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California Abandons $250 Billion Study On Why It Has So Many Unfinished Projects

California's $250 billion study looking into why it has so many unfinished projects was abandoned while only half-finished, the governor's office confirmed Friday.

Governor Gavin Newsom shuttered the project, citing concerns that it had gone dramatically over budget and was well behind schedule in its efforts to determine why so many of the state's construction projects were dramatically over budget and behind schedule.

"We're going to quit looking into why we quit doing everything," Newsom said. "It's just too hard to figure out where all the money is going. Look, I'm dyslexic, and that makes reading hard. And, though I haven't really tried, I'm pretty sure math is hard, too."

The California Accountability Project has now joined such failed endeavors as the California High-Speed Rail Project, the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing Development, and the Stop Letting the State Burn Down Initiative.

Newsom denied requests by the media to review paperwork related to the study, arguing that the unfinished work makes him look really bad. "It would be unfair to let you see it," he said. "To me, especially. For all we know, the study could have concluded that there was a very good reason the projects weren't finished. But now we'll never know."

At publishing time, a criminal investigation into widespread fraud throughout the state of California was also abandoned halfway through.
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California is 5th in GDP per capita; your native Florida is 35th. Maybe you guys could learn something from CA🤣😂


https://www.visualcapitalist.com/mapped-u-s-states-by-gdp-per-capita/
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@ElwoodBlues A lot of good that income is doing anybody.

@sunsporter1649 Oh, I forgot that you don't have homelessness in FLA


sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@ElwoodBlues The difference is that the homeless in Florida choose to be homeless, unlike your oh so wonderful commiefornia

@sunsporter1649 says
The difference is that the homeless in Florida choose to be homeless,
Oh really?? There are homes waiting for them and they said "no thanks"???

Have you got any evidence for this absurdity???

Oh, wait, you want me to post some photos of homes destroyed due to inadequate building codes in FLA, right??





sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@ElwoodBlues Building permits promply issues, majority of folks and businesses rebuilt, economy booming. Let us know the next time a building permit is issued, and when there will be water in the fire hydrants.

[media=https://youtu.be/uEnGXccyYAw]
@sunsporter1649 Oh you mean insured with federally subsidized insurance and rebuilt with FEMA money contributed by federal taxpayers?? Only to be knocked down in the next storm??


And which towns in FLA are so badly constructed that they get knocked down repeatedly, and rebuilt with federal FEMA money repeatedly??

Sanibel Island & Fort Myers Beach: Suffered intense damage from Hurricane Ian (2022) and were again battered by Helene and Milton (2024).

Horseshoe Beach & Big Bend Area: This region was impacted by three hurricanes in 13 months, including Idalia, Debby, and Helene, destroying many homes.

Steinhatchee: Suffered catastrophic damage from multiple "one-two punch" storms, notably Helene and Debby, bringing record surge.

Sarasota/Siesta Key/Casey Key: Sustained significant damage from Milton and Helene in 2024, causing structural collapses and infrastructure failure.

Pinellas County (Treasure Island/St. Pete Beach): Experienced extreme flooding from multiple 2024 hurricanes, displacing thousands.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@ElwoodBlues December 5, 2024

Today, Governor Ron DeSantis announced the award of $7.8 million in additional funding from the Florida Disaster Fund to communities hit by Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

“Florida sees disaster recovery through to the end, and thanks to our state’s good financial standing, we are able to help those who were devastated by hurricanes this year,” said Governor Ron DeSantis. “I’m pleased to make these awards today in our continued efforts to help Floridians get back to normalcy.”

The award includes $500,000 for school district foundations to support teachers and support staff who worked to get schools back open just days after the storms. Fifty thousand each will go toward Lafayette and Hamilton counties for Hurricane Helene and $100,000 each to Charlotte, Citrus, Hernando, and Polk counties for Hurricane Milton. This $500,000 is in addition to the more than $750,000 already provided to school district support foundations in Florida that were affected by these hurricanes this season.

Governor DeSantis also announced the award of $300,000 to support Florida’s first responders, who worked tirelessly after landfall to search, rescue, and keep the peace. This is in addition to $400,000 previously awarded to support first responders this season, for a total of $700,000. Governor DeSantis today awarded $100,000 each to the following groups:

Police Benevolent Association
Fraternal Order of Police
Florida Sheriffs Association

The Governor also today announced the award of $7 million to help Floridians repair and rebuild homes damaged by the storms. These awards are amplified by partnerships with companies like Home Depot and not-for-profits that perform muck and gut and repair operations on affected homes.

Following Hurricane Ian in 2022, over 1,250 homes were repaired, and over 51,000 volunteer hours were volunteered through similar housing repair awards from the Florida Disaster Fund.



And commiefornia builds a bridge for butterflys.

@sunsporter1649 says
award of $7.8 million
Federal taxpayers, via FEMA, subsidized FLA's poor construction practices to the tune of $2.1 billion over the last ten years. That's $210 million/year, and it doesn't include the flood insurance subsidy. The state contribution is less than 4% of the federal contribution.

You guys would be up the creek without federal subsidies!!


sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@ElwoodBlues Hows that super railroad coming along?