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To: Wuli
That is patently false. If the monies were kept in their states (lowering federal taxes), state taxes could capture it and fund the projects.

Or they wouldn't build the projects at all -- even if they were projects of national significance.

Perfect case in point: the Alameda Corridor initiative in southern California, along a busy rail corridor that connects the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach to the interior of California. Something like 80% of the cargo moving through these two major ports is destined for points in the U.S. that are hundreds and thousands of miles away. The upgrades along this route involved both public and private partners (eliminating grade crossings where public streets crossed the railroads), and were aimed at improving the throughput of the rail system between California and the rest of the U.S.

If it were up to California alone to fund this whole thing, it would never get done. California would simply have plenty of better things to do with their fuel tax revenues than to improve the flow of freight through LA/Long Beach to Midwestern rail hubs like Chicago and Kansas City.

You see variations of this story repeated all over the country ... which is why major transportation projects often meet overlapping local, regional and national needs.

62 posted on 09/18/2017 7:35:15 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("I was elected to represent the citizens of Pittsburgh, not Paris." -- President Trump, 6/1/2017)
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To: Alberta's Child

“Or they wouldn’t build the projects at all”

Well OMG that would be their democratic choice, wouldn’t it.


64 posted on 09/18/2017 8:25:15 PM PDT by Wuli
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To: Alberta's Child

“If it were up to California alone to fund this whole thing, it would never get done. California would simply have plenty of better things to do with their fuel tax revenues than to improve the flow of freight through LA/Long Beach to Midwestern rail hubs like Chicago and Kansas City.”

More B.S. Doing it is 100% in California’s interest, alone because were they not to do it the imports going to their ports would shrink, costing THEM economic benefits and jobs. Everyone else in the country WOULD get their imported goods, just not from California ports. The buyers across the country would care less about protecting California’s ports. California would compete with Texas, which, would, as a state competing with California, fund rails of its own from its ports to the midwest, and hubs for east & west routing from Oklahoma.


65 posted on 09/18/2017 8:31:59 PM PDT by Wuli
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