Study supports high-speed rail
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An economic study being released by backers of a 220-mph bullet train proposal on the November ballot says the high-speed rail line would boost economic growth in the region, reduce unemployment and pump up tax revenue.
Research by Philip J. Romero, a dean and economics professor at Cal State L.A., found that the economy would grow up to 4%, with new jobs created to build, run and maintain the 800-mile rail network.
Romero’s study is one of half a dozen conducted in regions along the proposed route. As envisioned by boosters, the $45-billion system would run from San Diego to Orange County and Los Angeles, up the Central Valley and into the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento.
-- Eric Bailey
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