Train to nowhere? High-speed Vegas line stirs controversy

(via USA Today) · April 4, 2012 · 9:14 AM

Victorville, Calif. — On a dusty, rock-strewn expanse at the edge of the Mojave Desert, a company linked to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid wants to build a bullet train that would rocket tourists from the middle of nowhere to the gambling palaces of Las Vegas.

Discussion:

Only trusted comments are displayed on this page. Untrusted comments have expired from this story.

  1. This idea needs to be sold to Californians and the state of Calif. Nevadans will benefit, but they're only an afterthought in the construction of the project!!

  2. The desert express train that stops in Victorville Ca. could not go any further even If developers wanted It to. It seems the steels wheels can't climb over mountains. Unlike the Meglevi train which has no problem climbing over mountains and can easily make the trip all the way to Los Angeles. The Meglevi can get to Los Angeles faster that then Desert Express can get to Victorville. So truly the Desert Express Is a train to no where.

  3. Wasteful nonsense, not deserving of a tax subsidy. The Las Vegas monorail should serve as an example of this cockeyed thinking. Conventional train service directly to Los Angeles from Las Vegas would be a worthy test of the market, at a fraction of the cost. What you see is what you get, and a high speed train to Victorville is a joke.

  4. Steel wheels can't climb mountains? Have you told that to the engineers at the Union Pacific and the Burlington-Northern-Santa Fe?

  5. Leric Goodman, Let me re- pharse,what I said steel wheels on steel rails cannot make the climb over mountains( CajonPass) as a high speed rail system.Conventional trains have to slow down and brake to make it over these mountains. We are talking about high speed passenger rail system ,not slow moving freight hauling trains.

  6. I was born and raised in L.A. I'd have zero interest in traveling to Victorville then taking a train. If I lived in Victorville, maybe. Sorry, but those in SoCal won't buy the concept. Silly.

Post a comment

Commenting requires registration.

Comments are moderated by VegasInc editors. Our goal is not to limit the discussion, but rather to elevate it. Comments should be relevant and contain no abusive language. Comments that are off-topic, vulgar, profane or include personal attacks will be removed. Full comments policy.

Most Popular

Follow VEGAS INC

Answer This!

Will online gaming hurt brick-and-mortar casinos?

TopDocs 2012 Cover TopLawyers 2012 Cover