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Drawing Widespread Criticism, Rick Scott Discovers the Joys of SunRail, and CSX

July 2, 2011 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

Sunchips.
Not quite sunrise on Rick Scott's approval numbers.

The Central Florida commuter line called SunRail will go forward, state officials announced Friday, ending months of deliberation by Gov. Rick Scott that tested the dividing line between his small-government brand of conservatism and the GOP’s pro-business orientation.

If it was, as some critics contended, an attempt to shore up his shaky political standing, it backfired; the governor quickly came under fire from all sides for allowing the project to go forward.


Click On:

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  • Flagler Commissioners Endorse SunRail As Gov. Scott Prepares to Derail Commuter Line
  • Despite Potential for 14,000 Jobs, Scott Rejects $2.4 Billion in High-Speed Rail Money


Transportation Secretary Ananth Prasad held a Friday morning press conference to announce Scott’s decision. Prasad went to pains to lay out the assurances from local governments and private officials that persuaded the state to go along with the 61-mile system, which is expected to cost almost $1.3 billion to build and operate from 2014 to 2030.

Prasad said Scott didn’t make the announcement because of a scheduling conflict, though the governor later explained his thinking to newspaper editors.

The decision highlighted the tensions Scott faces as he attempts to please both the business community, which supported the project and often strongly backs Republicans, and the activist tea party movement, which largely opposed plan, that helped power Scott through the GOP primary and general elections last year.

In remarks to a newspaper editors’ convention in Tampa, Scott made it clear he wasn’t a big fan of the project and wasn’t totally convinced it would be successful. But the governor said he hoped the project would work, and added there were differences between SunRail and a high-speed rail project he killed.

There was tremendous local buy-in on SunRail, Scott said, and the governor’s legal advisors told him he probably didn’t have legal standing to kill it because lawmakers had already appropriated the money and then-Gov. Charlie Crist had signed off on it in 2009.

“I don’t know that I would have made the decision to go forward with this if I’d been around three or four years ago,” Scott said. “But the local community is either putting the money up themselves or it is coming out of their transportation funds.”

Scott said he asked his legal advisors whether he might be sued if he killed the project, and what would happen if he was.

“They said there was significant risk I would lose,” Scott said. Whatever the reason, business groups praised the move as a visionary step that would provide a shot in the arm to the Central Florida economy.

“Long-term, SunRail will bring life to new businesses along its corridor,” said Jose Gonzalez, vice president of Associated Industries of Florida. “It will also have a tremendous impact on future investment in freight infrastructure, which Florida needs to take full advantage of improvements being made to our deep water ports in preparation for the expansion of the Panama Canal.”

But Doug Guetzloe, a conservative activist who has long fought SunRail, bashed Scott for “a fatal political error. He noted that very conservative voters are responsible for what remains of Scott’s approval rating, which hovers around 30 percent in several polls

“I think he just lost half of that, and I think he will now become the most unpopular sitting governor in the history of the state of Florida,” Guetzloe said.


Sen. Paula Dockery, a moderate Republican from Lakeland who was sympathetic to Scott in the primary, was also sharply critical of the move. Dockery has helped lead the charge against SunRail, saying the ridership projections don’t justify the state’s investment in the project.

“This morning, Governor Scott had his Secretary of Transportation announce that he will betray the trust of the conservative electorate who put him in office by moving forward with the least cost-efficient commuter rail project in the nation,” Dockery said in a blistering statement issued by her office. “This decision has completed the governor’s transformation from businessman to political insider.”

Scott also drew charges of hypocrisy from supporters of a high-speed rail line from Tampa to Orlando, a project backed largely with federal money that he canceled earlier this year.

“Governor Scott used all the right arguments to green light the wrong rail project,” said Sen. Arthenia Joyner, D-Tampa.

Joyner suggested the decision was driven in part by the support of U.S. Rep. John Mica, R-Fla., whose close ties to CSX — which is selling rail lines to the state for the SunRail project — has drawn media scrutiny in the days leading up to the decision.

Florida Democratic Party Executive Director Scott Arceneaux also blamed politics for the difference in the two decisions.

“By approving the SunRail project today, Rick Scott made it clear that he killed high-speed rail and the 71,000 job-years the project would have created as a partisan ploy to attack the President,” Arceneaux said.

Such widespread criticism indicated that the political fallout from the SunRail decision might not be over. Nor is the fight over the project itself, said Guetzloe, who noted his group is pushing a petition that would require any local expenditure for the project of more than $25 million to be approved by voters. Opponents of the project have also found at least one property owner willing to file suit and attempt to block construction.

At any rate, Prasad said, the stakes could not be higher.

“If we cannot make SunRail successful,” he said, “probably there will be no more trains in the state of Florida.”

–Brandon Larrabee, News Service of Florida

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Truth says

    July 2, 2011 at 10:37 pm

    Someone needs to tell the jailbird Doug Guetzloe that Scott would have been sued by the legislature had he kill SunRail and his attorneys thought it was a very good chance that he would lose.

    So the question is do you kill something you do not want and cost the taxpayers even more money in a lawsuit that that you know the outcome. Or do you just live to figh another day.

  2. arthur says

    July 2, 2011 at 11:13 pm

    Prasad’s quote in the last sentence is chilling. this state is doomed

  3. intheknow says

    July 3, 2011 at 8:27 am

    Mica is something else. Besides voting to kill Medicare, he is doing everything in his power to enrich his friends at government expense. SunRail is just one example. He’s also tried to get a freeway built through environmentally sensitive swamps, which would be enormously expensive and avoid populated areas. And don’t forget his attempts to force AMTRAK to give the enormously successful AutoTrain to one of his buddies now that they’ve rescued and rehabilitated it.

    Talk about abuse of power! Left to his designs, Social Security would be totally reliant on the whims of the stock markets. Thanks to his sabotage, the Jacksonville to Miami passenger trains on the Florida East Coast tracks won’t happen unless and until one of his co-conspirators can get rich off the government funding it would provide.

    And Rick Scott … It seems all he knows how to do is steal Medicare funds from taxpayers.

  4. Justice for All says

    July 3, 2011 at 9:30 am

    How did the State get backed into a position where they would supposedly be sued? Seems that is a politically expedient excuse.

    We continue to sink tax dollars into 20th century infrastructure instead of creating a 21st century education system.

  5. mara says

    July 3, 2011 at 10:37 am

    Mica is as disgusting and crooked as they come. I comfort myself with the knowledge that now that he’s finally starting to show his true colors, all those senior citizens he’s been suckering for years will finally WAKE UP and stop supporting him.

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