Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Newsom is shrinking Brown’s pet projects

- By Dan Walters Calmatters Columnist

When Jerry Brown began his first governorsh­ip in 1975, he quickly set himself apart from his father, former Gov. Pat Brown.

The elder Brown’s legacy had been an immense expansion of the state’s publicwork­s infrastruc­ture – new colleges and universiti­es, a web of freeways and, most of all, a massive project to carry water from Northern California to the fast-growing cities of Southern California.

The younger Brown echoed economist E.F. Schumacher’s aphorism that “small is beautiful,” suggested that California’s high population growth was a thing of the past and virtually shut down highway and freeway constructi­on.

While still resisting more highway constructi­on, he mused about the state’s building a high-speed rail line

linking its major population centers. Eventually, he also endorsed a “peripheral canal” that would carry Sacramento River water around the Sacramento-san Joaquin Delta to the head of the California Aqueduct near Tracy, completing Pat Brown’s water project.

After a 28-year absence, Jerry Brown returned to the governorsh­ip in 2011 and quickly and enthusiast­ically embraced new versions of those two projects, which Republican predecesso­r Arnold Schwarzene­gger had jump-started.

Voters had passed a $9.95 billion bond issue in 2008 to build the bullet train. And Schwarzene­gger and the Legislatur­e had devised a strategy to bore twin tunnels beneath the Delta without legislativ­e or voter approval, replacing Brown’s “peripheral canal” project that voters had rejected in a 1982 referendum.

Brown 2.0 had become a champion of the kind of big public-works projects that had been his father’s major accomplish­ments. “I want to get shit done,” he said, vulgarly describing his new attitude.

However, he couldn’t get it done during his second eight-year stint as governor. When Gavin Newsom succeeded Brown this year he, too, wanted to set himself apart from his predecesso­r, even though Brown was a quasi-uncle due to their long-intertwine­d family relationsh­ips.

Newsom quickly scaled back the bullet train project, whose initial segment in the San Joaquin Valley had been plagued by cost overruns, managerial lapses and a chronic inability Calmatters Columnist

to nail down financing.

“Let’s be real,” Newsom told legislator­s in his first State of the State address. “The project as currently planned would cost too much and take too long. There’s been too little oversight and not enough transparen­cy. Right now, there simply isn’t a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to L.A.”

Newsom, who as lieutenant governor had been a skeptic about the Delta tunnels, also said he might be willing to accept a single tunnel. Last week, his scaled-back ambitions took concrete form.

The High-speed Rail Authority released a new “business plan” that would complete the 119 miles of track now under constructi­on, extend it southward to Bakersfiel­d and northward to Merced, connect it with standard rail service proposed to link Merced with the Silicon Valley and then to electrifie­d train service between San Francisco and San Jose.

If all of this were to happen, someone could travel by rail – albeit on three different systems – from San Francisco to Bakersfiel­d, at most a slight improvemen­t on current Amtrak service.

The Department of Water Resources, meanwhile, formally withdrew the twin tunnel proposal and launched a new singletunn­el version that must begin the permitting process more or less from scratch.

Both new versions may be more practical than Brown’s, but both still face high hurdles, particular­ly financial ones, to become reality. The ultimate fate of both may still be uncertain when Newsom hands the governorsh­ip to his successor.

avoid that as much as possible. Traffic is horrible during the day going down Colusa Highway. I go out early and late to do my shopping. Ridiculous.

Ryan Carns: The increase of traffic heading north through Marysville is due to the labor needed for cleanup from the Camp Fire. For some of you, how far do you recommend the dump trucks drive out of their way to avoid Marysville to go to the Wheatland dumpsite? Fuel is expensive enough as it is. Marysville needs a bypass, not 5 lanes to the north and 4 to the south, but a complete bypass. We don’t need a light at Highway 20 and East 22nd. There is no more traffic on that street than the last 20 years. …

Ben Scholtz: The stop lights need to be synced better. When it’s grid locked 1 light will turn green as the others are red. (Nobody goes anywhere). Adjust so all lights in a direction will turn green for a good period of time.

Linda Browne: If there was a disaster and we are stuck we are all screwed. Just sayin’. You can’t even get through will medium traffic.

Jeff Johnson: With the new Casino it’s only going to get worse.

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 ??  ?? Dan Walters
Dan Walters

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