[quote name='speedracer']Bet on a theoretical position? How would we go about doing that?
The 2005 federal highway bill spent $293.7 billion over six years. The one before was $33.6 billion per year, again six years. So we've dropped a half a trillion dollars on highways over the last 12 years. The current bill is looking like it will be six years/$500 bil, putting us at a flat trillion over the last 18 years.
But that's only the federal government. The state of Texas and city of Houston combined spent $6 billion for highway maintenance
in Houston alone from FY1992 to 2001. When you sum up Houston and Dallas, Texas paid $11billion during that span. Just the state's part! Houston has been allotted $43 billion for maintenance from 2000-2020. Just Houston! And just the state's part!
The money that goes into highways and maintenance is mind boggling. We can't possibly imagine what our world would look like if we used the money on trains and the like because the amount of money we're talking about is so large.
There's other sources, like the 9% of the stimulus that went to highways. That's a cool $70.83 billion that'll never be noticed. A hundred billion here, a hundred billion there, and pretty soon we're talking about real money.[/QUOTE]
Sigh....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak#Public_funding
Along these lines, in a June 2008 interview with Reuters,
[57] Amtrak President Alex Kummant made specific observations: $10 billion per year is transferred from the general fund to the Highway Trust Fund; $2.7 billion is granted to the FAA; $8 billion goes to "security and life safety for cruise ships." Overall, Kummant claims that Amtrak receives $40 in federal funds per passenger, while highways are subsidized at a rate of $500–$700 per automobile. Moreover, Amtrak provides all of its own security, while airport security is a separate federal subsidy. Kummant added: "Let's not even get into airport construction which is a miasma of state, federal and local tax breaks and tax refinancing and God knows what."
According to the United States Department of Transportation's Bureau of Transportation Statistics, rail and mass transit are considerably more subsidized on a per passenger-mile basis by the federal government than other forms of transportation; the subsidy varies year to year, but exceeds $100 dollars (in 2000 dollars) per thousand passenger-miles, compared to subsidies around $10 per thousand passenger-miles for aviation (with general aviation subsidized considerably more per passenger-mile than commercial aviation),
subsidies around $4 per thousand passenger-miles for intercity buses, and automobiles being a small net contributor through the gas tax and other user fees rather than being subsidized.[75] On a total subsidy basis, aviation, with many more passenger-miles per year, is subsidized at a similar level to Amtrak. The analysis does not consider social costs and benefits, or difficult to quantify effects of some regulation, such as safety regulation
Huh, it seems that per passenger trains are subsidized far less, but they dont take the passenger nearly as far as any other mode of transportation on that subsidization. Secondly if more than the 97% of the country that drives cars suddenly switched to trains, wouldn't the goverment HAVE to spend far more than they are on cars to maintain that capacity?
In reality with trains its not about the cost, the routes that they take are not filled as they are now. People just don't want to ride them whereever they go now the trains are not filled to capacity, people dont want to have to live by a train schedule, they don't want to have to wait for a train to go somewhere. Sigh I guess you guys still wont get it, but I tried at least. You can call Americans greedy, environment killers, whatever but it is silly of you all to attempt to convince people that trains are only failing because of lack of subsidization, and the over subsidization of cars, but not the personal preference of Americans. It is also silly of you all to think any amount of money will change that.