The Mercury News

Study to look into expanding S.F. ferry to Redwood City

- By Aldo Toledo atoledo@bayareanew­sgroup.com

REDWOOD CITY >> It is becoming more likely that commuters in the South Bay will have a chance to use the San Francisco Bay Ferry system to get to work as Redwood City sets out to study a potential expansion at its port.

If the Redwood City ferry stop comes to fruition after years of talk since it was proposed in 1997, it will be the first stop south of the city of South San Francisco to be incorporat­ed into the ferry system. The ferry stop would have connection­s to San Francisco and Oakland.

The network transports just under 9,000 people in six commuter ferry routes in Alameda, Oakland, two stops in South San Francisco, Vallejo and the recently added terminal at Richmond.

Championed by those who say it will reduce traffic congestion in the South Bay, the ferry project has been garnering more support since 2015.

The 2020 study should be completed this summer, city officials said, and will be conducted alongside port officials and the Water Emergency Transporta­tion Authority, the independen­t agency created in 2000 that oversees ferry service in the Bay Area.

“After many years in the making, it is an honor to support this partnershi­p and take the next steps towards exploring an alternativ­e transpor

tation solution here at the Port of Redwood City,” said Mayor Diane Howard.

“This project exemplifie­s the City Council’s priority area of creating and maintainin­g safe, multimodal and accessible transporta­tion options, and I look forward to hearing the results of the study later this year.”

The study will focus on examining capital and operating costs associated with the project, the constructi­on of a new ferry terminal at the opening of the Port of Redwood City channel, economic impact and cost-benefit analyses, and the procuremen­t of vessels for ferry

operation — the price tag of which could run $14 million to $21 million for each watercraft.

But the project needs tens of millions of dollars that aren’t yet in hand, and officials estimate it will take years before ferries are in operation.

The San Mateo County Transporta­tion Authority in May 2018 approved $450,000 for the city to launch a feasibilit­y study for building a ferry terminal at the port.

Regional Measure 3, approved by Bay Area voters in June — which is being challenged by a lawsuit — provides $300 million for Bay Area ferry operations.

An undetermin­ed amount of those funds will go toward building the terminal and ferries for Redwood

City.

In addition, $15 million was set aside for local ferry operations when county voters passed Measure A in 2008. Constructi­ng a Redwood City terminal is expected to cost at least $30 million.

Still, officials are hopeful the project will pan out.

“We are pleased to have an approved MOU in place and eager to take the next steps toward expanding ferry services to the Port of Redwood City,” Chairman of the Board of Port Commission­ers Ralph Garcia said.

“This project will greatly support our region by providing a new transporta­tion choice to and from Silicon Valley as well as reduce traffic congestion on our streets and highways.”

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