Not exactly true. The people on the windward side could still benefit from a standpoint of reduced traffic. Reduced cars on the road can have a ripple of positive effects, I don't think it is fair to suggest it will only have one narrow benefit. The rail could always be added to as well to serve people living in central Oahu for example.
Now don't get me wrong, I have my criticisms of the rail system too but loo at the overall picture, the bad and the good.
you have a good point to which I have a rebuttal to your "reduced cars on the road" argument: Not to digress from my main points stated above but to reiterate a standpoint that I have taken and posted about previously in a different thread: I am willing
of all the west side and central oahu inhabitants who are current vehicle owners and daily vehicle commuters, a large majority will not simply forfeit the utility, convenience, and freedom of their vehicles in order to add to their commute time, decrease the utility of convenience of their owned vehicles, and furthermore pay additional out of pocket costs to use the rail once it is completed.
hypothetical but realistic example: I am a car owner and use it as a daily driver. If i lived in millilani, for example, and all else remained the same, I would NEVER forfeit the utility and convenience of my already owned vehicle to commute to the rail station, which further adds to my commute time at a decreased convenience factor in order to pay $5/one way, or whatever ungodly amount they might start charging, in order to board the rail train to go to work everyday. What if I have a hot date or dinner plans after work? Or an emergency occurs and my (hypothetical) child needs to be picked up from school? I would be kicking myself in the ass saying "why did i take the rail today? Why didn't I drive today?!?!" I would be stuck in town with no options, except the rail, to get back to the millilani, where I would have to commute from the rail stop back to my home.
Furthermore for the active 2aHI preppers here:
what will happen if we have a tsunami warning? sudden earthquake? island-wide flash flood? hurricane? will the rail train still operate?
have these contingencies been made abundantly clear to taxpayers? can folks rely on it to be operative in spite of adverse weather conditions? No, folks cannot. can folks rely on their vehicles and their feet and willpower to get them home in spite of adverse weather conditions? yes, at least more so than the rail.
Furthermore, what if I was a daily rail user, and the rails breaks down one day (much like the zip mobile broke down that one horrendous day of traffic), how the hell am I to get home in a timely and convenient fashion? Bus? $80 uber ride? hell no...
So why invest billions into something for which our political leaders cannot substantiate absolute answers for?
This illustrates the situation that exists for many central and ewa/west side inhabitants who enjoy the convenience and freedom of their vehicles. I am simply putting myself in the shoes of a millilani/ewa/westside inhabitant.
The "ripple effect" is at the most a hopeful outlook.
Everyday the same places are clogged up with traffic at the same times, and many of those places are not west of Red Hill, Fort Shafter, where traffic seems to gather. I've used the traffic function on google maps enough to witness these patterns. How will the rail positively affect traffic in Kahaluu where the same number of people are funneled into the same 2 lane road in order to get back to their homes on east coast (Laie, Punalu`u, Hau`ula, Kualoa, Malaekahana) of oahu? How will the rail positively affect the traffic jam of people into and out of Lanikai? How will the rail positively affect the mass exodus of East siders who primarily use the Pali Highway to get the town? How can those inhabitant benefit directly from the rail? They can't.
The rail does not serve the vast majority of Oahu's neighborhoods.
Through these "narrow" details I am very much analyzing the large picture.
The rail may have multiple benefits but IMO the drawbacks and hassles outweigh them by large margins, and their are zero direct benefits to a vast majority of Oahu's inhabitants (not even talking about non-Oahu inhabitants).