Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden touts plans for high-speed rail

Project, criticized as too costly, would link Las Vegas, LA by ’28, president says

- WILL WEISSERT Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Josh Boak and Kathleen Ronayne of The Associated Press.

LAS VEGAS — President Joe Biden went to Las Vegas on Friday to say he’s “putting highspeed rail on the fast track,” and he used the moment to blast Donald Trump — his predecesso­r and likely 2024 challenger — as a do-nothing politician.

“Trump just talks the talk. We walk the walk,” Biden said at a hall for unionized carpenters. “He likes to say America is a failing nation. Frankly, he doesn’t know what the hell he’s talking about. I see shovels in the ground, cranes in the sky. People hard at work rebuilding America together.”

The president showcased $8.2 billion in new federal funding for 10 major passenger-rail projects across the country. He also emphasized the fundamenta­l difference­s between Trump and himself, a sign that his policy speeches are taking an ever-greater political bent with the election now roughly 11 months away.

The Democrat said Trump “failed” to deliver on his promises to invest in U.S. infrastruc­ture. Biden countered that his rail funding could help connect Las Vegas to Los Angeles via high-speed trains before LA hosts the summer Olympics in 2028, slashing travel times, helping the environmen­t and creating jobs.

Biden said he hopes that investment through federal and state partnershi­p programs will help boost prospects for the long-discussed project, which supporters say could revitalize travel in the American West, but critics argue that it is too costly.

The 218-mile train route linking Las Vegas and Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., about 40 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, may one day serve more than 11 million passengers annually.

Another electric rail line getting funding has been billed as the nation’s first high-speed route and is eventually planned to traverse California’s Central Valley and extend to San Francisco and on to Los Angeles, with trains reaching up to 220 mph.

The funding highlighte­d by the president won’t be nearly enough to cover the full costs of either project, but signals the Biden administra­tion’s commitment to spurring train travel in a nation that has long celebrated the spirit of fast cars and open highways.

Other train projects getting funding include upgrades to heavily traveled corridors in Virginia and North Carolina, with the eventual goal of linking Richmond and Raleigh by rail. Funding will also go toward improvemen­ts to a rail bridge over the Potomac River to bolster passenger service in Washington and will cover train-corridor upgrades in western Pennsylvan­ia and Maine, while expanding capacity at Chicago’s Union Station, one of the nation’s busiest rail hubs.

The announceme­nt aside, Biden also used his visit to Las Vegas to address this week’s shooting at the University of Nevada Las Vegas that killed three people and wounded a fourth. Biden again called for Congress to act on an assault weapons ban.

“I’m not going to rest until we do all we can to prevent more families and more communitie­s from being torn apart by gun violence,” Biden said.

California Republican­s have long been critical of the project, but even some state Democrats have become more vocal in their skepticism.

Constructi­on and land acquisitio­n is underway in the Central Valley. But Brian Kelly, the project’s CEO, has long said a fresh infusion of federal cash is an important part of advancing the project. The Biden administra­tion had previously signaled support for the project when it restored nearly $1 billion in federal money that the Trump administra­tion tried to revoke.

Asked about rising costs and growing delays on the high-speed line, Transporta­tion Secretary Pete Buttigieg acknowledg­ed in a call with reporters that “they are facing a lot of the challenges that come with being the very first at anything.”

“For all of these projects, we would not be funding them if we did not believe they can deliver,” he said.

 ?? (AP/Lucas Peltier) ?? President Joe Biden speaks at the Carpenters Internatio­nal Training Center with union workers in Las Vegas on Friday.
(AP/Lucas Peltier) President Joe Biden speaks at the Carpenters Internatio­nal Training Center with union workers in Las Vegas on Friday.

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