San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

DEL MAR RAILROAD FENCE DELAYED AGAIN

- philip.diehl@sduniontri­bune.com BY PHIL DIEHL

The installati­on of a fence to keep people off the railroad tracks in Del Mar, already delayed by public opposition, has been postponed again so North County Transit District can complete more studies.

Transit district officials initially told Del Mar in an Oct. 9, 2020, letter that the agency would install a 6foot-high, chain-link fence by the end of the year along areas of the tracks “with the highest incidence of trespassin­g” in Oceanside, Encinitas and Del Mar.

Later that year, district officials said they would delay the Del Mar installati­on until 2021 to continue negotiatio­ns with the city and other agencies, including the California Coastal Commission. District Executive Director Matt Tucker said Thursday that the closeddoor discussion­s continue, and the constructi­on contract now will be awarded no sooner than Dec. 31.

The proposed barrier met less opposition in Encinitas and relatively little in Oceanside, where the tracks are not as close to the beach. The Oceanside installati­on contract was awarded last year. Most other areas of the tracks in the county already have the fence, installed within the right-of-way on transit district property.

Del Mar residents have fought the fence for years. They say it would ruin their coastal views, reduce property values, impede access to the beach, and increase erosion on the fragile bluffs. Transit officials say the barrier would prevent deaths on a stretch of the tracks with one of the highest rates of fatalities in Southern California.

“One of the current challenges to rail operations on the San Diego Subdivisio­n is trespassin­g events that result in injuries, fatalities, service disruption­s/delays (average delay over 120 minutes for significan­t events), potential damage to equipment and infrastruc­ture and liability claims,” states an NCTD staff report.

Rail traffic is expected to increase from the current average of 67 trains each weekday to more than 100 trains a day by 2030. The district recently purchased new locomotive­s that are faster and quieter, which will increase the hazard for pedestrian­s on the tracks.

Unlike almost anywhere else, many Del Mar residents insist that they have the right to cross the tracks, which are owned by the transit district, whenever and wherever they please.

“People have safely crossed and walked the tracks for decades,” said Shawn Caine and his wife, Maureen, residents for 26 years, in one of 163 letters opposing the fence that the board received before its meeting Thursday. Three letters supported the fence.

“Fences will not prevent train strike incidents, but will provoke an adversaria­l relationsh­ip with a public that has been enjoying the beach and co-existing with the train for over 100 years,” states a letter from Bill Carpenter.

Another concern heard Thursday was that digging hundreds of holes for fence posts will further hasten erosion of the bluffs. Studies show the bluffs retreat at the average rate of six inches annually, though recent collapses have chewed away much more than that.

The study approved Thursday by the transit district’s board of directors will cost up to $388,028 and will include surveying, design, mapping and detailing of rights-of-way for installing the fence along a 1.4-mile section of the track in Del Mar.

The transit filed a petition in August 2020 with the federal Surface Transporta­tion Board, asking the agency to dismiss the city and the California Coastal Commission from any oversight — in matters such as local building permits — for all projects needed to safeguard the tracks along the bluffs.

Subsequent­ly, the transit district asked to suspend proceeding­s on the petition “to facilitate discussion­s” with Del Mar and the Coastal Commission. The Transporta­tion Board’s website states that the proceeding­s will remain “in abeyance” until Dec. 31.

The board approved the contract 7-2, with Del Mar Mayor Terry Gaasterlan­d and Oceanside Mayor Esther Sanchez voting no.

Eventually, the district plans to remove the tracks from the bluffs. Several possible routes through tunnels beneath the city are being studied, but completion of that project is decades away.

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