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Latest post 04-13-2006 8:22 PM by Anonymous Citizen. 5 replies.
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  • 01-01-2001 12:00 AM

    2005 House Bill 4993 (Authorize local “light rail” system tax)

    Introduced in the House on June 23, 2005, to allow the Kent County public transportation authority to levy a property tax for up to 25 years to pay for a “fixed guideway project,” which includes light rail, “people movers,” and other such mass transit systems. Under current law such a tax can only be authorized for five years

    The vote was 52 in favor, 49 opposed and 9 not voting

    (House Roll Call 588 at House Journal 98)

    Click here to view bill details.
  • 06-28-2005 10:43 AM In reply to

    Train to nowhere.

    Obviously, the good representative is ignorant of the story behind Detroit's "People Mover" system: Over $200 million dollars spent for a 2.9 mile loop. Daily ridership way below expected levels. Sorry, but that money can be better spent by the taxpayers themselves without the mass transit crowd picking their pockets. This bill should die in committee.
  • 06-28-2005 12:18 PM In reply to

    Doomed to Repeat

    What is the basis for the fascination that so many politicians seem to have with trains?
  • 06-29-2005 2:32 PM In reply to

    License to Go Broke

    Rep. Kooiman's bill would give Michigan transit authorities the freedom to waste hundreds of millions of tax dollars on unproductive trolley lines. Such transit lines have victimized transit riders in Los Angeles, Sacramento, Denver, Portland, Buffalo, St. Louis, Minneapolis, New Jersey and elsewhere. The federal "New Starts" program gives generous handouts to states for building rail lines, but leaves local taxpayers responsible for the continuing burden of operating these railroads. Inevitably, regional transit agencies with trolley lines end up increasing fares and reducing service to bus riders to keep the streetcars running on one or two routes serving a tiny minority of regional destinations. Does any Michigan region have half a billion or a billion dollars to waste on a trolley line that will offer slower service than express buses operating on the same route? I don't think so. Yet if this bill becomes law, trolley-car enthusiasts and anti-auto agitators will promote such a project in Detroit even though the benefits are all imaginary, and can be demontrated to be so with even the simplest analysis.
  • 07-06-2005 7:56 AM In reply to

    Great Campaign Advertisments

    Going for light rail lets a legislator say: I'm building MI economy. I'm for the environment. I care for the little guy. I am curing the traffic problem. All while doing absolutely nothing of any real value whatsoever.

     

  • 04-13-2006 8:22 PM In reply to

    Untapped potential

    I suggest that the powers to be take another good look at the Detroit People Mover. I know that anyone with an open mind can see the importance of having a light rail system for the entire metropolitan area. The real story behind the Detroit People Mover is that it has been a victom of ignorant polititians with a lack of vision. Anyone who witness of the Autoshow and the Superbowl and took the time to evaluate the people mover's performance and has any sort of vision can see that the People Mover's potential needs to be finally tapped. It is vital to the redevelopement of the Detroit area. Anyone who doubts this opinion, I challenge you take time to ride the people mover and recognize the current growth and the people movers untapped potential in restoring Detroit to greatness.
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