COAST's latest reason for enthusiasm for Representative Chabot: He introduced on the floor of the House an amendment to a transportation appropriations bill to forbid spending any further federal monies on the Cincinnati Streetcar. That amendment was was adopted by voice acclamation, without objection, and the bill itself also has passed the House.
This does not and will not affect the $37 million already awarded by the Obama administration to the Cincinnati boondoggle, but will prevent any monies in FYs 2013 and 2014 from being added to that pot. Representative Chabot has committed to re-introduce that amendment each biennial cycle going forward.
This means the federal spigot will be cut off from spending any more monies on this project, if Representative Chabot is successful. Period. The Mallory/Qualls pipe dream of using federal monies to run the line to Clifton will be dead as long as Representative Chabot is in Congress.
The backstory
Here's the backstory to that action that is even more interesting.
Early this year, Cincinnati Mayor Mark Mallory made a pilgrimage to Representative Chabot, and informed him that he needs additional federal funding for the current leg of the Streetcar, and for future extensions of the same (i.e., up the Vine Street hill to Clifton and beyond). Representative Chabot, as reported by his staff, laughed, and said that of course he would not be supportive of either request, as he opposed the Streetcar funding.
But here's where Representative Chabot's heroism shines through. Instead of doing the "political" thing and simply refraining from helping Mallory, he decided to try to put a stop to the waste affirmatively. Thus, he and his staff worked diligently to introduce and pass the ban that we read about in the newspaper this week.
You can see Representative Chabot's introduction of the amendment and the accompanying floor speech here:
The federal legislation prospectively
News reports have downplayed the effect of the bold Chabot move. However, Representative Chabot's office reports that now that the amendment is in the House passed bill, there is a good chance it will become law. The Senate could strip the provision when it addresses the appropriations bill, but even then Speaker John Boehner could insist it remain in the agreed conference version of the legislation.
What this all means
Never in the history of this City has a major capital project proceeded with so little consensus in the community, and with so much opposition. To date, the Streetcar project is opposed by Governor John Kasich, the entire Ohio legislature (House and Senate) (which has outlawed all state spending on the project) (thank you Senator Shannon Jones!), the Ohio Department of Transportation (which yanked $52 million in funding from the project) the Hamilton County Commission (which outlawed the use of MSD funds for the project), COAST, the NAACP, the Fraternal Order of Police, the Cincinnati Firefighters Union, the CODE Labor Union, the Baptist Ministers, Westwood Concern, County Auditor Dusty Rhodes, former Congressman and Mayor Tom Luken, and former Cincinnati City Council Finance Chairman John Cranley.
So, in addition to the legal consequence of the Chabot amendment, in addition to the fiscal roadblocks erected at the State and County levels against the foolishness at City Hall, the growing and loud community consensus against the Streetcar is fair warning to Mayor Mallory, Roxanne Qualls and the remainder of the Batshit Crazy Council that this is simply the wrong direction for our fine City.
What's next
There are two remaining pressure points that COASTers intend to push to cut off funding for the Streetcar project.
- First, the City intends to spend some $11 million on the project from the sale of the Blue Ash Airport. Federal legislation prevents such use of those funds; they must be plowed back in to aviation-related capital improvements. COAST through lobbying and legal steps intends to see that that law is enforced.
- Second, the Mayor has persuaded Duke Energy to seek a City-only increase to electric and natural gas rates to fund the $12.5 million funding gap for relocation of Duke Energy's utility lines. COAST intends to lead the battle at PUCO to prevent that rate increase.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why COAST insists that the Mayor and his merry band of thieves on Council and in the administration are completely insane.
We are appalled by Chabot's action here. Can you see why we have never endorsed him?
ReplyDeleteWe support good Republicans like Sean Donovan who support the streetcar and lots of higher taxes. Not bad Republicans like Chabot who support limited government and oppose streetcars.
Remember: COAST supports politicians in Washington who attach strings to funding.
ReplyDelete