Los Angeles Times

Bullet train has an empty seat to fill

With top executive gone, rail authority looks for new chief to get project back on track.

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

The pressure is on board members at the California High-Speed Rail Authority to replace their chief executive officer, who left his job Friday.

Jeff Morales notified the board and Gov. Jerry Brown in April that he would be leaving, though rumors of his departure were widespread late last year. Morales’ deputy, Dennis Trujillo, left in December and has not yet been replaced.

The departures come amid a faster pace of activity on the project and signs that it is falling behind schedule.

The authority has to prepare its 2018 business plan, which needs to outline how it will attempt to close a gap of more than $40 billion in future funding to complete the Los Angeles-to-San Francisco railroad. The plan will also have to update the project’s $64-billion cost, which was revised downward two years ago amid some internal debate.

The project is building 119 miles of rail structures in the Central Valley, though federal regulators have said it is seven years behind schedule. Officials are also attempting to complete all of the project’s environmen­tal reviews, which were supposed to be completed this year but now have slipped at least one year. The authority is also working to select a private partner who could help operate the initial system if it is completed

by the scheduled start in 2025.

The new chief executive will be entering the job in the middle of these critical developmen­ts.

The board held a closed session May 10 to address the vacancies but did not take any public action. Another closed session is scheduled for the June 14 meeting, authority spokeswoma­n Lisa Marie Alley said.

Alley noted that two senior executive positions were recently filled when the authority named a new chief informatio­n officer and a new chief administra­tive officer, both transfers from other state agencies.

At the same time, the state’s leading consultant WSP USA, formerly known as Parsons Brinckerho­ff, has yet to install a replacemen­t for its project chief, Gary Griggs.

The company issued a statement Friday, saying, “We have selected one of the best qualified, global highspeed rail experts to direct the next phase of this program. The appointmen­t will be announced in the coming weeks and we look forward to moving ahead with this project.”

Leadership of the California bullet train, the nation’s largest civil infrastruc­ture project, should be a coveted position in the world of engineerin­g and constructi­on. Morales was paid nearly $400,000.

But the project subjects its top executives to a political pressure cooker and requires almost nonstop work, according to individual­s close to the situation.

The job is also fraught with political uncertaint­ies and some built-in problems that will fall on the new chief executive’s shoulders.

Brown, the chief proponent of the effort, leaves office in 18 months, and his successor may want to put someone else in the job, restructur­e the project or even stop it.

Other issues include the cost and schedule problem.

A risk analysis by the Federal Railroad Administra­tion projected that the first phase of the effort is seven years behind schedule and could increase in cost by 50%, to $10 billion.

The next chief executive will be under enormous pressure to prevent that outcome and will also have to address internal turmoil reflected in an employee survey which found that morale problems have worsened in the last few years.

The board named its general counsel, Thomas Fellenz, as an interim chief executive. Fellenz is also a civil engineer, and he filled in as chief executive for a period before Morales was hired five years ago. Jon Tapping, the project’s chief risk officer, is informally filling in for Trujillo, according to officials knowledgea­ble about the project.

Those sources said the project could operate on “autopilot” for a few months, but eventually an empty chief executive position could cause a loss of direction. One official close to the project said the rail authority staff is already clamoring for “affirmativ­e direction” amid growing concern that it is rudderless. But another official who works at the project said there does not appear to be a problem so far.

Brown can directly or indirectly name officials to the project and has exercised that authority in the past.

His spokesman Gareth Lacy said the new chief executive will be selected by the authority board, and referred questions to the authority.

Rail authority board Chairman Dan Richard, a former utility industry lawyer who was selected by Brown, exerts hands-on control over the project’s political management. Board member Michael Rossi, a retired Bank of America executive, similarly pays close attention to the project’s finances. Their involvemen­t helps, but risks diluting management authority at other times, individual­s close to the project say.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? JEFF MORALES’ last day as chief executive of the California High-Speed Rail Authority was Friday. His exit comes amid a f lurry of activity on the bullet train project, which regulators say is seven years behind schedule.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press JEFF MORALES’ last day as chief executive of the California High-Speed Rail Authority was Friday. His exit comes amid a f lurry of activity on the bullet train project, which regulators say is seven years behind schedule.

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