Boston's Big Dig Delayed Because of Programmers? 250
dalewj writes "This article in the
Boston Globe explains that Boston's Big Dig will be ready to open on time, if the software developers and cable layers can get their act together." Turns out honeywell's software isn't quite ready.
It's supposed to end? (Score:5, Funny)
The sun will burn out in 2.5 billion years... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:2)
Duh. Is the road from Boston to Washington covered with buildings that are blocking the way?
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:2)
Not that I'm running anybody down. I seem to recall the same kind of problem in SimCity 2000. Once those buildings are up, it really is a pain to put in a subway system.
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:2)
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:5, Informative)
Boston's highway system (with the exception of the Pike, which has its own connected but separate history) was designed around I-95 and the Inner Belt, but two major segments of I-95 (Canton to the South End and Revere to Peabody) were never built (the segment that was built is now I-93 downtown and Route 1 north of Boston), and the entire system is a half-baked mess because the core of the system was never finished. Depressing the Central Artery is supposed to alleviate at least some of the resulting mess by increasing the downtown capacity to handle the traffic that the Inner Belt was supposed to deal with.
(And no, they can't build the Inner Belt now -- the northern ramps (built, but cut off -- a news crew once put up a prank sign saying "Out of town drivers exit here) now lead to Storrow Drive, one of the major roads that runs along the Charles River, and the southern ramps were demolished and replaced with a commercial-vehicles-only connection to the airport.)
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:2)
I don't think they could *ever* build the Inner Belt. At the point where Rt. 2 merges from 4 to 2 lanes (where the original belt was supposed to go) you've got to deal with Belmont, Arlington, and Cambridge. There's enough money and politically active people in those communities alone to prevent it from happening.
Re:It's supposed to end? (Score:2)
In other words, Belmont had already gotten smacked, and right through some fairly wealthy areas on top of that. Arlington was in for more (after MassHighway had moved the route southward once already). The brunt of the damage was to hit Cambridge and Roxbury, also clipping Brookline in the process.
The story was a little different south of Roxbury; that stopped because of similar political pressure, but by 1972 (when Governor Sargent killed everything but the part of I-93 that leads through Somerville and Charlestown) parts of the I-95 route were not only under construction but striped and near completion. They ultimately built the Southwest Corridor Park along the route, along with commuter rail and rerouted Orange Line tracks. (That fight was even nastier than the Cambridge fight; parts of the city threatened to secede in order to sabotage the project. Ultimately I think the only parts of that road that were completed (and ultimately torn up) were between Jamaica Plain and Roxbury, though what is now Melnea Cass Blvd from Roxbury to the SE Expressway was built along land clearances for the Belt.)
IMHO the Inner Belt would never have been built even if the highway projects hadn't been stopped (though the Southwest Expressway would probably have been completed eventually if Massachusetts hadn't given up the allocated highway funding); the "Evel Kneivel" ramps I mentioned upthread were probably wishful thinking by the time they were built, as was the gigantic pile of sand in Saugus placed in the late 60s that was supposed to continue I-95 to the north, away from the chaos of Route 1.
take note (Score:2, Insightful)
Waiting on Programmers? (Score:5, Funny)
OH, "Big Dig", I thought you said "Dig Dug".
Nevermind.
The Big Dig (Score:5, Interesting)
Read more about it here. [bigdigsucks.com]
Basically, the thing has gone on forever, and will likely go on forever, thanks to beaurocracy. Blaming it on the programmers/cablers is probably little more than spin at best, or pre-election blame shifting by local "oh-fish-shulls" at worst.
The Big Dig is apparently a huge fiscal landmine that some people claim will never reap the rewards of the optimists who keep greenlighting the moneystream.
(On the other hand, I live far away, and am only going on a few websites' worth of info. So that's only one point of view.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:The Big Dig (Score:5, Insightful)
Mass transit in Boston is pretty good. you can go anywhere on the subway for $1, and the buses do a decent job of coverage too. The thing that sucks is that the subway turns into a pumpkin around 12:30am.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
-- Rest of my
Re:The Big Dig (Score:4, Interesting)
But alas, I lived in Brighton (part of Boston - uses Boston police force) which is about a 10 minute drive from my work (near South Station, heart of Big Dig). For me to take pulic transportation to work, I had to use a combination of bus and "T" or just another bus that was few and far between. It would take me at least an hour to get to work via public transportation with either method.
This is why I moved an hour south of Boston and drive (or occasionaly bus) to work. My rent is now 1/3 of that in Boston and my travel time is the same as before. Of course, my commute also contributes to the traffic problem. I am 55 miles south - commute ranges from 60 to 90 minutes. Commute home can take longer at times.
FYI, there is a commuter rail that is planned to extend into the town (Fall River, MA) I live in in a year or two. This was supposed to actually be up and running by now. Unfortunately, the budget for the commuter rail is tied to the Big Dig as well. So when the Big Dig f's up and needs more money, they push back the expansion of said commuter rail.
Exasperating.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
Boston is such a mess, and so bureaucratic that the only new housing is for the insanely rich because its such a bother to get anything built.
ostiguy
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
When looking for housing, plan on competing with students for it, including internatational students who seem to have more money than God.
If you don't secure a place to live in May, you will have a difficult time finding anything other than a complete sh1thole for $1500 a month ($2000 if you want 2 bedrooms). Don't forget that you will pay at least $100 a month for parking.
Subways fine, "Trolleys" suck (Score:3, Informative)
This was useful when all employment/shopping was downtown, but presents some problems as the economy spread from downtown Boston. If you are going anywhere that requires switching trains, you will be spending a minimum of 30-45 minutes on your trip. Busses can help with this, as they cut between different lines, but until a few months ago the route numbers weren't posted and the website remains difficult to use. While commuters can figure out the busses to simplify their commute, it simply isn't practical for an individual trip.
Beyond that, the system gets really slow. I live out on the Green Line, which is the most residential of the trains. After Kenmore Square, they become "Trolley lines" that are above ground, but have a dedicated area for their tracks. This means that the trains can't pass one another if one gets bogged down, and there is no meaningful way to run express trains.
The road system is a collection of disasters because of Boston's heritage. Boston is unable to rework their roads without shutting down the city, and an execessive number of buildings are declared historical, stopping progress.
On top of that, the elevated central artery, which the big dig will replace, cuts through Boston. Now ask yourself who would want to live right near a highway (and walk underneath it), and you realize why the Central Artery trashed the neighborhoods. Walking under a highway is a strange thing, and it cuts neighborhoods apart. This results in social costs in excess of the traffic.
Part of the problem with the subway system is that it is too slow. Even in Rush Hour, it is faster to drive then take the subways. If the trains go above ground (the Green Line), they are stuck waitting for lights like cars, and they have a 30 MPH limit (same as the official speed limit) plus they need to stop.
An additional problem is the system only runs trains once every 10 minutes (most busses are every 30 minutes). This makes the subway painful for short trips. If you are only going a few stops, you might spend 15 minutes waitting for the train for a 5 minute trip.
Boston has transportation nightmares. Unlike New York, that does construction at night, all road construction is done during the day in Boston, including during Rush Hour. The unionized workers don't have to put in overtime, so sometimes jobs will involve ripping up a street on Thursday/Friday, then MAYBE getting to fix it Monday or Tuesday of the next week. However, if it wasn't planned that way, it may be a week or more before they return with equipment.
The Big Dig will help with the highway crunch, but won't solve the general problems in Boston. The only nice thing will be if the Big Dig does enough, then people will take Highways (they'd be faster than city streets for a change) which might alleviate some of the other traffic. More likely, driving to work in Boston will be more pleasant, so people will get more cars bringing us back to the status quo.
Well, at least the friends of the powerful were able to buy all the slumlands next to the highway that is about to become parkland. They're going to make a fortune on those luxury apartment complexes that used to be crack houses or slums.
Alex
Re:Subways fine, "Trolleys" suck (Score:2)
They could get around this by "expressing" trains on the lines. For example, every once in a while, you can get a Red Line from Park St. direct to Harvard (skipping three stops). I've also been on a Green Line D train that expressed from Fenway to Resivoir. I have no idea why they don't do this more often, particularly for Sox home games. The killer is when the driver has to deal with a rider in a wheelchair: the operator has to get out of the train, find a manually operated lift at the station (which looks like it was slapped together by the kids at the local vocational school), wheel the rider onto the thing, crank it up to car-height, let the rider wheel on, and then crank the thing down, fold it back up, and put it away. This operation takes at least five minutes, thereby delaying all of the cars behind it. Some stops have ramps that help this somewhat, but the operator has to pull the train to the exact location of the ramp, etc. I have nothing against the wheelchair people, but the T should be doing a better job expediting this process.. Many of these transfer process are manual: for example, when a train starts its journey from the Lechmere stop, the operator has to pull the train up, get out of the train, find The Crowbar, and manually switch the tracks. This operation has to be done at least once every ten minutes, if a train leaves from the alternate set of tracks.
But, if a train does die on the tracks, they typically have "crossovers" every couple hundred of feet.. (This may not be true of the B/C/E lines, which run down Comm./Beacon/Huntington though.)
Unlike New York, that does construction at night, all road construction is done during the day in Boston, including during Rush Hour.
That's not entirely true... They work at night, particularly on Rte. 128, but sometimes up on I-93, too.
Re:Subways fine, "Trolleys" suck (Score:2)
Re:Subways fine, "Trolleys" suck (Score:2)
Quoting from their website [bigdig.com]:
I think they've done fairly admirably in this respect. To this end, they also have sound level testers who make sure that equipment used at night is run at a low enough level so as not to affect those sleeping nearby. They use specifically-designed shielding at the project where they work at night to dampen both noise and vibrations. In fact, maybe they've been doing such a good job at keeping it quiet that you didn't even think they were working..In the meantime, I also think a 15 year plan for a project this huge is reasonable and something still totally within their reach....software delays or otherwise. It's also interesting to note that a majority of the land recovered by removing the Central Artery's above-ground eyesore is going to be returned to the city in the form of parks/trees/grass as opposed to being auctioned out as lots for more building.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
As a "car-free by choice" Boston-area resident: fuck, no.
The MBTA is massively erratic. Different lines (both bus and subway) get different levels of service. Most of the other commentators in this thread have talked about the Green Line, which is abysmal (runs *in* traffic on several routes). I live on the northern arm of the Red Line, which is fantastic; however, it splits into two southern arms which are, definitionally, half the frequency of the unified northern arm. Thus it takes a Harvard professor half the wait to get a train to Boston Common as it does a housewife in Fields Corrner, despite them both being "on the Red Line". The Orange line is fast, but is essentially a commuter line, connecting impoverished residental areas to downtown; at times it is no more frequent than every 20 min, and is usually overcrowded and filthy. And so on.
The busses are a valient attempt to make something work in what must be the most bus-inimicable metro area in the US. But they still suck. For comparison, the MUNI in SF publishes (or did when I lived there 10 ya) a massive book of bus schedules, to which the busses run, +/- 2 minutes; it had many "timed connections" throughout the city whereby one bus would not leave a certain stop until another bus had dropped of (transferring) passengers. That's inconceivable in Boston. There are NO timed connections, in the entire bus system. You have *no* idea when one bus drops you off when the next bus will really be along. Busses regularly get 5 or 10 minutes behind schedule -- in part because this is traffic hell, and there's nothing to be done about it.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
As far as the overall effectiveness of the T, I've been pretty impressed. It's cheap and works; beats mass transit here in Grand Rapids hands-down of course, but also bests the CTA (just got kicked off the L this weekend "no trains further north tonight, sorry") and, IMO, the Washington Metro--which is pretty nice but infrequent and expensive.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:4, Interesting)
The Big Dig has indeed been going on for over a decade now. As a Boston resident, I'm definitely tired of it. But to be fair, it's not behind schedule simply due to incompetant beaurocrats (although there are plenty of those). The project itself is the single most complex undertaking of civil engineering in the history of the U.S. Any project of this scale is going to have delays.
They actually have a pretty good website [bigdig.com] It has a really neat gallery of huge aerial photos, as well as some great maps of the whole thing. A good time-waster, if you enjoy looking at maps.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:3, Interesting)
Not only did the project go over budget by a big chunk, but a big chunk has been unaccounted for (or was during the days when I was spending about three weeks out of every eight in Boston, days which came to an end 15 months ago).
No one knows for sure where all the money has gone, though anyone familiar with Boston is not surprised nor unable to make a few guesses.
Re:The Big Dig (Score:2)
Another big improvement is that there are few exits in the new tunnel, so people going through town will take the tunnel and not have to slow down for people entering and exiting, and people going in or out of Boston will use the surface roads. Hopefully by segregating traffic this way things will move more smoothly but who knows.
The subway situation is, as you say, terrible. The worst crime of the Big Dig is the lack of North Station/South Station rail connection. I had to tell some scared young girls traveling by themselves at South Station the other day that they had to get on the Red Line, then change to the Orainge Line to get to North Station. They almost cried, and this situation isn't going to change when the Big Dig is done. I hate the silver line (bus) too, but at least it's an option where there wasn't one before.
Finally, I walk to work from Boston to Cambridge and I think more people should try this, or at least take public transportation. Even if it takes the same amount of time, riding the train leaves you free to read or play with Linux on your laptop. Isn't that better than sitting in traffic?
Project Management (Score:2, Interesting)
Project managers unable to handle scope creep may demand unreasonable schedules, but thank Cthulhu in this instance that they are not deploying the code ahead of time and deciding to patch it later!
Software holdups...? That's kinda silly. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Software holdups...? That's kinda silly. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Software holdups...? That's kinda silly. (Score:2)
Perhaps I imagine long strands of fiber optics or ethernet cables with the ability to plug arbitrary devices at the ends. Allow for high enough bandwidth, and even if you have to sit on driving technology to catch up, you still know how much data you can pump through a fiber.
It'd be really, really, really sad if no one planned the project out, or even worse, planned it out in such a way that it depended on specific transport media. Test labs and simulations ought to go a long way for telling if something is scalable.
Re:Software holdups...? That's kinda silly. (Score:2)
What I gathered from the article was that both software developers AND cable-pullers were running late, not that the pullers were late because of the developers.
The pullers were probably delayed by the flooding in the temporary Fort Point Channel tunnels, as was everyone else.
It can happen (Score:3, Funny)
favorite quote (Score:5, Funny)
Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:2)
Boston was hurting in a big way (pun intended) due to trying to cram 1980s traffic down 1700s streets. Something had to be done. Whether the Big Dig was the right thing or not, and how efficently it was carried out, can be debated. But let's not bring poor old Dwight into it!
sPh
Re:Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:5, Informative)
Boston had already jumped the gun, and spent their own cash building their SkyWay, which turned out to be an utter piece of crap.
So in the 70s they realized it was worthless, it divided the city in half, was ugly as hell, and couldn't support anywhere near the amount of traffic they had. So they came up with the idea of moving it all underground.
Now, they couldnt afford it. So they went to congress with the notion that "hey, we didn't use up our eisenhower dollars, so you can give them to us now".
Critics noted that Eisenhower wasn't president anymore, and the dollars for the Interstate plan at the time were a 'use it or lose it' type of thing. Many cities and states didn't use their entire allotment - they can't just go to congress now and ask them to pony up the dough.
They got preliminary approval, but then Reagan scrapped it, calling it pork-barrel politics. Which it was.
Funding was eventually re-approved, and here we go. Pissing away billions to correct a localised inconvenience.
Most non-bostonians call it the Money Pit.
Re:Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:2, Funny)
I've always thought of it as "our local answer to corn subsidies."
At least we're not being paid NOT to build a highway.
Re:Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:2)
Actually, that is exactly what happened. Boston didn't want to make the sacrifices needed to have a real freeway going through downtown. Now they come up with the idea of an underground freeway, to not have to relocate anyone. This is crazy. Instead of having to make the hard decisions, billions upon billions of dollars are spent on a luxury that is only affordable because the federal government is funding it. If every city decided they wanted to move their freeway underground at great expense do you think that MA would support it?
Re:Why Federal $$$ Are Being Used. (Score:3, Funny)
Clearly, this is a design claim that needs to be tested. I'll call the military.
Not reassuring (Score:2)
Says the Boston Glob article: "Project engineers are more optimistic than the auditors."
Oh. Okay then.
Tolls (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Tolls (Score:3, Informative)
Though I would much prefer higher gas tax an no tolls whatsoever. The Mass Pike is a huge patronage system that exists primarily for the sake of providing perks for the powerful and connected. (Note, for example, that they didn't reduce the number of tolltakers when over half of the cars now use automatic EZ-Pass style transponders.)
Re:Tolls (Score:2)
When I'm elected supreme dictator of Massachusetts, I'll disband the Turnpike Authority and use gas taxes to fund the roads.
Re:Tolls (Score:2)
The westernmost stretch of I-90 is "zero-cent toll." When we drive from Albany to my mother-in-law's, we get a ticket a few miles past the NY/MA border, and then hand the ticket to a real person when we get off.
The RIGHT way to do this would be to scrap all of the "zero-toll" booths and build one "everyone stops" booth midway through the state. Or to charge tolls (even small ones) for the western stretch.
When I'm elected supreme dictator of Massachusetts, I'll disband the Turnpike Authority and use gas taxes to fund the roads.
When I am granted supreme godlike power and rulership of the world, remind me to 'elect' you as supreme dictator of MA.
Re:Tolls (Score:2)
Local politics are going nuts over this...
We don't have a choice (Score:2)
Alex
Of course.. (Score:2, Flamebait)
Then they're the first to be blamed when the entire project is late.
Unlike the other aspects of this project, they can't gauge progress or work yet to be completed based on tons of dirt moved, or number of steel beams installed.
So when Skeeter McPencilneck comes along to audit the project, he can't see a little progress chart with solid numbers, and of course its the software team to blame.
I'm reminded of a story one of my prof's told me, slightly off-topic but shows how 'real world' managers deal with coders.
Some General was overseeing the design and creation of a new fighter plane, and was busy going from team to team measuring the weight of every last nut and bolt used so he could nail down the operating specs.
So he gets to the software control team, and asks them "how much does your part of the system weigh?"
The team replies "Well, nothing sir"
The General is incredulous and miffed at the answer. He storms around the office until he finds a pile of punchcards. He holds them up and says "A-Ha. These have weight! You lied to me."
And the team replies "No, sir. The software isn't the punchcards - it's the holes in them"
Sidebar:
That city should have had to just stick with the useless skyway they pissed away all their dollars on. What a waste.
Lots of cities have terrible traffic problems. I'm stuck halfway between Baltimore and D.C., both could use a new multi-billion dollar traffic infrastructure.
Re:Of course.. (Score:3, Insightful)
And when the Big Dig is finished, and Baltimore, D.C., Manhattan, Detroit, Chicago, London, Paris, Tokyo, etc. see how cool it is, they'll know how to do it because we'll show them how.
Re:Of course.. (Score:2)
Well, D.C. at least is getting a nearly-a-billion-dollar infrastructure improvement: the redesigned Mixing Bowl [springfiel...change.com].
Clean Air (Score:3, Funny)
I-93 (Score:5, Funny)
It's funny. Laugh. (Score:2)
This is quite possibly the funniest thing I have ever read on slashdot. "Open on time"?!?!?!? How can you say that for a project that is already years behind schedule and billions (or maybe just millions) of dollars over budget?!
More roads (Score:5, Funny)
Re:More roads (Score:2)
Re:More roads (Score:2)
e.g.: the U.S. inching towards a police state and manufacturing consent for GulfWar2 in order to combat the "evildoing terrorists", rather than reexamining years of arrogant foreign policy that pisses these millions of people off while we pretend to think they're just "jealous" of our freedom.
--
I'm a programmer in BigDig... (Score:5, Informative)
The problem starts with the fact that we are the second contractor to pickup this problem, and we are required to adapt the first contractor's software to our needs. The software we have been given to work with is shoddy, badly coded, and still targets VAX C (even though it runs on an Alpha). Problems tend to crop up, and no one here really understands the system, including our contractors from the original system.
We also have all sorts of problems hiring (due to problems both on our side and their side of the table). We are never given enough money or time, and everyone here is vastly overworked.
The CA/T (Central Artery/Tunnel, or the BigDig) doesn't understand our needs or concerns, and getting help from them and their reps is like pulling teeth. Its like going to a frickin' Wrestling match, with petty arguments and name calling and bullshit all around.
Their requirements are frequently illogical and unclear, meaning time has to be spent on fixing the requirments that could better be spend on coding. We have all sorts of reliablity problems with the Alphas and assoicated hardware. It also takes about a pound of paper work and 3 days to be able to do anythign to the production systems in Boston.
The project is just one political mess, and to be honset, we are the CA/T's bitch, and get blamed for anything. The truth is that ev eryone is behind schedule, and that even if we are late deliviering, it will not matter because the tunnel will not be physically completed anyway. Kinda hard for the software to work if there's nothing out there for it to work with.
Ok, enough ranting for now. Feel free to reply or e-mail questions.
Mod parent up. (Score:4, Informative)
Yet you have time to read /. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yet you have time to read /. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yet you have time to read /. (Score:2)
If you can multitask, then you can be doing twice as much work..
*Whipping sound.. Drum beats..*
Re:Yet you have time to read /. (Score:2)
Re:Yet you have time to read /. (Score:2, Funny)
Besides, I'm only the intern. Its not like I'm important *rolls eyes*
Re:I'm a programmer in BigDig... (Score:5, Funny)
* It's not our fault, it's the previous contractor's.
* It's not our fault, it's management.
* It's not our fault, it's the client.
* It's not our fault, the requirement are fuzzy.
* It's not our fault, it's the politics.
Well, bad news, bucko: Welcome to the software industry. You've just used up your quota of excuses. You cannot bitch about a project until the next fical year.
rOD.
Re:I'm a programmer in BigDig... (Score:2, Interesting)
I still think they picked a known faulty booster to ensure the finger of doom pointed away from "the good guys".
Re:I'm a programmer in BigDig... (Score:4, Funny)
Oh come on, four-star software sounds pretty good to me. You're scoring it on a five-star scale, right?
Re:I'm a programmer in BigDig... (Score:2)
If time would better be spent on coding, shouldn't you just code to the requirements you're given?
(grinning, ducking, and running)
Clever sig
Easy (Score:3, Funny)
You make the polling configurable as suggested by the requirements - of course the only option you can choose when configuring is... 3 seconds!
Then when they ask to add to the range, you note that the entire system was built around requirement (1), and that you'll need one year to add any other options.
Unless of course for brevity you've left out that the operator had to be able to change the polling to a certain range of values. Then you're toast.
Seriously though, good luck to all of you - I've been in projects with requirements like that before.
Boston's Big Dig Delayed because of Slashdot? (Score:4, Funny)
A survey of the projects network logs showed that queries to the Slashdot website occured at an average interval of 37 seconds, or 3 minutes and 5 seconds per user assigned to the project.
Project spokesmen indicated that a planned installation of software to curb employee access to the website has been delayed due to lack of available programmers to do the installation.
Fred Brooks on Projects... (Score:2)
Re:Fred Brooks on Projects... (Score:2)
The original central artery was built as an elevated roadway which divides the city, looks horrible, and sucks to drive on.
The big dig *is* v2.0. The complexity of this project is mostly due to the fact that it is being built on and around the existing patchwork (v 1.99.99 ?)
The web page looked fine (Score:2)
Maps and Pictures (Score:2)
http://www.boston.com/beyond_bigdig/ [boston.com] (Warning: Flash) for extensive information
or the 'official' web site at:
http://www.bigdig.com/ [bigdig.com] for more information
Ummm. how about this... (Score:2)
psxndc
Sure, blame the programmers. (Score:2)
Nah. Just blame the computer geeks.
Re:Sure, blame the programmers. (Score:2, Interesting)
Quote (Score:2)
"Compressed testing period" means they're behind schedule, and they're going to cut corners actually testing their stuff. Bad bad bad.
I've never heard of a "compressed" schedule actually working. It usually means that the programmers submitted a schedule detailing how long things would take, and management turned around and rewrote the schedule to hit a specific target date. It means the schedule is a fantasy made up to satisfy some PHB.
I know my taxes go into a big hole in the ground.. (Score:5, Funny)
Big Mess (Score:2, Insightful)
I was in Japan a couple of times over the past few years. Now.. thats a well oiled commuter system. Their trains are clean, efficient, and more environmentally friendly than these loud diesel spewing smoke machine Amtrak monsters they use. Most of all, the trains are FAST and ON TIME. Their schedules are like clockwork, no and's or's or butt's. If it says it'll be there every 3 minutes.. a train is there every 3 minutes. Boston's train sytem sucks so bad, they had to put in a refund policy. If your train is 20.. yes thats TWENTY minutes late, you'll get your one way fare refuned. Whee. So generous.Did I mention? I was chronically late at least twice a month due to a broken down commuter train. That includes the other some thousands of other commuters that were delayed too. Every summer.. get a nice hot day, BLAM. Dead train. Ever sit in a train for 1 hour with no air condidioning? It gets up to like 100 degrees+. That consistently happens.
Now.. by the time they finish the Big Dig, the sprawl growing outside of the city will proportionately increase automobile traffic. By the time they are done, they'll need to expand once again. So when are we suppose to see any benefit?
OK.. one good thing. My company moved away from the city. About 1 hour west. I now live in the sticks and have a nice commute. The day I moved was the happiest day of my life.
Oh by the way.. my father worked for the MBTA for a number of years.. and my wife's cousin works for the rail lines in Japan around Kobe/Osaka. Ever hear of a train that senses the number of passengers onboard, and automatically adjusts the airconditioning systems appropriately? Well.. they have it in Japan.
Re:Can't be "on time" (Score:2, Informative)
And no, it's not behind schedule. The original plans were for 1994, but those got scrapped as the project got bigger and they realized exactly how long it would take. So based on the revised finalized schedule that was released about 1 year into the project, it's still on time. Sure, not on time based on the initial predictions which were way too optomistic, these deadlines are based on reality.
Re:Can't be "on time" (Score:3, Funny)
So why don't they just ask the geeks how long the software will be, and then push it back again?
Re:Can't be "on time" (Score:2)
Re:IWNRTFA (Score:4, Informative)
The Big Dig is a massive highway tunneling and reconstruction project to solve some of the serious gridlock problems Boston has. Since Boston competes with New York for convention attendance, this is relevant to many business travelers. (And MacWorld was once held there, and my be held there again.)
I know this, and I'm not even from there! You see the Dig mentioned regularly on other news sites from time to time; been going on for years now.
Re:IWNRTFA (Score:2)
Re:IWNRTFA (Score:2)
I dunno, it might become quicker to get from Copley to the airport using the Pike instead of surface streets.. going westbound I don't remember seeing an exit 22, now that I think of it.
Re:IWNRTFA (Score:4, Funny)
Kinda chaps your quiddick, don't it?
more like: (Score:3, Funny)
2. Chill out for about 20 years. Take your time doing anything. Make sure you hugely overstep your price quote.
3. PROFIT !!
Re:Why Should You Care? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's likely due to the fact that the road involved is Interstate 93, which is grossly incapable of handling the current traffic loads through downtown Boston. The fact that it's an Interstate means that the Federal Government funds a portion of the construction.
Re:Why Should You Care? (Score:2)
Re:Why Should You Care? (Score:2)
I93 runs from Northern NH straight through Boston to I95. It is also currently a parking lot for most of the day/night. Funding the Big Dig is quite akin to what *will* happen to the Atlanta Connector within the next few years. Interstates that run through major cities get enormous amounts of trucking and car travel. They need upkeep.
They need upkeep. (Score:2)
The most cost effieient solution to the traffic problem, as seen in most cities, is an interstate BYPASS. BTW, part of this project included building the bypass. So, federal dollars paying to beautify Boston and make it more tourist friendly is nothing more than pork. Even PBS came to that conclusion.
Regan the democrat.... (Score:5, Insightful)
See those things waving at you in the distance ? They are the Facts, wander over and see them some time.
Facts back At You...Veto Override (Score:5, Informative)
U.S. Senator who ensured the passage of the Surface Transportation and Uniform Relocation Assistance Act of 1987. This act included the federal funding for the Big Dig. President Ronald Reagan had vetoed this bill earlier that year. The senate voted to sustain this veto. Senator Kennedy allied with West Virginian Senator Robert Byrd to force a revote in the senate to override Reagan's veto. The revote was approved. At that point Kennedy and others put pressure on the deciding vote, namely, Senator Terry Sanford of N. Carolina. They threatened to pull tobacco subsidies to North Carolinian farmers. Under this pressure, Sen. Terry Sanford changed his vote and the Big Dig bill became law in April of 1987.
Re:Regan the democrat.... (Score:2)
It is a well established fact that the Republican party and the Facts are well separated. The Democrats are closer to them, but just keep their eyes closed and keep an imaginary version of reality in their mind's eye.
Re:Regan the democrat.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe the Dems held congress during the Regan, and Bush(41) administrations. It was probably like "Mr. President, we won't pass your defense appropriation if you don't pass our pork barrel highway through Boston".
Presidents DON'T control the budget (Score:3, Insightful)
The President only gets to sign or veto whole spending bills. They have little control over the specifics. Presidents can send it back and say "you have spent too much" but it is politically impossible for him to say "take this out, put this in, take these 3 things out, put these two in". That is why I wish the President had a line-item budget veto. A Republican congress tried to give a Democrat president (Clinton) but was overturned on Constitutional grounds (probably for good technical reasons). But I wish they would amend the Constitution on this one.
Brian Ellenberger
Re:Regan the democrat.... (Score:2)
I do not think that word means what you think it means. [gop.com]
Re:Big Mess. (Score:4, Interesting)
You need weasly city planners.
For example. The federal govt WILL help pay for Interstate and intrastate highways. Around here, there's a lot of renaming of roads so the feds help rebuild/repave them. They do have to be used as 'Hwy 200' for a certain period of time before they can become eligable, but it's a way to get more money to widen/improve an older road.
Either that, or the people who setup the road system did a really poor job. Considering I sometimes have to wait 25min for a train by my house, on a 4 lane intrastate hwy, I wouldn't entirely rule out past incompetance.
Re:Big Mess. (Score:3, Troll)
The Reagan administration vetoed the fed funding for this project calling it a huge pork barrel.
Our senior U.S. Senator, a big fat pork expert, managed to push it through.
Whenever there's a bridge in the news, you can expect to see the name Ted Kennedy.
Re:Somehow, I don't believe it. (Score:2)
If there's Mob influence going on in the Big Dig, it's on the QT -- the New England organized crime scene has been a shambles for years (two words: "Where's Whitey?"). No, IMHO it's just a whole lot of people on the take on their own behalf. Linkage funds indeed... I'd be willing to bet the Dig budget would be half as much as it is if it wasn't for "linkage".