California High-Speed Rail2018-04-16T15:48:56-08:00

California High-Speed Rail

The California High-Speed Rail (HSR) project carried a $40 billion price tag when first approved by voters in 2008. Eight years later, the government authority running the project estimated it will cost $64 billion. A revised business plan issued in March 2018 upped the cost to $77 billion and pushed the project back five years to 2033.

As outlined in the “Safe, Reliable High-Speed Passenger Train Bond Act for the 21st Century,” the HSR project will build approximately 800 miles of track up and down the state, connecting together most of the state’s large cities with up to 24 different stations.

Phase 1 promises a 2-hour and 40-minute ride between San Francisco’s Transbay Terminal and Los Angeles’ Union Station.

The project is expected to open in legs. The first, connecting San Jose to the Central Valley, is scheduled to begin passenger service in 2025. The second leg – expected to open in 2029 – will build out tracks from San Jose to San Francisco’s Transbay Terminal, including a Peninsula stop in Millbrae; and south from Bakersfield to Anaheim, with stops in Palmdale, Downtown Los Angeles, and at Burbank Airport.

The proposed timeline on the later extensions of the project aren’t as definite, but the state plans to add a 110-mile Sacramento extension, connecting to Modesto and Stockton on its way, and a 167-mile segment that snakes east from Los Angeles through the San Gabriel Valley to the Inland Empire, and eventually down south to San Diego.

The High-Speed Rail Authority officially broke ground on the project in Fresno in 2015. Since then, construction crews have been working on a 119-mile segment of track in the Central Valley. Recently the rail authority reported $1.7 billion in cost overruns on the Central Valley segment.

As a measure to reduce project costs, the rail authority says it may abandon plans to build multi-million-dollar safety barriers near freight train tracks to prevent crashes and reduce the train’s speed in urban areas instead.

The California Legislature’s Audit Committee recently voted unanimously to audit the HSR Authority’s budget and expenditures.

Angelica Obioha, Infrastructure-Info Staff

Gov. Brown Champions High-Speed Rail Even Though It’s Billions Over Budget

CBS » California Governor Jerry Brown went to bat Thursday for the bullet train, insisting that high-speed rail will be built even though the project is billions of dollars over budget already. Recent revelations that the first segment, currently being built in the Central Valley, is over budget by 35 percent. For a total of $10.6 billion. During his address Thursday, he implied that billion dollar cost overruns are just part of the process.

January 26, 2018|

Brown Defends His Vision for America’s First Electric High-Speed Rail

Greentech Media » Approved with a ballot measure in 2008, the 800-mile high-speed rail system would wend through the state and connect cities in the Central Valley, the Bay Area, Los Angeles, and eventually San Diego and the Inland Empire to the south and east of L.A. California plans completion of all legs by 2029 at a cost in the mid-$60-billion range — but the project has already been snagged by a series of budget overruns, delays, legal challenges and federal grant complications. 

January 25, 2018|

Is high-speed rail dying? 2018 could be a crucial year for the troubled project

The Fresno Bee » Beset by litigation, delays, cost increases, consistent political opposition, leadership turnover and no small degree of public skepticism, the agency acknowledged the upward lurch in the predicted cost to from $7.8 billion in 2016 to $10.6 billion now will only further stoke concerns over whether the ambitious plan to develop and build a system of electric trains will ever reach fruition.

January 17, 2018|

California high-speed rail blows past another deadline

The Orange County Register » The rail authority was able to meet one deadline — all the stimulus funds were spent by September 30, 2017. But that was also the deadline for completing construction of an initial segment. Recently the rail authority admitted to $1.7 billion in cost overruns on the 119-mile segment in the Central Valley, making the project 27 percent over budget.

October 7, 2017|
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