Kuwait Times

California high-speed rail ready to lay some track

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After years of prep work, Gov. Jerry Brown’s finance department decided Friday that California’s $64 billion highspeed rail project is ready to lay some track.

The administra­tion approved the rail authority’s request to spend $2.6 billion on work in the Central Valley. The decision lets the authority ask the state treasurer’s office to sell a portion of the nearly $10 billion in bonds voters approved in 2008 for a bullet train. However, the first 29-mile segment of track isn’t expected to be completed until at least August 2019.

The bullet train’s long-term prospects remain clouded because of uncertaint­y over funding and several pending lawsuits. Significan­t federal help is required, and the Republican-controlled Congress does not support the project. Private money also is needed but none has been secured yet.

The treasurer previously issued $1.15 billion of the bonds that went for administra­tion and on work to connect the new system to existing tracks, leaving the bulk of the money unspent. Finance Director Michael Cohen approved the Central Valley plan while downplayin­g a Federal Railroad Administra­tion risk analysis that included a worst-case scenario for the costs of the project. He instead cited the authority’s more optimistic analysis and an independen­t consultant’s review that he said found that “the cost estimates and contingenc­ies in this plan are reasonable.”

Brown is a vocal advocate of the rail project, and his administra­tion includes the finance department, so Friday’s decision is not surprising. The authority will ask the state treasurer to sell a portion of the bonds this spring to help pay for constructi­on of 119 miles of rail in the Central Valley from Madera to Shafter, authority spokeswoma­n Lisa Marie Alley said.

Cohen delayed a decision on the authority’s related request for $600 million for Caltrain in the San Francisco Bay Area. Bullet trains travel on electrifie­d rails, and the California authority’s business plan calls for the two systems to share lines along the Peninsula Corridor in the Bay Area.

Cohen said in a separate letter that he is waiting because the Federal Transit Administra­tion last month delayed a decision on whether to approve a $650 million federal grant for electrific­ation.

“The state’s substantia­l investment in this critical infrastruc­ture improvemen­t project is ready to move forward, the only remaining piece is action by the federal government on their contributi­on,” Alley said in a statement referring to the Federal Transit Administra­tion’s delay. Congressio­nal Republican­s have urged the administra­tion to reject the applicatio­n, and the agency said last month that it is deferring a ruling until the project is considered as part of President Donald Trump’s budget. Although congressio­nal Republican­s oppose the plan, Trump has previously spoken positively about highspeed rail. —AP

 ??  ?? The supports for a 1,600-foot-viaduct to carry high-speed rail trains across the Fresno River are seen under constructi­on near Madera, Calif. —AP
The supports for a 1,600-foot-viaduct to carry high-speed rail trains across the Fresno River are seen under constructi­on near Madera, Calif. —AP

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