Los Angeles Times

Bullet train’s S.F.-to-San Jose plan advances

- By Alexandra E. Petri

The California HighSpeed Rail Authority board of directors approved an environmen­tal report and preferred route for the extension of the state’s bullet train through the San Francisco Bay Area, inching the project one step closer to reality.

The unanimous vote by the board this month to certify the final environmen­tal report for the section between San Francisco and San Jose clears the way for the 43-mile expansion between the two cities, according to a news release from the California High-Speed Rail Authority.

“We are closer than ever to realizing a first in the nation, statewide high-speed rail system,” Tom Richards, authority chairman, said in a statement.

The extension’s approval sets the stretch between San Jose and San Francisco up to be “shovel ready” for when funding becomes available, said Anthony Lopez, informatio­n officer for the California High-Speed Rail Authority.

It also means that more than 420 miles of the project’s 500-mile program are now environmen­tally certified, Lopez said.

The section will link the Bay Area and the peninsula to San Jose, the Central Valley, and Los Angeles County.

According to the news release, the board selected an alternativ­e route for the San Francisco-to-San Jose leg that will share Caltrain’s commuter tracks. The route will travel from the previously approved San Jose high-speed rail station and will include new high-speed rail stations in San Francisco and Millbrae, the constructi­on of a light maintenanc­e facility on the east side of the Caltrain corridor in Brisbane, and other safety and speed projects.

The high-speed rail program, which has begun constructi­on in some parts of the state, has been beset by delays, criticism from communitie­s and politician­s and funding challenges. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, an estimated $25 billion is still needed for the newly approved leg and for a Silicon Valley segment approved last spring.

The estimated cost of the bullet train has mushroomed to $105 billion from $33 billion in 2008.

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