AnCaps
ANARCHO-CAPITALISTS
Bitch-Slapping Statists For Fun & Profit Based On The Non-Aggression Principle
 
HomePortalGalleryRegisterLog in

 

 Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure

View previous topic View next topic Go down 
AuthorMessage
CovOps

CovOps

Female Location : Ether-Sphere
Job/hobbies : Irrationality Exterminator
Humor : Über Serious

Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure Vide
PostSubject: Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure   Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure Icon_minitimeSat Jan 05, 2008 10:41 pm

Part I

NEW HAVEN — Conceived as a freeway, the Route 34 Connector still
promises to whisk motorists across New Haven as they exit Interstate
95. But in less than a mile, the three broad lanes abruptly end,
forcing traffic onto side roads that skirt the unbuilt right-of-way — a
wasteland of elongated asphalt parking lots and scrub grass.

Mayor John DeStefano Jr.
calls the aborted project a tragic example of public infrastructure
gone awry. He has drawn up detailed plans to rip up the highway and
parking lots and restore the neighborhood of homes and stores that once
existed. But lacking money, the mayor’s project only inches forward.A
few streets away, there is no such obstacle. On either side of New
Haven’s highway to nowhere, city streets throb with construction
activity. A different kind of infrastructure spending — unrelated to
roads or rapid transit, airports or levees — is under way. Yale University
is rebuilding itself — drawing on its huge, rapidly growing endowment
and on multimillion-dollar gifts, mainly from alumni — to renovate 54
buildings and construct 16 new ones. Not since the 1930s has Yale
undertaken so ambitious an expansion. The message in this
outburst of activity, here and in other places across the country, is
that private spending, supported handsomely by a growing number of very
wealthy families, is gaining ground on traditional public investment.
In the case of New Haven, once the recipient of more federal dollars
per person for urban renewal than any other city, private investment
now far surpasses public outlays. “For us,” the mayor said,
“infrastructure spending has come to mean growing the university. Yale
has the money, and what they get from us is the approval to grow.
”But for all the wealth going into private philanthropy, its reach is limited.

Richard C. Levin,
Yale’s president, is not committing money to the mayor’s reconstruction
plan or to other items on Mr. DeStefano’s wish list, like high-speed
rail service to Manhattan or lengthening the runway at Tweed New Haven
Regional Airport so more airlines will fly here.Philanthropic
spending adds mainly to the nation’s stock of hospitals, libraries,
museums, parks, university buildings, theaters and concert halls.
Public infrastructure — highways, bridges, rail systems, water works,
public schools, port facilities, sewers, airports, energy grids,
tunnels, dams and levees — depends mostly on tax dollars. It is hugely
expensive and the money available, while still substantial, has shrunk
as a share of the national economy.The American Society of Civil
Engineers estimates that government should be spending $320 billion a
year over the next five years — double the current outlay — just to
bring up to par what already exists.A few decades ago, after the
Depression and World War II, the nation rapidly added infrastructure
and “maintenance was a less pressing issue,” Casey Dinges, a society
spokesman, said. The entire interstate highway system, for example, was
built in just 35 years.But now 14 years are likely to pass
before a widening of just one bridge in that system, spanning the
Quinnipiac River here on I-95, is completed. The traffic-congested
bridge is to become six lanes in each direction, from the present
three. Nearly six years into the expansion, the approaches are
gradually being widened, but the bridge itself is untouched. The first
pilings have yet to be sunk to support the additional lanes. The state
transportation department, which is handling the $2 billion project,
blames the slow flow of money, mainly from the federal government. That
flow has averaged less than $45 million a year, according to Albert A.
Martin, the department’s deputy commissioner. “If we had had
the $2 billion in hand right from the start, that would have reduced
the construction time by half, to seven years,” Mr. Martin said. “The
problem is, we don’t have the dollars readily available. That is one of
the big differences between us and Yale.”
Yale’s reconstruction proceeds at warp speed. Scaffolding and gauzelike
scrim, to protect pedestrians from falling debris, cover buildings on
nearly every block of the urban campus. The emphasis is on those
devoted to science and medicine, to enhance Yale’s stature in these
fields. But every other department is a beneficiary, too, and all of
the 12 residential colleges are being renovated. To keep this work
going year-round, Yale built a four-story brick dorm, almost large
enough to fill a city block, as temporary student housing.

The 90-year-old football stadium, the Yale Bowl, got a share of the
largesse. A mansionlike field house is soon to be built alongside it,
which, among other things, will allow the opposing teams to spend
halftime in greater comfort. For years they have rested in roped-off
exit tunnels beneath the stands; the locker rooms are too far away.“The
field house is a luxury item in a way,” Laura A. Cruickshank, an
architect employed by Yale as university planner, acknowledged. “But
when you have a stadium that is so old and iconic, you have to do
things differently. And how much of a luxury is it when you have
players who play the way they do and you have to tape them up at
halftime in the tunnels?”Propelled by the construction on
campus, Yale has become a big owner of commercial real estate in the
surrounding downtown, engaging in a form of urban renewal not unlike
what Mayor DeStefano wants for Route 34. But while the mayor has to
extract state and federal subsidies, Yale goes forward with its own
money.Biotech start-ups, restaurants and stores now occupy
Yale-owned buildings. Wanting its new campus in upscale surroundings,
the university even employs two people full time to recruit boutique
retailers in New York and Boston as tenants on spruced-up streets.“The
mayor was far-sighted enough,” said Mr. Levin, who has been Yale’s
president since 1993, the same year that Mr. DeStefano first won his
office, “to recognize that working with us, with our capital, we could
actually revive the downtown, which we’re doing.”The person in
charge of improving the neighborhood around Yale is Bruce Alexander,
64, a former real estate entrepreneur who helped develop the Inner
Harbor in Baltimore. Mr. Levin recruited him in 1998 and, during a
recent tour of the city, Mr. Alexander pointed out one of his favorite
achievements — the purchase of a group of contiguous buildings
occupying a square block in the heart of the city.The owner had
gone bankrupt, and to avoid having the buildings auctioned piecemeal,
Yale bought them all, at the mayor’s request, and filled them with
stores and restaurants at street level, and apartments and offices on
the upper floors.“When you own a block of property,”
Mr. Alexander said, “you can create an identity.”Infrastructure Spending LagsThe
shift from public money to private wealth in shaping the nation’s
cities is evident in national data. Government outlays on physical
infrastructure have declined to 2.7 percent of the gross domestic
product, from 3.6 percent in the 1960s. Philanthropic giving, in
contrast, has jumped to nearly 2.5 percent of G.D.P., from 1.5 percent
in 1995 and 2 percent in the ’60s. Most of this money goes into
endowments and foundations, or comes in the form of individual gifts,
and then is increased through leverage. Of the $3 billion that Yale has
spent so far on its vast building program, for example, slightly less
than two-thirds came from gifts and from the endowment, which now
totals $22.5 billion. The rest was borrowed, Mr. Levin said.Yale
now spends more than $400 million annually on its renaissance, nearly
six times its outlays for construction and renovation in the mid-1990s.
New Haven, by contrast, budgeted $137 million in the current fiscal
year for all its capital projects, including those subsidized by state
and federal governments. That is less than twice the amount budgeted in
the mid-’90s.
Government investment nationwide has lagged for several reasons, say
business leaders, academics and public officials. Tax cuts have helped
to hold down overall government spending. So has the view, widespread
in recent decades, that public investment is often inept and wasteful.
And politics intrudes, with the widely criticized earmark process in
Congress cited lately as a prime example of misdirected spending.
Continued...


Last edited by on Sat Jan 05, 2008 11:21 pm; edited 1 time in total
Back to top Go down
CovOps

CovOps

Female Location : Ether-Sphere
Job/hobbies : Irrationality Exterminator
Humor : Über Serious

Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure Vide
PostSubject: Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure   Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure Icon_minitimeSat Jan 05, 2008 10:42 pm

Part II

“Governments are accountable to the democratic process, which has
many, many virtues; I would not trade it for anything else,” Mr. Levin
said. “But it is not particularly good at focusing resources and
driving things efficiently.” Perhaps most important, big
businesses no longer put as much clout and attention behind public
infrastructure investments. In an earlier era, corporations, many with
deep roots in local communities, lobbied government for the railroads,
highways and many other facilities they needed to operate successfully.
And they served as a crucial fountain of local tax revenue.But
companies are more mobile today. And many of the urban manufacturers
most dependent on public infrastructure have moved or gone out of
business. The Winchester Repeating Arms Company, once New Haven’s
largest employer, is among the departed. Yale, which pays some taxes
and escapes others that most corporations pay — particularly property
taxes — is now the city’s biggest employer.Anthony P. Rescigno,
president of the Greater New Haven Chamber of Commerce, is struggling
to revive the commitment of his members. He is trying to drum up
stronger support among local businesses to lengthen the airport runway
to 5,000 feet from the present 4,000 so that commercial airlines will
bring in more flights. His members favor the longer runway, but not
passionately. “We had an example of a biotech company in New
Haven bringing people here all the time,” Mr. Rescigno said. “Because
he couldn’t bring them here easily by air, he would bring them to New
York.

The meetings and conferences took place there, not here. He had
an option.”Some government-business alliances still carry weight.

In the Seattle area, for example, Microsoft has pushed its headquarters city,
Redmond, to spend millions to upgrade
roads for its expanding campus, along with the millions that the
software giant has spent.Now Microsoft wants the state to
replace a 40-year-old, two-lane bridge on a highway that connects
Seattle and Redmond. “We joined the city in arguing for the new
bridge,” said Lou Gellos, a Microsoft spokesman, “and that was
instrumental in bringing the issue to the forefront.

”But such examples are increasingly rare these days.
“If you had 30 C.E.O.’s saying, ‘Damn it, we need new bridges or faster trains,’
then that would happen,” said Peter R. Orszag, director of the
Congressional Budget Office.

“The fact of the matter is that public infrastructure spending does not
have much momentum behind it at all.”Money Tight, Progress SlowMayor
DeStefano, 52, an intense man who grew up here, has chosen to spend
most of his limited capital budget to renovate New Haven’s public
school buildings and add three high schools. His goal, he says,
is to raise the quality of the education so that families will choose
to use the public schools, even moving back from the suburbs. His
argument is not unlike Mr. Levin’s: Newer buildings, better equipped,
make for a better education. “The high school dropout rate has
been cut in half,” the mayor said, arguing that the multiyear
reconstruction project is showing results. “Eighty-two percent of the
kids go on to two- and four-year colleges. That is higher than the
state average.”Mayor DeStefano’s efforts to rebuild New Haven as
a city of middle- and working-class neighborhoods represent a reversal
of the large urban renewal projects that once dominated public
infrastructure spending. New Haven was at the forefront of that
movement. Under an earlier mayor, Richard C. Lee, federal tax dollars
poured in for slum clearance, highway construction, big public housing
projects, a coliseum and a huge downtown shopping mall. Most of
this is gone now. A community college rises where two department stores
stood, and the mall is closed. The 10,000-seat coliseum, a Mecca for
wrestling matches and minor-league hockey, was torn down last January.
The Route 34 Connector would have linked I-95, south of the city, to
the existing Route 34 in the north. Environmentalists helped to halt
the project, objecting in particular to a section of the freeway that
would have crossed wetlands. More recently, low-income families living
near the right-of-way petitioned the mayor to return the land to
streets, stores and homes.

“They want to recreate the neighborhood in which they grew up, or
where their parents and grandparents grew up,” said Karyn M. Gilvarg,
executive director of the New Haven City Plan Department. She estimates
the cost of doing so at $150 million, a relatively small sum for Yale,
but too expensive for the mayor to proceed quickly. There are
other delays. The mayor would like Metro-North Railroad’s New Haven
line to offer a high-speed service to Manhattan, cutting the 80-mile
run to an hour, from an hour and 40 minutes.“The largest cluster
of hedge fund managers after New York and London is in Fairfield
County,” the mayor said, arguing that New Haven would get some of that
business “if it were a half-hour or an hour closer” by train to Midtown
Manhattan.The state government, which owns the New Haven line,
is indeed gradually building up an infrastructure to make faster train
service possible. Three hundred new rail cars, built to run at high
speeds, will start arriving in 2010.“We are in the process of
repairing bridges and upgrading power lines,” Mr. Martin, the
transportation official, said. “And we are looking at installing
concrete ties as replacements for the wooden ones.”Given the
limited pool of federal and state money, however, the project moves at
a snail’s pace. Under the best-case schedule, high-speed service will
not arrive in New Haven for a decade.“We don’t have the big
companies pushing the government to get the work done, because they
don’t need it,” Ms. Gilvarg said. “They are all going to China or
wherever,
and the business sector is smaller in New Haven than it was.”Blurred
Lines in New HavenFor New Haven, that leaves Yale.“There
are no corporate citizens left in New Haven except Yale,” Mr. Levin,
the university president, said. He, too, would like to see the airport
runway lengthened and high-speed rail service to New York. But they are
not central to what he considers his mission, which is to make Yale
pre-eminent among universities, not just in science and the arts, but
in the students’ daily lives.Eight of the 12 residential
colleges have already been rebuilt, at a cost of at least $40 million
each. In appearance, the colleges are the same elegant gray sandstone
Gothic structures dating from the early 20th century. The new comforts
and efficiencies, though, are evident on closer inspection.Visiting
Trumbull College, next to Sterling Library, Ms. Cruickshank, the
university planner, points to the leaded glass windows, which are
double paned now, eliminating the unsightly plexiglass that had been
screwed to the windows to keep down heating bills.The bedrooms
are still small, but they are organized for the first time in clusters
of four or five around a common room, creating a much more social
environment. “You cannot walk from one place to another without passing
students,” said Janet B. Henrich, the master at Trumbull. Reconfiguring
rooms and passageways is costly without being as noticeably expensive
as the changes in the basement, which long housed a small theater for
student productions, a gallery for their art, a music practice room and
a snack bar. But exposed pipes ran along the ceiling, limiting the
space. That was solved by enlarging the basement and encasing
the intrusive mechanicals, so that the basement no longer seems like
one. The theater in particular benefited. It has 60 cushioned seats,
banked steeply over the stage, and equipped with the latest lighting
and
sound devices.“I am not sure it makes for better performances,” Ms.
Henrich said, “but it is probably safer and easier to learn the
basics.” As
Yale invests, pursuing its goals, Mayor DeStefano falls increasingly
into step, blurring the line between public and philanthropic
infrastructure spending. Yale has acquired land to build two more
residential colleges, and the mayor contributed by closing off and
giving portions of two streets to the university.In return, Yale
has agreed to spend $10 million to repair bridges, streets, lights and
sidewalks in the neighborhood — in effect, picking up a bill that would
strain the city’s budget.“The streets of their campus are the
streets of the city,” Ms. Gilvarg, the city planner, said. “They are
part of the public infrastructure, not private roads.”


Link
Back to top Go down
 

Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure

View previous topic View next topic Back to top 
Page 1 of 1

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
 :: Anarcho-Capitalist Categorical Imperatives :: AnCaps' Laissez-faire Free Trade Zone-