Polls show that New Jersey voters ardently support Gov. Chris
Christie's decision to cancel the $8.7 billion commuter rail tunnel
to New York City. His actions have attracted criticism from state
lawmakers and transportation officials who favor the project.
However, a Quinnipiac University survey shows public sentiment very
much on the side of frugality with 53 percent of voters supporting
the N.J. governor versus 37 percent who do not. Over 30 percent of
Democrats also said they support Christie's actions.
Using the 2005 initial projection of $5 billion, New Jersey
officials proceeded to obtain $3 billion from the federal
government, spend $600 million in start-up costs, and commit
another $1.2 billion in contracts and fees. Now, as the
expected cost of the project has ballooned to $10 billion - double
the original estimate - construction has ceased as the state's
budget woes have worsened. This essentially means taxpayers
will have spent over $4.5 billion for nothing.
It's difficult to overstate the public's antipathy toward
long-term debt and runaway expenditures. Just as many
Americans believe that the federal debt is as grave a threat to the
country as terrorism, a Gallup poll shows.
"The overall scores for terrorism and the federal debt are
boosted by the relatively high percentages of Republicans -- 50% or
more -- who consider each of these extremely serious, putting these
at the top of the Republicans' list," Gallup says. "The size and
power of the federal government ranks third among Republicans."
There is an alternative to the duplicitous, gimmicky financial
practices the political class uses to camouflage long-term
taxpayers costs known as life-cycle budgeting, which imposes strict
requirements on government officials.
The full "life cycle cost" of any expenditure must be known up
front under this process. Government officials must give a full
accounting not just of the construction costs but also how much a
project will cost to operate and maintain. This practice is
particularly relevant where infrastructure is concerned.
The Congressional Budget Office reports
that life cycle will generate real savings in this area.
Calculating the initial costs as well as the long term operation
and maintenance costs is the key to ensuring that infrastructure
projects are cost-effective. A separate CBO
study found that the use of life cycle costs extended the life
of equipment eliminated redundant systems, reduced the cost of
operations and maintenance as much as 40 percent, and improved
systems' reliability by roughly 70%.
In many respects, the budget process at the state and federal
level is completely broken. Gov. Christie and other fiscal hawks
who are seriously about safeguarding taxpayer interests should
consider life-cycle budgeting methods that expose and highlight
long-term costs that were previously hidden from scrutiny.
In this new economic climate, where federal and state government
budgets are mired in unprecedented budget shortfalls and running up
huge deficits, policymakers should not be permitted to continue the
old short-sighted approach to budgeting infrastructure projects
which has time and again derailed these critical investments.
Instead of the old politics of budget deception, we need a new,
fact-based, transparent life-cycle budgeting process that shows
taxpayers the true cost of infrastructure projects - from cradle to
grave.
Bravo once again to Chris Christie from our former home state
that we had to leave due to the financial hijinks and blatant
mismanagement of the two previous Democrat "governors". Between the
two of them, they were unqualified to run a lemonade stand.
They and others still practiced under the old rules of
government planning that launched programs and projects without
regard to where they would end up or what they would cost. There
are still private companies that operate this way, but they soon go
bankrupt and may or may not be replaced. How do you replace a state
that goes bankrupt? N.J. came close and California is running
headlong into it.
Businesses are one thing, but governments are quite another.
Successful businesses operate using Enterprise Resource Planning or
Capacity Planning, that is, knowing what you have, knowing who you
have to make it and knowing when it has to be made.
Those who follow these principles continue to be successful,
while those who ignore them continue to fail.
Gov. Christie, while not being a business man, understands these
principles all too well. That's why he's getting resistance from
government interests who are only interested in government, and not
the people they purport to serve.
Chris Christie is sounding more and more like Presidential
material.
Go Christie, Go!!
Bob| 11.15.10 @ 12:47PM
Governor Crisco is a fathead both literally and figuratively
speaking. I hope the GOP does put him on the ticket with Romney.
Both governors would lose their home states.
ggoblue| 11.15.10 @ 1:46PM
yet he kicked your azz in an open election. sucks to be you.
Oldefarte| 11.15.10 @ 1:19PM
He's no doubt a 'fathead' since he is intelligent and has common
sense, both of which are seriously lacking in our current [and no
doubt your favored]president [w/o his teleprompter of
course]!!!!!!!!
Arms Merchant| 11.15.10 @ 2:52PM
Life-cycle budgeting is already used on major weapons programs
in DoD, with mixed success. So much is dependent on technology
risk, getting the project done expeditiously and not changing the
requirements once into it. Construction projects may or may not be
lower-risk than major defense programs, depending on the type of
project (e.g., Boston's Big Dig).
Color me skeptical.
Turk| 11.15.10 @ 5:33PM
Governor Christie thinks he's big stuff now, he sure is, and his
56 inch waistline is bigger than Taft's. I hope he does get the
nomination. Hollywood will have a field day lampooning his
chubbiness and newspaper cartoonists will have him as a barrage
balloon hovering over the capitol.
Victor & Margie| 11.15.10 @ 12:15PM
Mr. Mooney,
What an excellent idea!
Bravo once again to Chris Christie from our former home state that we had to leave due to the financial hijinks and blatant mismanagement of the two previous Democrat "governors". Between the two of them, they were unqualified to run a lemonade stand.
They and others still practiced under the old rules of government planning that launched programs and projects without regard to where they would end up or what they would cost. There are still private companies that operate this way, but they soon go bankrupt and may or may not be replaced. How do you replace a state that goes bankrupt? N.J. came close and California is running headlong into it.
Businesses are one thing, but governments are quite another. Successful businesses operate using Enterprise Resource Planning or Capacity Planning, that is, knowing what you have, knowing who you have to make it and knowing when it has to be made.
Those who follow these principles continue to be successful, while those who ignore them continue to fail.
Gov. Christie, while not being a business man, understands these principles all too well. That's why he's getting resistance from government interests who are only interested in government, and not the people they purport to serve.
Chris Christie is sounding more and more like Presidential material.
Go Christie, Go!!
Bob| 11.15.10 @ 12:47PM
Governor Crisco is a fathead both literally and figuratively speaking. I hope the GOP does put him on the ticket with Romney. Both governors would lose their home states.
ggoblue| 11.15.10 @ 1:46PM
yet he kicked your azz in an open election. sucks to be you.
Oldefarte| 11.15.10 @ 1:19PM
He's no doubt a 'fathead' since he is intelligent and has common sense, both of which are seriously lacking in our current [and no doubt your favored]president [w/o his teleprompter of course]!!!!!!!!
Arms Merchant| 11.15.10 @ 2:52PM
Life-cycle budgeting is already used on major weapons programs in DoD, with mixed success. So much is dependent on technology risk, getting the project done expeditiously and not changing the requirements once into it. Construction projects may or may not be lower-risk than major defense programs, depending on the type of project (e.g., Boston's Big Dig).
Color me skeptical.
Turk| 11.15.10 @ 5:33PM
Governor Christie thinks he's big stuff now, he sure is, and his 56 inch waistline is bigger than Taft's. I hope he does get the nomination. Hollywood will have a field day lampooning his chubbiness and newspaper cartoonists will have him as a barrage balloon hovering over the capitol.