The Guardian (USA)

California scales back plan for high-speed train between Los Angeles and San Francisco

- Associated Press in Sacramento, California

Gavin Newsom declared Tuesday there “isn’t a path” for completing the state’s plan for a high-speed rail line between San Francisco and Los Angeles, yet his office insisted he is fully committed to building such a project.

The California governor, delivering his first State of the State address, said he’d shift his focus to completing just a 171-mile segment of the line already under constructi­on in the state’s Central Valley. The project is key to the economic vitality of the state’s agricultur­al heartland, he said.

A high-speed rail line linking Los Angeles to San Francisco was the goal when voters approved a ballot measure in 2008. The roughly 520-mile line initially was estimated to cost $33bn and was pegged for completion in 2020. Officials eventually hoped to connect the line to San Diego and Sacramento.

Subsequent estimates more than doubled the cost to $77bn and pushed the timeline to 2033.

“Let’s be real,” Newsom said. “The project, as currently planned, would cost too much and take too long . . . Right now, there simply isn’t a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to LA. I wish there were.”

Newsom said he’d continue doing environmen­tal reviews for the LA-San Francisco line and seek private investment to connect the Central Valley to the state’s major hubs, prompting confusion about whether he actually was changing the policy of his predecesso­r, Jerry Brown.

Newsom’s spokesman Nathan Click said the governor is committed to completing the longer line with additional private and federal money “as the Cen

tral Valley section demonstrat­es the viability of the broader project”.

The questions about Newsom’s rail plans clouded his first State of the State address in which he outlined his vision for leading the nation’s most populous state. California, he said, faces “hard decisions that are coming due” on clean water, housing and homelessne­ss.

Newsom used the speech to contrast his administra­tion with Brown’s as much as he did to take issue with Donald Trump. He blasted the president’s views on immigratio­n. Newsom called the border emergency “a manufactur­ed crisis” but also compliment­ed Trump’s calls for lowering prescripti­on drug costs.

Trump has criticized California’s high-speed rail plan. Newsom said the state risked having to return $3.5bn in federal money if building stops on the Central Valley leg or it doesn’t complete the environmen­tal reviews. Rail leaders have long said they do not have enough state money to complete the line. Private investment has been tied to getting more government investment.

Newsom did not provide any fresh details about how he planned to leverage or gather private money in a way his predecesso­rs could not.

His speech left lawmakers with different interpreta­tions of how the project would move forward.

Democratic state senator Anna Caballero, who represents part of the Central Valley, called the shift to a line only from Bakersfiel­d to Merced “disappoint­ing”. But she said she hopes to see that line connected to other state hubs at some point.

“People need to see it move to really feel like it’s important,” she said.

Republican state senator Jim Nielsen said Newsom’s comments were an acknowledg­ement the full train would never be completed.

“It cannot be achieved, and the governor has essentiall­y admitted it,” he said. “This entire thing has now changed from whether or not there’s going to be a high-speed rail to what’s going to be left for central California.”

Newsom rejected the idea that his plan would create a “train to nowhere” and said building in the Central Valley would help revitalize the economical­ly depressed region. He also replaced Brown’s head of the state board that oversees the project and pledged more accountabi­lity for contractor­s that run over costs by putting informatio­n about how rail dollars are spent online.

Newsom also announced a new head of the state water board, a new chair of the state board of education and a new task force on housing and homelessne­ss. It’s typical for new governors to remake the administra­tion, even if executive power remains within the same party.

He announced the creation of the new commission on homelessne­ss and supportive housing to address what he said is a moral issue that has become a public health crisis. His administra­tion recently sued the Orange county city of Huntington Beach, accusing it of not meeting mandated affordable housing goals.

The governor has invited the leaders of 47 other noncomplyi­ng cities to a meeting next week for what he called “a candid conversati­on.”

“I don’t intend to file suit against all 47, but I’m not going to preside over neglect and denial,” he said. “These cities need to summon the political courage to build their fair share of housing.” Newsom also promised to have a plan within 60 days for dealing with the recent bankruptcy filing by Pacific Gas & Electric Corp. after years of devastatin­g wildfires. He said he has convened a team of the nation’s best bankruptcy lawyers and financial experts from the energy sector to work with his administra­tion to develop a strategy to protect the state’s power grid, wildfire victims, company employees and ratepayers.

“We are all frustrated and angry that it’s come to this,” Newsom said. “PG&E didn’t do enough to secure dangerous equipment or plan for the future.”

He also promised to address the pressure that climate change is putting on utilities.

 ??  ?? Gavin Newsom greets people on the assembly floor before delivering his first State of the State address. Photograph: John G Mabanglo/EPA
Gavin Newsom greets people on the assembly floor before delivering his first State of the State address. Photograph: John G Mabanglo/EPA

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