Bacon Bits: Bafflement, Confusion… and Hope

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Headline from FFXnow: “Inova temporarily closes urgent care centers in Reston and Tysons due to high patient volume.” On top of an influx of COVID-19 cases fueled by the Delta variant, Virginia hospitals are getting more patients — many of whom had delayed seeking medical care due to the pandemic — with more medically complex conditions. The health system closed the two facilities to “manage an influx of patients without overwhelming exhausted staff.” I get the part about the staff being exhausted. But how does closing the two centers do anything to solve the patient overload? Inova says it is consolidated staff from the shuttered centers “to better accommodate patient volume.” Huh? No explanation of how that works. 

Build a rail line and they will come A newly launched Richmond-to-D.C. passenger rail line is the first project under the Northam administration’s $3.7 billion, 10-year passenger rail program which, due to protests, COVID-19 and culture wars, has warranted almost zero scrutiny. In this piece in Energy News Network, Danny Plaugher, executive director for Virginians for High Speed Rail, says the new line, which will generate a predicted 12,600 passengers annually, show how serious Virginia is in its commitment to high-speed rail. Aside from getting passengers off the highway, rail is touted as a way to reduce CO2 emissions in the all-consuming war on Climate Change. While the Northam administration is spending billions on rail, here’s what’s happening in the real world: Road and highway travel is recovering from the epidemic, while rail traffic is not. The most recent quarterly ridership for the Virginia Railway Express (VRE) commuter rail service in Northern Virginia, for example, is down 85% in 2021 compared to the same period in 2019.

A massive win for Southwest Virginia. A joint venture between Blue Star Manufacturing and American Glove Innovations has committed to invest $714 million to establish the most the world’s most advanced (NBR) manufacturing facility to produce nitrile rubber gloves. The project would repatriate production of an estimated 60 billion gloves annually from Asia to the United States. Based in the Progress Park in Wythe County, the project will employ a predicted 2,500 people within five years. According to the Virginia Department of Economic Development, it represents  “the largest job creation in Southwest Virginia in a generation.” As part of the deal, the state has promised to invest $8.5 million to upgrade water and wastewater capacity at the industrial park. The nitrile glove market is expected to grow 9% annually through 2027.


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32 responses to “Bacon Bits: Bafflement, Confusion… and Hope”

  1. Dick Hall-Sizemore Avatar
    Dick Hall-Sizemore

    Regarding the piece about rail, I think the new rail line is the one that will leave directly from Main Street Station in downtown Richmond, going to D.C. In the past, all trains from D.C. to Richmond stopped first at the station on Staples Mill Road. One or two then crawled through Richmond to the Main St. Station. This new line is not high speed rail, just a train that leaves from downtown and does not stop at the Staples Mill Station. As for VRE ridership, as soon as federal and other workers are brought back into their offices from working virtually, the ridership should pick up.

    That is good news for Southwest Virginia. But, we should not count our chickens just yet. There is a history of big promised economic development projects not coming to final fruition.

    1. James Kiser Avatar
      James Kiser

      So the working class in the private industry subsidizes the well paid feds.

  2. tmtfairfax Avatar
    tmtfairfax

    If Virginia has such a great, pro-business climate, why didn’t Elon Musk consider moving Teslas’s HQ to the Old Dominion instead of Austin, TX? I think the Virginia Elite have now fooled themselves.

    1. how_it_works Avatar
      how_it_works

      Uhh, because Tesla isn’t a Federal contractor?

      1. tmtfairfax Avatar
        tmtfairfax

        I keep hearing that Virginia just isn’t for federal contractors, but thinking about it, you are probably dead on correct.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          I doubt Tesla is going to continue to make cars or if they do, it will be a tiny sliver of the market. They basically make cars for folks who are fairly well off. They’re never going to be a Toyota or Subaru or Chevy.

          No big loss for Va.

          1. how_it_works Avatar
            how_it_works

            And that’s a demonstration of the forward-thinking that makes Virginia such a great place to live, work, and play!

        2. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          Well, it isn’t just for Federal contractors. There’s plenty of low-wage service sector restaurant and retail employment in Virginia too….

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Because SpaceX and 95% of its braintrust is in Texas.

  3. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    Anyone who has done the trip between DC and Richmond on I-95 knows it’s no sweet thing and often an armpit of a trip.

    On some days, it’s apparent that something has to happen – either a second parallel I-95 corridor or train service or ???

    People are fooling themselves if they think train service will fail. Over the next 20-30 years, more and more people will use that train service if it operates on time as a quality service. IMHO of course.

    1. tmtfairfax Avatar
      tmtfairfax

      I’d rather drive the San Diego Freeway between LA and SD. The train might work for those needing to be in either Richmond or D.C. proper. I used to take the train to Philly quite often. It worked best if I had business downtown. The suburbs, not so much. The problem I see is so many people start or stop outside these two points D.C. and Richmond).

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        The Northeast Corridor has maxed out roads and now is more and more into rail.

        DC-Richmond has always been predicted to be part of that “Golden Crescent”.

        If you look at the road network in NoVa and the main interstate connections to Richmond – and ask what the chances are of getting the right-of-way for a parallel I-95 corridor – what are those chances?

        good or pretty slim?

        It’s even true for additional rail right-of-way – there is stubborn opposition to adding a rail to the current north/south right of way.

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Straight up the 17 to the 301, cut between DC and Baltimore. Stoplights I can handle. Morons on the I-95 parking lot are too much.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        AND they’re build a new bridge ! You don’t care for the HOT lanes on I-95? There are still idiots but fewer! 😉

        1. Nancy Naive Avatar
          Nancy Naive

          Why buy the cow when you get country roads for free… or something like that.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            time is money? The new Nice Bridge is supposed to have a hell of a toll, no?

          2. Nancy Naive Avatar
            Nancy Naive

            $6 to get out of Maryland… cheap at twice the price.

  4. At, say, $100 a ticket for the Richmond-DC rail trip — how long to cover the $3.7B cost [not counting personnel, upkeep, retirement, etc. costs]?

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      Won’t never just like METRO in DC, VRE, the rail in the northeast and most European and Asian is never, right?

      Virginia generates a billion dollars a year from general sales taxes and a good amount of that goes to fund rail.

      1. tmtfairfax Avatar
        tmtfairfax

        We don’t have the density in most of Virginia to make rail reasonably cost-effective. I’d rather see some reasonable level of local bus service maintained. Even though most lower-income people drive, there are still lots of people who depend on bus service.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          I think rail service between Richmond and DC is a little bit chicken-egg. It has to exist for a while – before people will start using it.

          I don’t think regional rail is really about density if it connects two urban areas with low density in between.

          We would have never built the interstates in rural USA if we required “density”.

          What makes the interstates valuable and useful to many folks is it allows them to go long distances between two points.

          It’s actually when those interstates get overwhelmed by density that they lose their functionality – like trying to get from Richmond to DC for a meeting and trying to figure out how much time to allow. Rail is more reliable.

          1. tmtfairfax Avatar
            tmtfairfax

            The Interstates were like the Post Office, designed to serve the entire nation. Heck, I’ve driven on an Interstate Highway in Hawaii!

            Mass transit depends on ridership. Move beyond a small bus and you need density. Richmond just doesn’t meet the density of the Northeast.

          2. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            Why are the interstates different from rail?

            The rural interstates did not depend on local traffic not even nationwide traffic at frist. You could have never justified building the rural interstates with what the demand was – at that time.

            Early on , the rural interstates had almost no true “interstate” traffic on them.

            Once they got built – THEN they got significant traffic from out of region/out of state and it had nothing to do with “density”.

            Correct?

        2. how_it_works Avatar
          how_it_works

          It amazes me that Chicago and suburbs has the ENTIRE population of Virginia (about 8 million) packed into maybe 5 counties…and traffic moves there better than it does in NoVA.

          Of course, what you don’t find there is the 200-house subdivision with exactly one entrance/exit onto a major highway with all the people living there demanding that the DOT install a traffic signal for them.

          That sort of crap seems to be a Virginia specialty.

          1. LarrytheG Avatar
            LarrytheG

            On the second point, I totally agree. Not only do they want that traffic signal, they also do not want internal connections to adjacent subdivisions.

            VDOT has actually tried to insist that all new subdivisions have at least TWO entrances, but they have been opposed by BOS “representing” citizens.

            On point one, I’ve driven in Chicago and nope – it’s just as big an armpit as many other urban freeways IMHO.

            I have driven every state and that includes the urban areas and to be perfectly honest, the best roads are toll roads which I gladly pay to get a more civilized experience because there actually is some correlation between yahoos and tolls…

            I just don’t see where VDOT is much different, to be honest. They pretty much follow the national standards for designs and signage.

            What varies a lot is when the roads are local and not state-DOT maintained, which is most cities and towns and in most other states, the county roads.

            It’s Texas, Virginia, North Carolina and Alaska where the State maintains the county roads also.

            The standards for Interstates and US-signed roads (like US 29) are dictated by FHWA.

            Not sure what exactly is the angst with VDOT in particular.

            They are actually considered one of the better DOTs if not mistaken.

            https://reason.org/policy-study/24th-annual-highway-report/

            .

  5. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
    James Wyatt Whitehead

    VRE is still empty. I see those trains everyday in downtown Fredericksburg. Just a handful of people around. I don’t see the new line paying for itself. HOpe it works. I love trains.

    1. LarrytheG Avatar
      LarrytheG

      You’re still slaving away at Bowman Center?

      You must go through town to get back to Warrenton?

      yes.. VRE ridership has cratered and not come back.

      The MPO in Fredericksburg has been reporting that.

      Part of it is that the Govt was already allowing some work-from-home even before the pandemic.

      Not only VRE. Van pools, buses, slugging, etc –

      1. James Wyatt Whitehead Avatar
        James Wyatt Whitehead

        Fredericksburg has turned into Manassas. Just too many people trying to go somewhere now. You would think there would be a way to get some of that traffic onto the rails.

        1. LarrytheG Avatar
          LarrytheG

          It’s a mess and you’d think if less people were “commuting” it would be less traffic but , nope…

          I even see clots of cars at odd hours…

          If it ain’t the geezers doing passive-aggressive blocking of the lanes, it’s the wise-asses weaving between them and tailgating.

          1. tmtfairfax Avatar
            tmtfairfax

            Lane-blocking, by cars or not-quite-fast-enough trucks is a plague.

  6. James Kiser Avatar
    James Kiser

    I will bet that in 5 years you will find this massive southwest investment will generate at best maybe a 1000 permanent jobs. remember Terry McAuliffe gave the Chinese 20 million in taxpayer inducements and got nothing.

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