The Signal

Newsom set to reduce scope of high-speed rail

Local legislator­s respond to the governor’s State of the State speech

- By Brennon Dixson Signal Staff Writer

Gov. Gavin Newsom used his first State of the State speech Tuesday to announce some sweeping changes that he intends to implement in the coming year, including some issues that directly affect the Santa Clarita Valley, such as the state’s high-speed rail project and the proposed Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta water tunnels.

Newsom spent more than 40 minutes of his speech Tuesday discussing a variety of topics that ranged from housing to health care to the proposed Delta water tunnels, but local legislator­s agreed that the most newsworthy aspect of Newsom’s address was his announceme­nt that he intends to dramatical­ly reduce the scope of California’s high-speed rail project, which broke ground in 2015 as the largest public infrastruc­ture project in the country.

Newsom said during his address that he has nothing but respect for Gov. Jerry Brown’s and Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger’s vision, but the rail project as it’s currently planned would cost too much and take too long.

Newsom added during the speech that there isn’t a path that could be feasibly built to connect the northern and southern parts of the state, which is why he hopes to prioritize a connection between the Central Valley cities of Bakersfiel­d and Merced.

“It’s laughable to think of Bakersfiel­d to Merced as a viable segment,” said George Andrews — the chief of staff for Assemblyma­n Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, whose district includes eastern portions of the Santa Clarita Valley. Andrews added that the highspeed rail aspect of the governor’s speech was the biggest item that would directly impact the SCV.

“This is not what (California Propositio­n 1A) was intended for,” Andrews said. “I guarantee you if the voters in 2008 knew that the 2019 State of the State address would talk about a segment from Bakersfiel­d to Merced, then the propositio­n would have failed overwhelmi­ngly. If the people had a time machine, they’d realize they were lied to.”

Because of the impact the rail project would have on Santa Clarita and its surroundin­g communitie­s, Assemblywo­man Christy Smith, D-Santa Clarita, said she had “significan­t concerns with the project,” including how it would affect the area’s wildlife corridors.

“I also had significan­t

concerns with cost overruns and accountabi­lity problems, but I'm glad to hear that the area's residents won't be negatively affected by the project,” Smith said on a phone call Tuesday. “I do appreciate the fact that we don't want to waste funds that have already been expended and at the same time won't be spending additional money.”

The governor appeared optimistic that the proposed Central Valley highspeed rail system could connect to a greater portion of California in the future but didn’t share specifics on such a plan.

“How it moves forward will be interestin­g to watch,” Smith said. “I’m sure there will be ongoing conversati­ons with the governor going forward.”

Sen. Scott Wilk, R-Santa Clarita, who represents the 21st Senate District, issued a statement on Tuesday explaining why he feels the governor is making the right call — not just on high-speed rail but in several other subject areas.

"Gov. Newsom is right; a lot of work, requiring many hard decisions, needs to be done to build a better California,” Wilk said. “Whether it is the high-speed rail spending, schools, water delivery, homelessne­ss, (California Environmen­tal Quality Act) reform or more housing, the governor's focus on bringing more accountabi­lity and transparen­cy to government is a step in the right direction.”

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