San Diego Union-Tribune

State awards $106M for S.D. County rail projects

- Philip.diehl@sduniontri­bune.com

The California Transporta­tion Commission has allocated $106 million for San Diego County rail projects, including $36 million for future phases of the ongoing efforts to stabilize the Del Mar bluffs.

Work is underway on the fourth phase of a six-part effort begun in 2003 to shore up the 1.7-mile stretch of eroding coastal cliffs. The current constructi­on, budgeted at $5.8 million, includes repairing and replacing a concrete stormwater channel and other drainage structures and installing more concrete-and-steel support columns.

Planning is underway for the fifth phase, expected to cost $70 million, which will include more support columns and drainage structures, seismic reinforcem­ent, and sea walls.

Other rail projects that will benefit from the state funding include constructi­on of the first Coaster passenger platform at the San Diego Convention Center, replacemen­t of the San Dieguito River bridge near the Fairground­s, and improvemen­ts through Camp Pendleton.

“We are excited and grateful to the California Transporta­tion Commission for selecting the region’s grant applicatio­n for funding,” said North County Transit District chair and Encinitas Councilman Tony Kranz in a news release from the district Monday.

“The funding will support ... projects that will increase transit ridership and rail freight movement. These projects will also create local jobs and help boost our economy, which has been ravaged by the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The coastal rail corridor between Los Angeles, San Diego and San Luis Obispo, typically called LOSSAN, carried $1 billion in freight and more than 8 million passengers in 2019.

“This funding is critical to SANDAG’s goal of improving the speed, capacity and safety of rail service along the second busiest rail corridor in the nation,” said Poway Mayor Steve Vaus, chairman of the San Diego Associatio­n of Government­s board.

The most likely long-term solution appears to be rebuilding the Del Mar section of the tracks on a new inland route through tunnels beneath the city. That project is decades away and will cost several billion dollars.

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