Boston 2024

You say things like this too much. There is no "voice of 'the system'". There is only the political culture that oversees it. And inaction mostly suits them just fine. The Olympics would change the culture of inaction.

The voice of the system is the people who use it - both those that choose it and those that rely on it. As the system becomes more and more broken down, these people will become angrier, and then inspired to action, and the political culture will take notice as a result.

Now, personally, I'd like to think that eventually people are going to take notice and solve the problem before it reaches full-blown crisis, but...
 
The voice of the system is the people who use it - both those that choose it and those that rely on it. As the system becomes more and more broken down, these people will become angrier, and then inspired to action, and the political culture will take notice as a result.
So you say, but the State is now something like 14 years behind on the GLX and Red-Blue and we've seen essentially zero elections turn on the question of SIP-implementation. Don't confuse your personal frustration with any sort of tipping point general motivations. And to the extent that any voters have influence, it is the swing voters of Lexington/Concord (rich, liberal, car-based enclaves).

City (transit) voters are ignored because they don't swing.

What you assert here is actually more in line with Equilibria's point: that the Political system would be happy to drag its feet on SSX until 2035, dangling it in front of suffering commuters, getting re-elected by saying "I'm working on it, but you know Beacon Hill...", and never actually funding it ('cause that takes money and political will).
 
It's the exact same logical fallacy that's in play when statements like "the political reality is that the difference between SSX opening in 2035 or before 2024 is whether or not we get the Olympics." It's patently untrue. The system can't survive another 10 years of inaction before we even start talking design-build. Not at South Station. Not for Red-Blue. Not for signal modernization (and that one might not even be on this list, I need to double check.) Because the system can't survive another 10 years of inaction, the pressure will begin mounting as the delays get worse and more immediate economic harm is done to the city through the direct effects of lost time and the indirect effects of people who have a choice choosing differently.

Something has to give.

That's my point. The argument that we need the Olympics to get anything done doesn't hold water.

How do you know what's going to "give" is just letting the system "die"? We had years upon years of pressure from our current breakdowns. On some viewpoint, your logic would say the pressure should have forced the state to take action on problems like the Orange line trains 5 years ago, if not earlier. Yet, we are at least 5 years away assuming no delays or issues. You may very well be underestimated how willing we will tolerate South Station going overcapacity, no Red-Blue, no signal modernization, or anything. From my viewpoint, the only incidents outside of big publicity events that forces politicians to take real action is not systematic overload, is if people start dying.

So Equilibra does have a real point here. The Olympics may be one of the only "realistic" (as in having some chance that is greater than 0%) scenario of making stuff happen. Even if it is not higher, it may well be higher than your scenario of the government getting their act together. You argue that system breakdown inspiring public anger will inspire them to do it anyways. I must disagree on the basis that you're hinging your logic that people will become angry enough that it will force politicians. I say you underestimate how much a politician can procrastinate and the constituents ability to accept things barring someone dying.
 
But this is all quite theoretical, isn't it, until we know what this list of improvements and system expansions would actually need to look like to accommodate the bid?
 
But this is all quite theoretical, isn't it, until we know what this list of improvements and system expansions would actually need to look like to accommodate the bid?

Absolutely. Bid book is out in less than a month, hopefully.
 
(and a large portion of its renting citizenship tossed out on their ass by landlords looking to cash in on short-term Olympics rentals, but that's a separate problem)

I've got to address this, because it keeps popping up. Despite a well publicized slumlord problem, Boston has insanely strong renters rights; it's practically impossible to evict a tenant for almost anything, including non-payment of rent for months. So unless you are suggesting that landlords are going to raise the rents for the entirety of 2024, and leave their units vacant the majority of the year (remember most leases in the area turn over in September) just for a speculative windfall for a month in the summer, this won't happen.

Those two things are absolutely synonymous when the security response features a total public transportation shutdown and "strongly suggested" shelter-in-place/stay-away orders. Were there roadblocks in place on that Friday morning? I, of course, wasn't about to drive all the way up to Boston just to find out, so maybe someone else who was here at the time can let us know. I can't imagine that there weren't.

Good to hear you were nowhere near the city when this happened, and are basing your opinion on the LOCKDOWN CNN bullshit. I live less than a mile away from where he was shot.

Other than in the active shooter section of Watertown, there were no roadblocks, or much of anything else. To shelter in place was a suggestion, as you note. I voluntarily gave my employees the day off at my old restaurant, since I assumed there would be no business. Even so, I was able to drive to the store just to check on everything with no problem. In the morning when I left, there was still speculation he had gotten across the river and was in my neighborhood. Even so, no issue.

Later in the afternoon, a few friends walked/drove over and we hung out on my roof watching the helicopters ferry people in and out of the Home Depot parking lot. Again, they had no issue getting here, even as the caravan of Humvees streamed down the Pike right in front of my house.

From what I hear, while quiet, things were largely business as usual in the southern side of the city.



IMO, the IOCs comment on our reaction was NOT that they expect the city to be on lockdown throughout the events. Their praise is that if god forbid something terrible DID happen at the Olympics, they city has a very good reaction protocol in place. The general sentiment was by and large "you screw with us, we will stop everything and find you". I can see that being appealing to an international event.
 
I've got to address this, because it keeps popping up. Despite a well publicized slumlord problem, Boston has insanely strong renters rights; it's practically impossible to evict a tenant for almost anything, including non-payment of rent for months. So unless you are suggesting that landlords are going to raise the rents for the entirety of 2024, and leave their units vacant the majority of the year (remember most leases in the area turn over in September) just for a speculative windfall for a month in the summer, this won't happen.

There is nothing stopping landlords from only offering September 1 - August 1 leases.
 
HOA = home owners association. So, it depends on the buildings in question, although a short-term lease restriction is a fairly standard covenant. There may also be town-by-town bylaws restricting leasing, although I'd be quite surprised if there were across-the-board restrictions. Also, no matter what, you run into the same legal murky zone as Airbnb where the short-term rental could be said to incur state and local hospitality tax.
 
BigEMan, take Shepard's word for it.

The against-the-HOA-rules sublet is a classic game theory failure. The better the HOA is at keeping the place owner-occupied and "keeping up the neighborhood", the greater the incentives to cheat are for the one owner who does sublet, because he's offering a rare and prime thing: a rental slot in an owner community.

To see why "all" HOAs make rules prohibiting sublets, think about how lawyers "paper" things.

1) Massachusetts is *very* tenant-friendly. Tennants can get in, trash the place, be loud, and then stop paying rent in protest as the rules try to be enforced

2) Owners remember this from when they were tenants...or, more importantly, have lawyers and mortgage companies and insurance companies who do.

3) The rules in Homeowner Associations and Condo Owner Associations (call them "the HOA") are designed to be enforced against other Owners and assume normal owner-vs-owner leverage, but both Owner and HOA are near-powerless against tenants who might be in an Owner's unit(see #1, above)

4) The nightmare of the HOA is that an absentee owner rents to an obnoxious/dug-in tennant, in which case, it is like *they all* are the landlord suffering from a dug-in tennant.

5) So while individual owners who have "moved on" love to sneak in prohibited sublets--the rule-breaking owner gets to cash his rent check(thinking "The 'bad tennant' scenario won't happen to me" and "the tennant will pay my mortgage"), and foist all the of the "neighbor problems" off on the HOA. The HOA knows that every possible lever needs to be pulled to keep as many units owner-occupied as possible. And then the absentee-owner/landlord loves to tout (to prosepective, illegal tennants) that the whole rest of the building is owner occupied.

6) At the moment people buy-in to an HOA, most are picturing themselves as owner-occupiers, and are not looking forward to that future when they might have hoped to sublet legally. So it is a good moment to impose the "no sublet" rule via the HOA agreement. And the lawyers and mortgage company are happy to see it in the closing docs and the buyer barely notices.

7) So the lawyers, insurers, and HOA, representing the greater interests of "Capital" make sure to slip a few words into the HOA prohibiting short-term subleasing as often as they possibly can.
 
There have been a lot of comments about people making a fortune on their rental apartments/properties during the Olympics. This is unlikely to be the case.

The same idea was put forward in London. But just like the idea that the Olympics would 'overwhelm' the city with traffic it just didn't happen.

Here are two news stories describing what did happen (BBC and a rental co).

"Everyone was expecting a huge surge in the population that would drive accommodation prices to a premium ...... and then London 2012 descended and the visitors didn’t. Museum visitors were 30% down, hotels reduced their rates (a particular one near Hyde Park dropped over 80%, from £500/night to less than £100), and souvenir-stand owners looked just plain bored, with heads resting heavily on their hands as they stood leaning against their counters…waiting." - London Relocation Co

"The summer of 2012 will be remembered as the year London welcomed the world to the Olympic and Paralympic Games, but for many estate agents it would be the "hype that never materialized"." - BBC

The fact is the normal tourists all stay away from the city, and for longer than just the games. This opens up lots of hotels, transport etc. And there are many more potential available apartments than potential Olympic visitors. Also, a very high number of people who work in London went on holiday or worked from home which opens up even more available supply.

Of course you can find exceptions, and for very adjacent spots and high quality housing some will be rented. But not every person with a spare bedroom will be charging $200 a night.

Obviously, because London is a much bigger city than Boston it's possible the relative Olympic demand to hotel rooms and the number of available apartments may make housing more scarce but I certainly wouldn't bet on it.
 
When you start saying things like "they're offering little real benefit," that does get to the heart of the issue: I want this to happen because it's a chance for the city to do something special and profound. To me, it's worth three weeks of hassle for that to happen here. I don't want it to bankrupt the City, but I don't think it's going to, and I see things like SSX and Allston DMUs as benefits above and beyond the benefit of simply doing this here. Holding the Olympics in Boston is a benefit, not a cost that has to be paid off by building every dream MBTA extension ever.

This. It's a good thing to do if you can, and Boston absolutely can.
 
BDC has a report on a grassroots meeting of opponents:

http://www.boston.com/business/news...6I/story.html?p1=Topofpage:Carousel_sub_image

Interestingly, Boston 2024 showed up with some pretty high-level people. That's a good look for them. They should pay attention to how to organize people and get a message out on the street. To date, the effort has sought buy-in mostly from corporate leaders and universities. That's very important, and they've been very successful, but it's given the whole thing a shut-in, high-falutin air to it.

Boston 2024 should never forget that it started with two guys and a Facebook page, and (for all I know) a venue map made by a bored grad student in a studio apartment. They should also pay attention to the arguments raised at this meeting, since we'll be hearing them for ten more years (and maybe forever) if Boston is selected.
 
Sorry, that's an opinion, not a logical fallacy. An opinion can be debated with evidence, but a logical fallacy is wrong in and of itself. Two different things. Fact: SSX isn't on the table until ~2035. Fact: the Olympic bid would likely require it be done by 2024. If you have another fact showing SSX would be done by 2024 regardless of the Olympics, you're free to present it, but that doesn't make this argument a logical fallacy.

It's a fact that SSX is on the table right now because there's money allocated for it and an EIR is being produced. The same thing can be said for GLX and a number of other projects, mind you, but it is a fact that the project is moving forward.

Whether it gets done in any reasonable amount of time, I can't say. But it is a fact that the project is moving forward, even if at a glacial pace. And the ultimate point of my argument is this:

Last year when the transportation bill was up for renewal, Governor Patrick and Secretary Davey outlined absolutely everything we need to do to the T, and basically everyone agreed with what they laid out. Then it came time to allocate the money, and the State House gave them about 1/3 of what was asked for. So, why not just pay for all the fixes/expansions we know we need without bringing in the Olympics? We tried that already, and it didn't work. What makes people think trying the same thing again would get a different outcome?

You're absolutely correct in that even though most everyone agrees that there's a problem and in spite of that, nobody wanted to fund the solution. That's a problem, and it's a problem that we need to solve.

I want us - the city, the region, everyone who uses mass transit and therefore has a stake in that - to focus on that. Because that's a problem today, and it's still going to be a problem in 2024 whether or not we host this damn thing. When we all wake up September 1, 2024 and put Boston 2024 into the history books, we might have cleared the backlog of vital infrastructure projects, but the city isn't a static place. We can never arrive at the point where transit won't need to expand or adapt anymore, we can never arrive at the point where nothing needs to be maintained anymore, and because we embarked on all the necessary projects under the pretext of getting the city up to top form for the Olympics - we're right back where we are today with a paralyzed political body and nothing getting done again.

I don't think it's a logical fallacy to ask what the plan is for solving political gridlock and forcing these things to get done without the threat of a failed Olympics looming overhead, when the argument is being made that the Olympics are necessary to get anything done at all.

At best, that's deferring the problem for a decade, and deferring things is a big part of why our infrastructure is (in some cases quite literally) crumbling beneath us today. I'm not interested in shrugging my shoulders and saying "well if this will get the projects done then I'm on board." I'm interested in figuring out how we get past this.

So you say, but the State is now something like 14 years behind on the GLX and Red-Blue and we've seen essentially zero elections turn on the question of SIP-implementation. Don't confuse your personal frustration with any sort of tipping point general motivations. And to the extent that any voters have influence, it is the swing voters of Lexington/Concord (rich, liberal, car-based enclaves).

City (transit) voters are ignored because they don't swing.

What you assert here is actually more in line with Equilibria's point: that the Political system would be happy to drag its feet on SSX until 2035, dangling it in front of suffering commuters, getting re-elected by saying "I'm working on it, but you know Beacon Hill...", and never actually funding it ('cause that takes money and political will).

This is the problem that needs addressing. I want the region to come together, Boston 2024-style, to solve this problem.

In fact, I will even pull an about-face and give my full-throated support to Boston 2024, so long as we solve this problem first. Let's move ourselves forward to a time and place where it doesn't take the Olympics to get things done, and then I'll gladly jump on board.

But I don't want anything to do with the Olympics so long as we "need" them for any reason.

How do you know what's going to "give" is just letting the system "die"? We had years upon years of pressure from our current breakdowns. On some viewpoint, your logic would say the pressure should have forced the state to take action on problems like the Orange line trains 5 years ago, if not earlier. Yet, we are at least 5 years away assuming no delays or issues. You may very well be underestimated how willing we will tolerate South Station going overcapacity, no Red-Blue, no signal modernization, or anything. From my viewpoint, the only incidents outside of big publicity events that forces politicians to take real action is not systematic overload, is if people start dying.

It hasn't even come close to getting as bad as it could get. The system is still functional. Sure, things break, and the trains are all too full, and people bitch on UHub and at the water cooler... but for the most part, the T continues to run, and you can rely on it to get you home eventually.

You mention people dying - wait until the derailments start happening, or one of our particularly deficient bridges collapses. Wait until the next idiot who can't put his phone down crashes a Green Line trolley in the Central Subway. Wait until the rolling stock is all so dated and dire that it's a gamble every time you board the train whether it's going to just straight up die before you make it to your stop. Wait for "30 minutes late" to become the new on-time.

I promise you, this all can get so much worse. We haven't even had a taste of how bad things are capable of getting. The consequences of deferring action aren't linear - they're exponential. We've made deferring action into an art form here in this town - but trust me when I say that the bill is coming due eventually.

Like I said before... I'm really, really not looking forward to that. I don't want to live or work or play in a place that says "eh... not worth dealing with it" to on-time-performance metrics plunging below 40%.

But if that's what it's going to take to get people to wake up and start dealing with these things as actual problems, then I've made peace with the fact that there's a lot of painful commutes in my future. I don't like it, but I'm prepared for it.

Good to hear you were nowhere near the city when this happened, and are basing your opinion on the LOCKDOWN CNN bullshit. I live less than a mile away from where he was shot.

Other than in the active shooter section of Watertown, there were no roadblocks, or much of anything else. To shelter in place was a suggestion, as you note. I voluntarily gave my employees the day off at my old restaurant, since I assumed there would be no business. Even so, I was able to drive to the store just to check on everything with no problem. In the morning when I left, there was still speculation he had gotten across the river and was in my neighborhood. Even so, no issue.

Later in the afternoon, a few friends walked/drove over and we hung out on my roof watching the helicopters ferry people in and out of the Home Depot parking lot. Again, they had no issue getting here, even as the caravan of Humvees streamed down the Pike right in front of my house.

From what I hear, while quiet, things were largely business as usual in the southern side of the city.

I have no reason to doubt you, but I just wanted to take a moment to explain my side of this.

I commute by Amtrak from my home in Rhode Island into downtown Boston every weekday. I've been doing it for a couple of years now.

The morning that the manhunt started, exactly one southbound Amtrak train left the city of Boston before they shut it down. Northbound Amtrak trains were being pulled from service anywhere they could reasonably terminate them. That was the information I received from my friendly neighborhood station employee when I asked them what was happening.

I received an email from my then-university notifying me that the T was entirely shut down, that a shelter-in-place/stay-away advisory was out for the city, and that all my classes were canceled. I was advised to turn around if I could and not to bother if I hadn't yet left.

At the time I was a full-time student. I had no job other than my classes and I therefore had no reason to try and drive up to the city. Furthermore, the only information I had at that time was the advisory and the fact that mass transit had been shut down.

I hope you can forgive me for drawing what I felt and do still feel is a reasonable conclusion of "there's an effective lockdown in place" based on the information I had available to me about what was happening 85~90 miles away from where I live. I had no way of knowing that life pretty much continued as normal, because the only information I had to me suggested that was emphatically not the case.
 
You mention people dying - wait until the derailments start happening, or one of our particularly deficient bridges collapses. Wait until the next idiot who can't put his phone down crashes a Green Line trolley in the Central Subway. Wait until the rolling stock is all so dated and dire that it's a gamble every time you board the train whether it's going to just straight up die before you make it to your stop. Wait for "30 minutes late" to become the new on-time.

Why exactly should we wait for that?
 
Why exactly should we wait for that?
CBS is not advocating waiting for any of these moments, he is trying to describe some "not-the-Olympics" event which will (or should) galvanize the political class into action.

I find his case uncompelling. The "bridge collapse" ones are too unlikely (overstating the decay and disaster), and all the likely ones already have mostly already happened and the Political Class shrugged it off (like recurring Green Line accidents, CR delays, crowding at peak times, etc.).

CBS has thus far opposed "only-the-Olympics" position (best stated by Equilibria), which holds that the Olympics offers a new and likely-effective basis for mustering the political will to follow through on all the projects that the Gas Tax (boosted by indexing) was supposed to deliver between now and 2024.

I agree with Equilibria. The disasters are short term things that favor "investigations" and short-term fixes. (aside from firing a few scapegoats, did anything change in the epoxy/bolt tunnel collapse fatality?) The Olympics is a plausible 10-year (5 election cycle) thing that will require long-term will (and repeated votes to "do" gas tax indexing via a vote, for example)
 
Maybe instead of spending time organizing an Olympics, we could sink all our time into researching magic pixie dust that we could sprinkle on the state house to get legislators to fully fund transportation projects and speed up their time lines?
 

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