Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The HSR illusion

The Fresno County Supervisors held a vote to continue support of the HSR. The March 27, 2012 Fresno Bee article explains.

The articles the Bee run are relatively honest and impartial but, the comments are filled with non-cognitive emotion which produce irrational stupidity. Posted in a blog by Todd Litman, a leading land-use expert, at www.planetizen.com, is one of the best comments of this phenomenon: "A related issue is the Dunning-Kruger effect, which refers to the tendency of people who are unaware of how little they know about a subject to be overly confident of their abilities and judgment. Research indicates that ignorant people often rate their knowledge and ability higher than it actually is, suffering from illusory superiority, while more knowledgeable people underrate their own abilities, suffering from illusory inferiority."

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

like a circus tight-rope act

An article in the LA Times dated March 26, 2012 claims the proponent's hyperbole may be in jeopardy. The proponents claim that the project can side-step the legislative requirements. It appears that the fate of CA's HSR is going to lay in the hands of the judicial authorities who will hear the cases.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

active in the news again

According the March 8, 2012 Fresno Bee article, a new study suggests the CA HSR will create jobs. In the real world of things costing money, how many jobs will it take to generate the additional tax increase to support a $100billion state funded project? For the immediate $2billion proposed HSR segment, how many other government reliant jobs will be cut? Is there a study somewhere that asks the question to how many jobs have been eliminated in California and the US due to the enormous increase in taxation?

The study spoken of in the article also suggest that a city along the proposed HSR route with a station 'would fare better' than a city without a station. Is this study actually suggesting that a city has negative benefit with lower land values from visual damage, noise pollution and severed land use access that leads to further economic decrease for everywhere except where a station might be located?

Note to the CA HSRA: update the transit technology to a modern day system that enables every town to have a station. Trains are a relic technology developed in the early 1800s. Our society has developed extensively over the past 150 years and has to have a mobility system capable of meeting modern day transportation requirements. Where is this study?

Friday, March 2, 2012

ehhh, hun?

In an act of desperation the CA HSRA is now accepting bids for contracts they can't award. Here is the newest turn of events with the HSRA the March 2, 2012 Fresno Bee article.