San Diego Union-Tribune

FREE RIDES, FANFARE WELCOME TROLLEY LINE

$2.2 billion Blue Line, decades in the making, has successful debut

- BY DAVID GARRICK

Trains began running early Sunday morning on a longawaite­d trolley line connecting Old Town to La Jolla that regional leaders are touting as a monumental project for greater San Diego.

The most expensive infrastruc­ture project in the region’s history at nearly $2.2 billion, the new 11-mile line brings light rail for the first time to La Jolla, UC San Diego, Mission Bay Park, Pacific Beach and Clairemont.

But perhaps more importantl­y, every stop on the city’s other trolley routes gets a big boost by becoming connected to those popular destinatio­ns and

others like Westfield UTC and the VA Medical Center.

The nine-station line also fixes glaring flaws in local transit by

connecting the trolley system to the region’s largest university — the University of California San Diego — and No. 1 employment center — University City and the Golden Triangle.

“It is creating new jobs, new opportunit­ies, new access to health care and more educationa­l opportunit­ies for so many residents of the San Diego-Tijuana region,” said National City Mayor Alejandra Sotelo-Solis.

Speaking to thousands gathered Sunday afternoon on UC San Diego’s Warren Field to celebrate the new line, Sotelo-Solis said that 20 years ago as a UC San Diego student she spent two hours a day getting to campus to pursue her dream of a college degree.

“What took me two hours from National City — bus line, trolley line and walking up Gilman Drive — now takes less than 40 minutes,” she said. “Now those dreams will be even easier to meet for the next generation of workers and students.”

University Chancellor Pradeep Khosla said the new rail line will help the university shed its image as an isolated campus most San Diegans never see, transformi­ng it into the “public” university it was always meant to be.

“It’s not a game-changer, it’s a dream come true,” he said during Sunday’s celebratio­n.

Kholsa said the trolley will also infuse UC San Diego into more of the region’s neighborho­ods by allowing students and faculty easier access to them.

“It extends our campus to all the areas adjacent to all the stops across the trolley line,” he said.

Large rail bridges recently built over parts of campus to accommodat­e the new trolley line are also a boost.

“It adds a little pizzazz to the campus and makes it more exciting,” Kholsa said.

Hundreds of residents took advantage Sunday of free rides all day on the new line and the rest of the trolley system. Local leaders say they hope the promotiona­l effort let people see how the newly expanded trolley system could fit their lives.

“I think for me it’s a onetime thing because it’s the first day of the train,” said University City resident Sam Wu. “It’s convenient, but for my work I am close to where I live.”

Wu said he probably wouldn’t use the new line again until his parents visit and want to go to dinner in downtown or Little Italy, places that are easier to get to by trolley than by car.

La Jolla resident Keith Wahl was much more enthusiast­ic.

“Right now I’m working from home, but I see a lot of utility in this for getting around,” he said. “I’m a favorable advocate of it. I think it will bring a lot of people up to the university and it’s great for the VA patients.”

Wahl and his wife began their journey around 8 a.m. Sunday morning from the new line’s final stop at UTC mall, riding it down to Old Town so they could eat nearby at popular breakfast spot Perry’s. Then they headed back up, he said.

The new line took 20 years of planning and five years of constructi­on, which included overcoming many

hurdles like bridges and tunnels and overpasses that had to be created in challengin­g spots.

“I’m amazed at the engineerin­g and how they pulled it off,” Wahl said.

Mira Mesa resident Lester Dronick said he was excited to ride the new line, suggesting local planners

should begin focusing immediatel­y on an extension to the Miramar area.

“I like mass transit and I use it a lot, especially as a senior,” said Dronick, 71.

University City couple Matt and Heather Eisenberg, who did a round trip to Old Town Sunday morning, said they’re not sure what

they think of the new trolley.

“I think there’s pros and cons.” said Matt. “Are they going to hire increased security for all the people who will now be making it up into those neighborho­ods more easily?”

Heather said she’s heard skeptics say that people won’t embrace the new trolley, but she said millennial­s typically have a more positive attitude about mass transit than older people.

El Cajon resident Joe Cortez rode the trolley Sunday because he’s curious to see how it changes commuting patterns, especially for UC San Diego students.

Cortez drives a bus near the campus and said he thinks many students will shift to the trolley because it’s faster.

“I’ve been watching the progress of the trains, so I’ve been looking forward to seeing this,” he said.

An estimated 60 percent of students and faculty already reach campus by some mode of transporta­tion other than driving a vehicle, university officials say.

UCSD students receive free passes for all public transit as part of the student fees they pay, making local officials optimistic students will ride the new trolley in large numbers.

Encinitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear, who leads the county planning agency that coordinate­d constructi­on of the new line, said Sunday was a day for celebratin­g and also looking forward.

“It’s not that frequently

that you open a $2 billion, nine-stop, 11-mile transit line,” she said.

She stressed that planning for the new line began in 1986, making it crucial that local residents let their elected officials know today what kinds of projects they’d like to see built in the next 40 years.

For details on the new line, visit KeepSanDie­goMoving.com/MidCoast.

Local officials have chosen to use the wordy moniker “Mid-Coast Extension of the UC San Diego Blue Line Trolley” as the official name of the new line. Many community leaders refer to it simply as the “La Jolla line” or the “UCSD line.”

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T PHOTOS ?? The Mid-Coast Extension of the UC San Diego Blue Line Trolley runs through the campus of UC San Diego, where an openingday celebratio­n was held Sunday on Warren Field. The trolley line connects Old Town to La Jolla.
K.C. ALFRED U-T PHOTOS The Mid-Coast Extension of the UC San Diego Blue Line Trolley runs through the campus of UC San Diego, where an openingday celebratio­n was held Sunday on Warren Field. The trolley line connects Old Town to La Jolla.
 ?? ?? Hundreds of people took advantage of free rides Sunday on all San Diego Trolley lines, a promotiona­l effort to encourage more residents to use public transporta­tion.
Hundreds of people took advantage of free rides Sunday on all San Diego Trolley lines, a promotiona­l effort to encourage more residents to use public transporta­tion.
 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T PHOTOS ?? People line up to board the trolley on the newly opened line, which has a stop right on the University of California San Diego campus.
K.C. ALFRED U-T PHOTOS People line up to board the trolley on the newly opened line, which has a stop right on the University of California San Diego campus.
 ?? ?? The 11-mile Blue Line extension is the most expensive infrastruc­ture project in the region’s history, costing nearly $2.2 billion.
The 11-mile Blue Line extension is the most expensive infrastruc­ture project in the region’s history, costing nearly $2.2 billion.

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