Oroville Mercury-Register

California bullet train’s latest woe: Will it be high speed?

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO » A new and fundamenta­l debate has emerged in the battle over California’s high-speed rail project that could again significan­tly downgrade the troubled effort: Should the trains even be high speed when the system launches?

That’s a conversati­on Democrats in the state Assembly want to have amid negotiatio­ns over whether to release about $4 billion in bond money for the project. The California HighSpeed Rail Authority said it needs that money to continue constructi­on beyond next summer. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom included it in his state budget, but negotiatio­ns between his administra­tion and the Legislatur­e have stalled. They’re hoping to reach an agreement when the Legislatur­e returns for session in January.

It’s the latest setback for the project, originally expected to cost $33 billion and be completed last year. Today the vision of shuttling passengers between Los Angeles and San Francisco in less than three hours is a distant dream. The first leg of rideable track, connecting two cities in the Central Valley, won’t start until at least 2029, and the project’s costs have ballooned to $98 billion.

Little political will seems to exist to either kill the project outright or to give it more resources, leaving constructi­on to continue without a long-term plan.

At the center of the latest dispute is how soon to electrify the line, which rail officials say is a necessity to make the train high speed — the whole idea of the project that voters were sold on. They want to enter into a contract next year for a firm to design and construct an electrifie­d track and system and to maintain it for 30 years, effectivel­y locking in the state for the long haul.

Current plans call for the first rideable leg to go from Bakersfiel­d to Merced, where passengers would ideally be able to hop on another transit line to head into the San Francisco Bay Area in a roundabout way. Rail officials and local transit agencies plan to partner to create a single station in Merced, where riders could get off the high-speed train and onto another system, but the constructi­on of it is not fully funded.

That’s prompted Democratic Assemblywo­man Laura Friedman, chair of the transporta­tion committee and a lead negotiator on funding, to ask whether it makes sense to fully electrify the line right away. She thinks the authority’s money might be better spent ensuring that there’s a single station at Merced. That would ensure passengers can get to the coastal job hubs from the Central Valley, even if it’s on a diesel train. Overheard electrific­ation could be finished later if there’s more money.

“I’m not arguing that that’s an optimal solution, but I think that people need to be honest about what we have the money to do right now,” Friedman said.

High-speed rail officials and supporters say running anything less than an electrifie­d train goes against what voters endorsed and wouldn’t bring the clean energy benefits.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A full-scale mock-up of a high-speed train is displayed at the Capitol in Sacramento.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A full-scale mock-up of a high-speed train is displayed at the Capitol in Sacramento.

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