The Washington Beacon is reporting that House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi steered over a billion dollars toward projects of a hedge fund owned by billionaire Tom Steyer. At the same time, Steyer has been a constant donor to the political efforts of Pelosi.
Ten years ago, the hedge fund Steyer founded and led until late 2012, Farallon Capital Management, bought large plots of real estate in Mission Bay, an up-and-coming neighborhood in San Francisco. Since then Mission Bay has blossomed, while Farallon has sold most of its property there. Steyer has used his fortune to donate to Democratic senators and governors and has promised not only to raise $50 million for global warming causes, but also to convince other money men to donate another $50 million. The Beacon reports:
By last year, Pelosi had steered more than a billion dollars in federal financing to San Francisco’s Third Street light rail project, which provided Mission Bay with previously unavailable public transit access.Obviously this brought additional value to the two parcels of Mission Bay property Farallon still owns. But in 2005 the city's Municipal Transportation Agency's analysis of the Third Street light rail expansion found that the project would be wasteful and inefficient.
The bulk of that financing came in 2012, months before Steyer gave up day-to-day control at Farallon (he remains invested in Farallon funds). Pelosi announced that she had helped secure $967 million to expand San Francisco’s Central Subway system.
“With nearly $130 million from the Recovery Act and $18 million from across the federal government, the project will use public investments to spur and stimulate the private sector; adding jobs and creating a better environment for business,” Pelosi said in a statement announcing the funding.
Her support was more than just financial. Pelosi went out of her way to expedite federal backing for the project in the face of bureaucratic hurdles designed to ensure responsible stewardship of taxpayer funds.
"As proposed, this project … promises to combine high capital costs with higher operating costs and … does not, apparently, effectively meet the market needs in the corridor it is intended to serve,” found Thomas Matoff, the former director of transit planning for the city who led the study.By the time Pelosi gathered and distributed the pork for the project, Mission Bay real estate values were soaring.
That finding posed a problem for the project, which was required to meet Federal Transit Authority standards for cost-effectiveness in order to secure federal subsidies.
Pelosi got the project an exemption from those standards in a 2005 transportation funding bill.
Despite projected inefficiencies, the project was expected to stimulate real estate prices in the surrounding area, even if it did so through de facto taxpayer subsidies.
Steyer ended up donating more than $100,000 to Democrats during the 2012 election cycle.
2 comments:
But, But.... didn't Jews just discover Israel in 1947?? That's what a lot of American's think.....
The photograph of the British facing up to Arab rioters in Jerusalem is from the 1936 -38 rebellion NOT 1929. To the 1929 point: Insp Cafferata 's Arab constables deserted and he was faced with trying to hold off the rioters himself with revolver in hand. Interestingly Insp Faraday Arab constables did not desert at Safad which is now forgotten about. The giveaway to the intended image of this presentation - which is not wrong overall about what happened given the reaction-times of the era - is the detail of the Arab messenger arriving by motorcycle ie no public telephones over that distance at that time. The British had phones or radio for the police and government and did react as quickly as roads and vehicles of the time let them move armoured cars from Sarafand to Jerusalem on the day and troops from Egypt who arrived by rail within two days. HMS Barham and Courageous (battleship & cruiser) from Malta with marines to secure Haifa and stokers to keep the railways moving also arrived within the week according to an exercise within the previous 12 months because of the Yom Kippur incident the previous year. The overall problem was that in the name of finance the garrison of a quiet province had been cut back to just the armoured car unit and RAF squadron and the two battalions worth of gendarmerie (one each of British and local men) had been run down then dispersed by 1927 so there was no on call reserve security force beyond the local normal level of policing.
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