The real roadblock to Trump’s big building dreams

Author: Charles Lane

The American people support more spending on roads, buildings and waterways – 75 percent are in favor, according to a year-old Gallup poll. So President Trump’s call for a 10-year, $1 trillion “national rebuilding” plan was one of the few parts of his address to Congress Tuesday that might’ve been the same if Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders won in November.

Many Democrats will support a Trump-backed infrastructure bill, in the name of boosting short-term job creation and long-term economic productivity.

There’s just one catch: Many of the same people who tell pollsters they want to unleash the bulldozers will sing a different tune when those machines approach their communities. And America’s responsive, democratic political system, with its decentralized institutions and multiple “veto points,” will heed the cry of “NIMBY” – not in my backyard.

Two consecutive California governors, Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger and Democrat Jerry Brown, have dreamed of a high-speed rail system like Japan’s, paid for partly by state borrowing. Nearly a decade after voters approved the California bond issue, the project has barely started.

Residents of Silicon Valley and the San Joaquin Valley filed lawsuits. Property owners along the route have refused to sell land.

To be sure, California’s high-speed rail is brand-new infrastructure and, as such, inherently more disruptive. Maybe Americans will be less wary of merely upgrading existing installations, as Trump – with his tales of trucks damaged by potholed interstates or tiles raining down from the Midtown Tunnel’s ceiling – seems to intend?

Well, a $120 billion federal plan to improve the ancient but vital Northeast Corridor rail line, thus slicing Amtrak travel times between New York and Boston, faces resistance from the 7,500 denizens of Old Lyme, Conn. It would mean tunneling under their downtown. Connecticut’s Democratic elected officials, state and federal, support the resisters of Old Lyme.

Even much-needed repairs to to DC’s Rock Creek Park thoroughfare, Beach Drive, a mere 6 ½ miles long, took years to get going, due to negotiations between the feds and local DC authorities over stormwater drainage.

It’s fashionable and, to some extent, merited to denounce NIMBYism. We don’t want a few selfish holdouts to block manifestly urgent and beneficial projects.

On the other hand, it’s hard to prove, really prove, the necessity and utility of any given bridge or highway. A just-completed $1.6 billion expansion of LA’s 405 freeway accomplished next to nothing in terms of its stated goal – reducing congestion – according to The New York Times.

Anybody else notice that Trump hasn’t identified a specific new road or hospital the nation absolutely, undeniably must have?

Yes, the jewel of American infrastructure – the interstate highway system – knit this great land together. In the process, it tore through many an old downtown or established neighborhood (often inhabited by relatively powerless minority groups).

In fact, backlash against the interstates is one reason we have environmental impact statements today, and the pesky delays that come with them. Prompted in part by widespread “freeway revolts,” Congress passed the National Environmental Policy Act.

Few recall that history now, but it puts into perspective a lot of today’s simplistic thinking about infrastructure.

The United States’ failure to enact a “massive” program to repair our “crumbling” infrastructure reflects not stupidity, or weak national will, but a genuine, inescapable collective-action problem. Infrastructure’s benefits are diffuse, long-term and, to some degree, speculative; its costs are focused, immediate and palpable.

Approaches to this conundrum vary. In China, a one-party state shoves whole villages aside to make way for dams and airports. As that demonstrates, there’s always a tension between grand schemes of “national rebuilding” and, well, democracy. Or, if you prefer, there’s a rather striking compatibility between such schemes and authoritarianism.

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