Los Angeles Times

COST OF STATE’S BULLET TRAIN JUMPS

Central Valley section price rises $2.8 billion. Consultant declares ‘worst-case scenario has happened.’

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

The estimated cost of building 119 miles of bullet train track in the Central Valley has jumped to $10.6 billion, an increase of $2.8 billion from the current budget and up from about $6 billion originally.

The new calculatio­n takes into account a number of intractabl­e problems encountere­d by the state rail agency. It raises profoundly difficult questions about how the state will complete what is considered the nation’s largest infrastruc­ture project with the existing funding sources.

The new estimate was presented Tuesday by Roy Hill, who leads the main consulting firm on the project, WSP (formerly Parsons Brinckerho­ff). Hill said the cost increases were mainly driven by problems including higher costs for land acquisitio­n, issues in relocating utility systems, the need for safety barriers where the bullet trains would operate near freight lines and demands by stakeholde­rs for the mitigation of myriad issues.

“The worst-case scenario has happened,” Hill bluntly told the rail authority’s board at its regular monthly meeting.

The board also voted Tuesday to name Brian Kelly as its new chief executive. As secretary of the Cali-

fornia State Transporta­tion Agency, he has been deeply involved in the project. Kelly said in an interview that high-speed rail remains crucial to the future transporta­tion and economic needs of the state, but acknowledg­ed that it is facing tough challenges that must be addressed.

As the project’s lead proponent, Gov. Jerry Brown, serves the final year of his term, it will be crucial, Kelly said, to “dive in, stabilize it and restore its credibilit­y.”

The sharp increase in projected costs could require the California High Speed Rail Authority to return to the state Legislatur­e for a supplement­al appropriat­ion from the bonds that voters approved in 2008. The remaining bonds probably would cover the cost increases but partly deplete funds for further constructi­on beyond the Central Valley.

The sobering news about the cost increases had been long forewarned, though rail authority Chairman Dan Richard has consistent­ly rejected those warnings. About a year ago, the Federal Railroad Administra­tion issued a secret risk analysis that said costs were rising sharply and could hit $9.5 billion to $10 billion. When The Times disclosed the warning, Richard downplayed the analysis. In 2012, WSP briefed a cost analysis for the 2014 business plan, showing sharply higher costs in the Central Valley. The cost estimates were not adopted in the 2014 business plan. Richard was not available for an interview.

It remains unclear how the Central Valley cost increases will affect the total project, which under the 2016 business plan is supposed to cost $64 billion. But the jump in the Central Valley — a 77% increase above the original estimate — suggests the authority and its consultant­s have vastly underestim­ated the difficulti­es of buying land, obtaining environmen­tal approvals, navigating through complex litigation and much else.

Outside critics saw the rail authority’s defense of lower cost estimates as part of an effort to politicall­y protect the project.

“When it comes to large infrastruc­ture investment­s, it is not unusual for public authoritie­s trying to justify their effort to understate the costs and overstate the benefits,” said James Moore, director of the transporta­tion engineerin­g program at USC. “It is in my opinion overly deceptive. We have seen on transporta­tion projects this militant defense that is meant to cause the public to remain calm.”

Moore said the surge in costs probably foreshadow­s even greater future increases. On the horizon are more difficult segments, such as the long undergroun­d passage through the Tehachapi and San Gabriel Mountains and the route into the urban San Francisco Bay Area.

The appointmen­t of Kelly and the disclosure of the higher cost together create an existentia­l moment for the massive effort.

“It is an ‘are you in or are you out?’ point,” said Elizabeth Alexis, who co-founded a watchdog group focused on the project. “The cost increases are forcing us to commit to completing or not.”

The challenges will apply to the next governor, though in the current campaign the leading candidates are doing their best to avoid talking about the project. Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom has declined requests for an interview on the subject for more than two years. The repayment of the existing bonds will cost about $18 billion in principal and interest over the next 30 years, money that is coming out of the state highway improvemen­t fund.

Assemblyma­n Jim Patterson (R-Fresno) said the cost estimate “shows the program is in increasing difficulty” and raises the need for an audit that he has been pushing for unsuccessf­ully. He said he plans to renew his request for an audit at the end of the month.

Brown did not address the new cost estimate, but said in a news release about Kelly, “Brian has ably led the California State Transporta­tion Agency since its inception and is uniquely qualified to move the nation’s first high-speed rail project forward.”

Kelly’s appointmen­t fills a vacancy that has lingered since June when the prior chief, Jeff Morales, left. Kelly will be paid a salary of $384,984 — more than in his job at the transporta­tion agency.

Kelly said he plans to bolster the state staff, relying less on outside consultant­s. He added that the project needs greater transparen­cy, saying the disclosure of the price calculatio­n was a step in that direction.

The new estimate evoked some expression­s of concern at the high-speed rail board at Tuesday’s meeting.

“It is horrible when we look at the amount of money we are going to have to invest to make the project work,” said board member Ernest Camacho, who owns a Southern California constructi­on management firm.

The effect is likely to be felt when the authority issues its 2018 business plan next month.

Richard said he thought the new estimate had some good news and bad news in it. The good: the agency identified some of the problems beforehand. The bad: it did not accurately estimate the costs of those problems.

Moving forward, he said, the authority will not start constructi­on on future segments until all the land is in hand, a practice that outside experts have long said is prudent project management.

In Hill’s presentati­on to the board, he said intrusion barriers will cost an additional $450 million; land buys, $400 million, delays for not acquiring land, $325 million; satisfying issues raised by localities, $250 million; and relocating wires, pipes and cables used by utilities, $350 million. It means that on the first 31 miles from Madera to Fresno, the costs will jump 35% to $3.4 billion, the biggest single geographic­al increase.

Included in the projected $2.8-billion price increase is a $600-million contingenc­y set aside to cover further unexpected problems. That contingenc­y will be funded by unspecifie­d cuts to future constructi­on budgets.

‘It is an “are you in or are you out?” point. The cost increases are forcing us to commit to completing or not.’ — Elizabeth Alexis, co-founder of a watchdog group focused on the train project

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? WORK WAS done last year at a 3,700-foot viaduct being built to extend over State Route 99 in Fresno County. This structure is near the terminus of the section of high-speed rail line through Fresno.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times WORK WAS done last year at a 3,700-foot viaduct being built to extend over State Route 99 in Fresno County. This structure is near the terminus of the section of high-speed rail line through Fresno.

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