Los Angeles Times

Metrolink is heading to Perris

The 91 line will expand with four new stops, including one in Moreno Valley.

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In its first major expansion since 1994, the Metrolink commuter railroad that serves Southern California is converting 24 miles of an old freight route to passenger service between Riverside and Perris.

The $248-million project will extend Metrolink’s 91 Line to new stations in north Riverside, Moreno Valley, downtown Perris and south Perris.

After years of planning and a lawsuit that temporaril­y blocked the proposal, constructi­on finally began in October 2013. Passenger service could begin as early as October, two months ahead of schedule, officials said.

“We’ve wanted to see Metrolink out here for a long time,” said Perris Mayor Daryl Busch, vice chairman of the railroad’s board of directors. “We’re looking forward to it. It’s going to be a great asset for the community.”

Metrolink, which now has 512 miles of track and carries an average of about 41,500 riders each weekday, serves Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura counties.

The system was last expanded 21 years ago with the addition of the Antelope Valley Line from Lancaster to L.A.’s Union Station.

The Perris extension will use a section of Southern Pacific Railroad track, which still serves some freight traffic, that was purchased by the Riverside County Transporta­tion Commission in 1993. Safety at railroad crossings will be enhanced, and noise abatement measures will be installed in some neighborho­ods close to the tracks.

The new route is projected to carry about 4,350 riders on weekdays, potentiall­y eliminatin­g thousands of trips on interstate­s 215 and 15 and state routes 60 and 91.

The project includes a 10-mile stretch of double track, along with new gates, raised center dividers, flashing warning devices and pavement markings at rail crossings. Crosswalks for pedestrian­s will be installed at two crossings.

Three crossings — Poarch and Gernert roads in Riverside and 6th Street in Perris — will be closed permanentl­y to traffic, except for emergency vehicles. Sound walls will be added in some areas, and “quiet zones” will be establishe­d in the city of Riverside. Trains entering such areas are prohibited from sounding horns, except in emergencie­s or as required by federal regulation­s.

The cities of Perris and Moreno Valley pushed hard for the added service, said Jeff Lustgarten, a Metrolink spokesman. “Some would like to see service extended all the way to the Coachella Valley, but more analysis and identifica­tion of funding would be needed.”

Planning for the expansion began about 11 years ago, officials say. But the recession and a lawsuit filed by the Friends of Riverside’s Hills, an environmen­tal group, delayed the project.

The lawsuit was settled in July 2013 with requiremen­ts to increase the soundproof­ing of homes near UC Riverside, the preservati­on of wildlife habitat and funding for recreation­al trails in the county’s Box Springs Mountain Reserve.

“This is a critical public transit project that will help Riverside County, as well as all of Southern California,” county Supervisor Marion Ashley said when the case ended. “We’ve always had a great project. This settlement makes it even better.”

At the terminus of the line in south Perris, a 700space park-and-ride facility will serve communitie­s as far south as Temecula, officials predict. In addition, transit buses will connect to the new stations.

Funding for the project has come from the state, a $75-million grant from the Federal Transit Administra­tion and Measure A, Riverside County’s special sales tax for transporta­tion project. The work is expected to generate 4,400 direct and indirect jobs during constructi­on.

 ?? Wally Skalij
Los Angeles Times ?? THE $248-MILLION project, which will add stations in north Riverside, Moreno Valley, downtown Perris and south Perris, could be ready with passenger service as early as October. Above, a Metrolink train crosses an intersecti­on in Santa Fe Springs.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times THE $248-MILLION project, which will add stations in north Riverside, Moreno Valley, downtown Perris and south Perris, could be ready with passenger service as early as October. Above, a Metrolink train crosses an intersecti­on in Santa Fe Springs.

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