Porterville Recorder

Bullet Train Authority can handle environmen­tal reviews

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

The California bullet train authority said earlier this year that federal bureaucrat­s have slow-walked approval of its environmen­tal documents, contributi­ng to delays in the project.

But this week the Federal Railroad Administra­tion, which oversees billions of dollars in grants for the project, assigned authority for such environmen­tal reviews under the National Environmen­tal Policy Act to the state — giving the rail authority its long-sought status.

The approval comes after the Trump administra­tion delivered a sharp blow to the rail authority in May, terminatin­g a $929-million grant that was issued in 2010. The FRA asserted that the state had violated its terms and was not making adequate progress.

The state responded with a suit against the action, asserting that federal officials have “disengaged” with the state and refused

to communicat­e. Federal officials have also raised the prospect of attempting to claw back another $2.5-billion grant for the bullet train but have not taken action so far.

The so-called assignment under NEPA came in a 25-page memorandum of understand­ing signed by FRA chief Ronald Batory, who signed the letter terminatin­g the 2010 grant.

The rail authority had been seeking the approval for several years, since federal laws changed and allowed state rail projects to get the same authority as highway projects, said rail authority Chief Financial Officer Brian Annis. He said it isn’t clear what triggered the federal approval after such long delays.

“This action is an important milestone for the high-speed program,” authority Chief Executive Brian Kelly said in a statement. “We’ve lost valuable time waiting with the FRA’S disengagem­ent, so I am very thankful for this action and I am hopeful this step is the beginning of a more collaborat­ive and cooperativ­e relationsh­ip prospectiv­ely.”

The assignment under NEPA is similar to the authority that the California Department of Transporta­tion

has for highway projects. The rail authority already has res

ponsibilit­y for performing reviews under the California Environmen­tal Quality Act.

The California project is many years behind schedule, owing to a wide range of problems beyond the issue of environmen­tal approvals. The authority has encountere­d serious problems acquiring property in the Central Valley, obtaining state permits and approving detailed engineerin­g designs by its contractor­s.

The announceme­nt by the FRA would allow it to move ahead with completing section-bysection environmen­tal documents for the route from San Francisco to Los Angeles. Until now, only two sections have received final approval, Bakersfiel­d to Fresno and Fresno to Merced.

Under terms of its federal grant, the rail authority must complete those environmen­tal reviews, which among other things determine the exact route the rail line will take, by 2022.By

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