Boondoggle in the Motor City: Detroit's Train to Nowhere
Detroit has become a place
Hollywood directors come for great wreckage shots. One quarter
of the city's 140 square miles are deserted. Detroit public school
students boast the
nation's worst reading scores, the products of a
corruption-ridden school system that recently
flirted with bankruptcy. Detroit bested Baltimore in 2009 to
take the dreaded
"murder capital" title. It may also be the worst place in the
country to have a heart attack: prepare
to wait half an hour for an ambulance.
In a town lacking essential services, what do local leaders and
federal politicians have in mind for helping the city? What's
needed to hoist Detroit back to its 1950 heyday, when it was
America's fourth largest city, with more than double its current
population?
Why, light rail, of course!
The Motor City is moving ahead with a plan to build a 9.3-mile
light rail line that will run from downtown Detroit to the edge of
the suburbs. It'll cost an estimated $500 million. Three-quarters
of the bill will be paid by federal taxpayers, with the rest picked
up by a consortium of foundations and businesses.
If built, the project will end up on the Mackinac Center's list of
government-subsidized white elephants touted as "crucial to
Detroit's comeback," its "rebirth," and pivotal to "turning things
around." In reality, it'll just be another train to nowhere, much
like Detroit's existing light rail line, the unfortunately named
"People Mover," which operates at 2.5% of capacity.
For more on Detroit's light rail folly, check out Reason
Foundation's Adrian Moore and Shikha Dalmia's
rebuttal to PBS's recent documentary,
"Beyond the Motor City," which laid out the case that light
rail can, yes, "revive" Detroit.
Produced by Jim Epstein. Approximately 5.45 minutes.
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