Los Angeles Times

Bullet train costs climb 27%

A 119-mile segment in the Central Valley is exceeding its estimate by $1.7 billion.

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

The California bullet train project, already mired by major delays and rising costs, is facing $1.7 billion in cost overruns on a 119-mile segment currently under constructi­on through the Central Valley, a 27% jump over the original estimate, according to new documents.

The increase reflects difficulti­es officials have encountere­d over the last five years, including buying land, moving undergroun­d utilities and negotiatin­g agreements with freight railroads.

The Central Valley constructi­on and planning is now projected to cost $8 billion, based on a quarterly report — known as the funding contributi­on plan — that was issued in June but not made public until this month. Work on the track, originally scheduled to finish this year, is about seven years behind schedule.

The latest overruns could have larger consequenc­es. If the reasons for the Central Valley increase also affect other parts of the Los Angeles-to-San Francisco project, that could drive up the price for the entire $64-billion system by billions of dollars.

Critics long have forecast that the final tab could top $100 billion. But supporters of the bullet train — the nation’s largest infrastruc­ture project — reject those assertions, saying the rail line will become a cornerston­e of the state’s transporta­tion system and that such cost increases should be taken in stride.

The California High-Speed Rail Authority said it has been transparen­t about the cost pressures, reporting to a joint budget committee in the Legislatur­e in December that the tab for the Central Valley segment had hit $7.8 billion.

That report, however, included signals, electrical systems and a maintenanc­e facility that were not part of the Central Valley constructi­on program’s original scope, which was priced at $6.3 billion.

“We put our best estimates forward,” rail authority spokeswoma­n Lisa Marie Alley said. “There are going to be cost increases, but there could be cost decreases.”

The funding contributi­on

plan was posted on the authority’s website after a Bay Area watchdog group, California­ns Advocating Responsibl­e Rail Design, filed a public records act request.

Officials have disputed outside estimates that indicate the project’s price tag is growing — including one in December by the Federal Railroad Administra­tion that cited a cost of $9.5 billion to $10 billion. In 2015, the authority’s main consultant, WSP, also had said in an internal assessment that costs were rising.

The rising total could challenge California to find new sources of revenue to complete the project even as Gov. Jerry Brown, its biggest proponent, serves out his last 15 months in office.

The large number of changes that have been made to the scope of the project since its inception make cost comparison­s problemati­c.

The rail authority added 2.7 miles of track and structures from Madera to Merced but reduced 8 miles near Shafter that included a long viaduct through the city.

It also had to increase safety barriers that would prevent freight trains from crashing into bullet trains where the tracks come within 102 feet of each other, adding tens of millions of dollars in costs.

Alley noted that the cost increases have not all come at once, and that the rail authority has and will continue to properly report them.

“We are looking at the scope, schedule and budget for the 2018 business plan, which will be out in February,” she said.

The cost pressures have been building from a variety of sources: property values are increasing; the number of parcels needed to complete the project has grown; officials faced more work than expected with utilities; and other so-called thirdparty and railroad negotiatio­ns were difficult.

“A lot has happened over the years,” Alley said. “We are always mitigating and looking for ways to reduce costs.”

But those costs could go even higher.

One of the state’s major contractor teams — led by the Spanish constructi­on giant Dragados — is seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in additional payments, rail authority officials said during a recent public meeting. Dragados was selected in December 2014 to build a 65-mile section south of Fresno for $1.23 billion. So far, it does not appear that constructi­on has started.

According to an update this month, the rail authority is looking for ways to contain costs through, among other things, institutin­g better management controls, reducing the scope of the project and planning “early minimal operations” once the rail system is up and running.

How that translates into actual changes to the project is not yet clear.

One concrete example to lower costs cited by the documents is to run trains more slowly in urban areas rather than building multimilli­on-dollar safety barriers.

Such a change would affect travel times.

Under the 2008 bond act that voters approved to help fund the bullet train, the system has to be capable of trips between L.A. and San Francisco in 2 hours and 40 minutes.

A number of experts doubt the project can meet the requiremen­t once it is built, given the many compromise­s that already will mean reduced speeds in various parts of the state.

“If we reduce peak speeds, we’ll have to make up the time somewhere else,” Alley said.

‘A lot has happened .... We are always mitigating and looking for ways to reduce costs.’ — Lisa Marie Alley, spokeswoma­n for California High-Speed Rail Authority

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? A VIADUCT for the California bullet train is shown in Fresno. A segment of the project in the Central Valley is running over budget.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times A VIADUCT for the California bullet train is shown in Fresno. A segment of the project in the Central Valley is running over budget.

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