The federal government sought to have the case dismissed, arguing it belonged in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.
IT'S HISTORY on MSN
Why California abandoned the bullet train - government gave $3.5 billion, then came back for its money
You’ll see how early missteps—failed negotiations with freight railroads, underestimated land acquisition fights, and a maze of environmental lawsuits—pushed planners off their original route and deep ...
Naming rights have rescued major California businesses before. Now the chief of the often-belittled California High Speed Rail Authority (HSR) thinks they might be at least part of the answer to ...
California is pushing a $3.5 billion bullet train that promises to be the fastest in the country and mark a milestone in ...
Opinion
Moon on MSNOpinion
This is Why California’s Bullet Train Became America’s Biggest Infrastructure Failure
California’s high-speed rail was sold as a 220-mph revolution that would connect San Francisco and Los Angeles in under three hours, but instead it became America’s most expensive infrastructure ...
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