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The City of Phoenix has spent 1.4 billion dollars
to construct the light rail basically along the same route of the existing Red Line
beginning at Christown
Spectrum Mall Station turning eastward to Central Avenue then proceeding south to
Phoenix downtown then turning east eventually ending in Mesa, Arizona.
Eventually, the transportation
plan includes light rail extensions connecting with the initial light rail
system but with the cost of 70 million dollars per mile in today's dollars,
future extensions will be exorbitant and will probably never be built. Thus most
Phoenix commuters requiring some mode of transportation will continue to depend on
buses as the only means of mass transit.
The 1.4 billion dollars spent on light rail should have
been spent to purchase 500 new buses to reduce the wait time to every 10 minutes
during the week on all Phoenix bus routes and 20 minutes on weekends. Buses are
now packed beyond capacity during the week and on the weekend, it takes as much as 2
hours to go from one point to another point when having to use 3 different buses
routes. On Sundays, going east from 32nd Street and Indian School Road to 44th
Street transferring to the 2nd bus to Thomas Road then transferring to the third bus going east
on Thomas Road to Saint
Theresa Catholic Church at 5045 E. Thomas Road is 2 hours. Same route returning requires 4
hours on Sunday buses.
As the Phoenix City Council gloats with the commencement of the light rail, Phoenix
residents undergo horrendous
contentiousness hardships
with the present bus transit system. It is hard to accept waiting for the next bus
requires waiting nearly an hour standing under a 100 plus degree sun
without shade protection. (All north
side bus stops on any route have no shade protection because of the sun's
alignment from the southern exposure.)
Because of the financial collapse of
credit markets with a looming recession already taking its toil on reduced
revenue for state and local governments, construction of the light rail has reduced sales taxes and
created inconvenience during
light rail construction that has had an adverse impact on the Phoenix economy.
Very soon after operation begins, the light rail will be
identified as a boondoggle
with the only reason for the light rail being acknowledged as public relations theatrics for the Phoenix city council
to get away from the stigma of buses and go to the buzz project of the day
further wasting taxpayer money. Not a lot of expertise and creative vision on
the part of the city council. Downtown development is not working and the light rail is one
more fiasco.
The light rail will be a bonus for
ASU's main campus connecting with Phoenix downtown ASU buildings; however, the ASU campus in downtown
Phoenix is only instant gratification of putting up any building to fill empty
land parcels and should never have been built. It has already been exposed
the 5,000 plus student population used by Mayor Phil Gordon and ASU President
Michael Crow to promote and substantiate taxpayers
paying $220,000,000 ($220 million) to build the ASU downtown college
campus is a charade. Gordon and Crow dangled an enticing carrot
to obtain the $220 million from Phoenix taxpayers:
The Arizona State University campus would bring thousands of
students to struggling downtown shops, they said.
Voters OK'd the bond money, and the students came.
But the enrollment numbers
―
about 6,200 in 2006, 6,600 in 2007 and 8,400 in 2008
―
don't tell the full story.
An
Arizona Republic review of ASU documents
shows each year, roughly half of those students didn't take
any classes downtown.
The actual count is only at most a
few hundred students. These few students will add nothing to consumer spending
in downtown Phoenix. One look at the number of retail outlets on the ASU campus
is ample proof students have few disposable dollars for retailers in
downtown Phoenix.
The land used to accommodate the
downtown Phoenix ASU buildings is some of the most valuable land in Phoenix.
Valuable land parcels in downtown
Phoenix should only be used to enable Phoenix to enter into the
realm of becoming a world class tourist destination. The direction
downtown Phoenix has taken by Phil Gordon using the "herd mentality"
by manipulating the city council to go along for
the ride would make Friedrich Nietzsche proud. Not a lot of bright thinkers
among the city council particularly the mayor. The ASU buildings in downtown
Phoenix make no contribution to tourism marketing and convention center required
amenities and supporting activities. The Phoenix ASU buildings were only built
because of the availability to tap into $220 million of Phoenix tax payer money to finance
the ASU downtown Phoenix buildings. In addition, the ASU downtown Phoenix
buildings were built to fuel the use of scarce available land in downtown
Phoenix only to lay claim to the vitality of a vibrant Phoenix downtown
development but in reality, the ASU downtown Phoenix buildings add zero to the designation of Phoenix as a world
class city.
Bluntly put so everyone understands, the ASU downtown Phoenix buildings are a charade
— a
readily perceived pretense; a travesty exaggerated by a grotesque imitation of
spearheading revitalization of downtown Phoenix. Every member of the Phoenix
City Council who voted to approve spending $220 million for a charade
should be removed from the Phoenix City Council. Phil Gordon is termed out and
will be gone after this current term. Gordon has been too frivolous with Phoenix
coffers of taxpayer funds. Michael Johnson can serve one more term but
he has done enough damage following Gordon blindly and so hopefully, he will see
the hand writing on the wall and choose not to run again.
To give clarity to the decision to
use $220 million to finance the downtown Phoenix ASU buildings, with less than
only 500 actual students in downtown Phoenix at any one moment, Phoenix
taxpayers are spending $440,000 per student. Wall Street greed is certainly
alive and well in downtown Phoenix as Phoenix taxpayers pay for the folly of
Gordon, Crow, Johnson and the other city council members who voted for the ASU downtown Phoenix
buildings.
It is long over due to rein in
government spending using taxpayer money to finance private and other
government entities' development. The downtown Phoenix ASU buildings should have been built on the
main campus in Tempe using ASU funds — not City of Phoenix taxpayer money. — Jon Garrido
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