LATEST NEWS
February 4, 2010
Stimulus cash not enough to finish high-speed rail projects
CHICAGO
The US$8 billion in stimulus cash awarded to 13 high-speed rail corridors across the U.S. may seem like a windfall for advocates, but there’s a catch: the money isn’t enough to finish any of the major projects.
State coffers are dry and federal spending is being cut back, so it’s unclear who, if anyone, will pay the rest of the multi-billion dollar bill.
Many states have been vague about how they would foot their part of the bill. But experts say most are counting on the federal government to cover at least half of their costs over the next few decades — a hope that may clash with U.S. President Barack Obama’s recent pledge to curb spending.
“As time goes on, as fast trains become a way of life for America, there will be more and more federal help,” Gov. Pat Quinn said after his state learned it would get more than a US$1 billion of the stimulus money.
Optimists point to the 2011 federal budget Obama proposed Monday that seeks US$1 billion more for high-speed trains on top of the $8 billion he announced in stimulus money last week. There’s anotherUS$2.5 billion tucked away in the 2010 federal appropriations bill that has been approved but not yet allocated.
A proposed US$500 billion, six-year federal transportation reauthorization bill includes US$50 billion for high-speed rail. But that generous sum was included before Obama began talking about belt tightening, and it seems unlikely to win approval in its current form.
Even if it came through, that money hardly covers the proposed price tag of the 13 high-speed rail corridors, which are estimated to cost at least US$60 billion and possibly more than US$100 billion over the next decade or two. Those cost estimates also don’t include the hundreds of million of dollars it could cost each year to operate the networks — costs that states typically pick up.
It also might be hard for states that are grappling with huge budget shortfalls to justify spending more on high-speed rail while education and health care are on the chopping blocks, Pattison said.
Illinois, Florida, California have by far the most to win if the money does keep flowing — and the most to lose if it doesn’t. Those three states were given the bulk of the federal stimulus money.
Chicago would become the hub of an eight-state network, which, in all, won a third of the US$8 billion in stimulus money.
Florida is getting US$1.25 billion for a new high-speed track that would run from Tampa to Orlando, then later from Orlando to Miami.
A planned California network is by far the most ambitious. It received the second largest slice of the stimulus pie, US$2.3 billion, to begin work on an 800-mile (1,300-kilometre)-long, high-speed rail line tying Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay area to Los Angeles and San Diego.
But California, Illinois and Florida face yawning budget deficits. So anything short of a sustained federal commitment over decades could stick them with construction and then operating bills they can’t pay.
Associated Press
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Where does labour law stand on ladder safety?
- PCL Constructors works on Humber River Regional Hospital in Toronto
- Stakeholders react to Ontario College of Trades proposed membership fees
- Disclosure bill an attack on unions, says organized labour
- EllisDon to build performing arts centre for Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS |
These projects have been selected from 267 projects with a total value of $4,935,993,413 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Friday.
LIGHT RAIL TRANSIT EXPANSION, STATIONS
$2,200,000,000 Toronto ON Prebid
$47,902,962 Clarington ON Tenders
$40,000,000 North York ON Negotiated
| CURRENT STORIES |
- EllisDon to build performing arts centre for Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario
- Historic Burlington, Ontario railway station to be moved
- Widespread opposition to Ontario College of Trades membership classes
- Safety training today builds safety leaders of the future, says IHSA
- Denis Dixon new Professional Engineers Ontario president
- University of Windsor design competition winners announced
- Construction material costs “took a breather” in April: Associated General Contractors of America
- Almost fit for a King
- Contractors warned about PST transition
- Fort McMurray aggregate producer expands to meet demand
- Another multi-billion dollar LNG terminal proposed for Kitimat
- Best open shop contractors honoured
- Learning to dig safely in B.C.
- Review of Saskatchewan labour laws concerns unions
- Big deal for Ritchie Bros.
- Contracts awarded for 17 Wing in Winnipeg
- Highway 3 improvement contracts awarded
| ALEX’S ECONOMICS BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Canada’s Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in the North American economic environment with emphasis on the construction industry.
- Economic Nuggets - May 15, 2012 (May 14, 2012)
- Canada Rode a Second Consecutive Month of Strong Job Gains in April (May 11, 2012)
- U.S. Employment Rose by a Mediocre 115,000 in April (May 4, 2012)
- More








