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A different solution would be a downtown taxing district to fund downtown transit improvements, a la what was proposed to pay for the various renditions of the Central Area Circulator from the 1960s to 1990s - also fought vigorously by business interests, generally. If congestion pricing is good for business (personally, I think it generally would be if it's done right), then the focus should be on convincing them why. |
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If we don't get the money back this needs to be put up on Daley's list as money he lost for the city. Sorry the buck stops with him. He was trying to kill us last month with his money cutting into a very basic required service called snow plowing....and yet he was off visiting places in the Fall and lost us $153 million dollars. Two huge mistakes. Maybe Daley doesn't care about Chicago anymore?
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^^^ That's a silly thing to say. Of course companies are focused on long term growth. Its the government who has a problem with being short sighted. For some reason they can't get it through their heads that we can't just keep borrowing and encouraging our citzens to borrow by driving down the cost of debt. In case you haven't noticed, most US businesses have better long term solvancy right now than the US Federal government...
There are whole sections of accouting departments dedicated to tracking long term growth plans in most companies. Companies are obsessed with growth and expansion and long term success. Quote:
If you are interested in this topic and have an understanding of Economics here is the study I am basing this off of: http://gateway.nlm.nih.gov/MeetingAb...103622537.html |
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But what's silly is to imply that the 21st Century business gestalt is somehow okay. I guess if you see the Big Three and the former Wall Street financial giants as exceptions (of myopia) rather than the rule (of prudence and careful investing) I could understand where you're coming from; but I think you'd be alone in that assessment. |
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For example, what if the city gets BRT money from the upcoming "stimulus" instead, without the congestion-pricing strings attached? Wouldn't that be win-win from City Hall's standpoint, since it would avoid another confrontation with the 50 hooting chimpanzees in the City Council? Or maybe this is a deliberate thumb in the eye by DOT. Lots of possibilities, but I'm certain there's a lot more to the story than "Daley snooze, Chicago lose." |
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A gas tax is (or should be) quite painless to raise, especially at the moment. Just start adding 10 cents a gallon every 120 days until it's $1/gallon higher than it is now. The problem there, of course, is the sound-bite television ad: "Rep. Prudence Goodsense voted for the largest tax increase in Illinois history. What was she thinking? We can't afford four more years of Goodsense." |
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Money was offered...rules with dates were given. It was very specific. We are already taking a loss with the $1 Billion over time. That was hard enough to give up.....but this deal has cost us even more money. |
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^^^ They are mutually exclusive in the eye's of the National Democratic party and that's what matters. Hopefully Obama will be closer to Clinton than the classic Democratic argument on this issue being from the University of Chicago, the bastion of free market economics.
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