No Light Rail in Vancouver!
Light rail costs too much, does too little
Denver Rail Still on Track — Barely
The latest estimates say that Denver’s FasTracks rail projects are only $1.5 billion
overbudget, not the $1.8 billion originally reported. The $300 million savings comes
from such things as single-tracking light-rail lines that were originally planned
to be double tracked.
Denver’s Regional Transit District (RTD) plans to make up the $1.5 billion by selling
$800 million more bonds (thus making for a longer pay-back period), and asking the
federal government for more money. But officials still expect a $400 million or so
shortfall.
One way RTD hopes to close the gap is through “public-private partnerships,” which
the local press is misleadingly calling “privatizing.” The idea is that, instead
of having RTD design, build, and operate the rail lines, they would turn most of
that over to a private company. Of course, the company would still need huge subsidies,
but RTD hopes it can save some money this way.
This whole process raises all sorts of questions in my mind.
- Under the original financial plan, RTD would complete construction in 2017 and pay
back the loans and bonds by 2048. Since rail lines need to be rebuilt every 30 years,
they would need to borrow more money to rebuild the lines as soon as the original
bonds were paid back. Under the new plan, it will take several more years to pay
back the bonds, which means they will still be paying them off after the rail lines
are fully depreciated. Do they expect voters will agree to another tax increase to
keep the lines going even while they are still paying a tax for the fully depreciated
line?
- RTD says it can single-track part of one of the rail lines without reducing service.
If so, why didn’t it plan to build a single-track line in the first place?
- Similarly, if public-private partnerships can save so much money, why didn’t RTD
propose them in the first place?
Yellow lines were supposed to be Diesel-powered commuter trains; blue lines were
supposed to be light rail; green is a bus-rapid transit route. Light blue is existing
light-rail lines.
RTD’s problem is that it has to carefully balance construction to all parts of the
region. The political compromise that led to passage of the tax increase required
that RTD build lines to all major suburbs simultaneously. Each of the suburbs feared
that, if they were last on the list to have a rail line, cost overruns would kill
their project. So they demanded simultaneous rather than sequential construction
of the rail lines.
All of the “major investment studies” done for the planned routes found that rail
transit was the least-cost effective way of moving people and reducing congestion.
For example, in the East Corridor, as shown in the table below, rail both costs more
and does less to relieve congestion than new freeway or high-occupancy vehicle lanes.
Cost Per Hour Saved
Cap Cost Op Cost Annualized Hours $/Hour
New
fwy lanes $305 $16 $40 18.3 $2.18
HOV/bus lanes 337 15
42 12.6 3.34
Diesel rail 374 34 63 8.9
7.12
Electric rail 571 29 75 9.1 8.26
Capital and operating costs are in millions. Annualized cost, also in millions, is
the sum of operating costs and amortized capital costs. Hours is the annual number
of hours saved to commuters in millions. $/hour is the cost per hour saved.
At the time of the election, RTD had decided to operate Diesel commuter trains in
the East Corridor. But it has since switched to electric trains even though this
would cost more. In fact, the total capital cost of the East Corridor line is now
well over a billion dollars, or roughly twice as much as projected in the major investment
study.
Officials from west-side suburbs are angry that their lines are being short-changed
with single tracks when RTD is spending more on the East line. It does seem perplexing.
My hypothesis is that, given a choice, transit agency officials will always go for
the high-cost solution. They view taxpayers as a bottomless pit of funds and see
no need to restrain their spending. Someone must have noticed that Diesel commuter
trains were more cost effective than electric trains and switched.
It is easier to come back later and double track a single-tracked line than it is
to convert a Diesel-powered line to electric power. So RTD probably figures to spend
as much up front on the high-cost technology. That sounds cynical, but when it comes
to rail transit, no matter how cynical you are, you can’t keep up.
After all, one of the pre-FasTracks light-rail lines that opened a few months ago
is carrying only a handful of people each trip. While RTD says it will cut service
on this line (which goes from nowhere to nowhere), you have to wonder why they thought
it made sense in the first place. The answer is that rail transit isn’t about transportation;
it’s about construction jobs.
One factor that may play a role in the decision to electrify the East line is campaign
contributions. The prime candidate for making Diesel-powered railcars is Colorado
Railcar, while Siemens, a German company, makes many of the electric-powered railcars
in use today. Siemens contributed over $100,000 to the FasTracks campaign, while
Colorado Railcar contributed only $20,000.
Perhaps the switch from Diesel to electric is payback. Colorado Railcar will still
get to sell its Diesel cars for the Boulder-Longmont and North Metro lines, but Siemens
will get most of the rest of the system.
I suspect Colorado Railcar, whose one contribution came just a few days before the
election, assumed that it had a home advantage and would not have to contribute much
to get the contracts. Or maybe it just didn’t have Siemens’ deep pockets. Siemens’
first contribution came more than four months before the election. In trouble over
a bribery scandal, the company obviously has no compunction about greasing the right
palms to get contracts worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
Reprinted from The Antiplanner