President Obama made a big deal late last week about high speed rail and pointed to $8 billion in stimulus spending to get some projects going.
The President is right to highlight the nation's need for high speed rail. But bullet trains are only part of what the U.S. needs to bring its deteriorating transport infrastructure into the 21st Century. And $8 billion won't take us very far on high speed rail. California's planned line between San Diego and San Francisco budgets out alone to $80 billion and that is likely a low ball figure.
What the U.S. desperately requires is a national infrastructure plan which identifies necessary future national transport networks--high speed rail, interstates, freight rail--and links them with regional systems--roads, mass transit, airports, and ports. Even more importantly, these national and regional infrastructure systems need to integrate with land planning, including most importantly housing. More people need to be able to move more seamlessly from their homes to work and commercial districts without depending on cars or else we will fall further behind in our ability to keep our economy literally moving.
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