Trump, governor spar over California high speed rail funds NEWSWIRE

Trump, governor spar over California high speed rail funds NEWSWIRE

By Bob Johnston | February 14, 2019

| Last updated on November 3, 2020


Advocate contends that new vision should not change project’s original scope

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – President Donald Trump fired the latest salvo in the California High Speed Rail firestorm late Wednesday when he sent the following tweet:
To which California Gov. Gavin Newsom responded:
Newsom’s tweets following his “State of the State” speech on Tuesday attempted to clarify his position that the state would continue aspects of the project funded by $3.5 billion in federal high speed rail grants. But in doing so, he threw down the gauntlet for the White House occupant by adding, “And by the way, I am not interested in sending $3.5 billion in federal funding that was allocated to this project back to Donald Trump.”

In engaging Newsom on the matter, the President tipped his hand on where he places high speed rail on a list of infrastructure priorities. This follows a statement last year by U.S. Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao that “there is no deal” for the federal government to supply half of the cost of building new rail tunnels under the Hudson River linking Penn Station with New Jersey.

Meanwhile, Midwest High Speed Rail Association Executive Director Rick Harnish contends that Newsom’s revisions are valid. He notes they are consistent with the California High Speed Rail Association’s original plan to make the Central Valley segment a 200 mph test bed, but only as long as the tracks now being built host electrified trainsets capable of those speeds.

“They did the right thing by starting in the Central Valley,” Harnish tells Trains News Wire. But to pave the way for future expansion to Los Angeles and San Francisco, as Newsom claims, “acquiring high-speed trainsets and demonstrating their capabilities is absolutely essential in getting the political support to move forward,” Harnish says.

He also points out that, until Tuesday, the agency had only planned to first operate on a 116-mile Bakersfield-Madera portion, mainly because the proposed route north of that point would head west through the mountains to the coast. Completing a full 160 miles to Merced, Harnish says, “creates a hub that connects with an already-funded Altamont Commuter Express expansion from Stockton, Calif., with the potential of utilizing conventional service on an upgraded ex-Western Pacific route across Altamont Pass currently hosting ACE rush hour trains between Stockton and San Jose.”

Harnish says terms of the federal grant only dictate that speeds of the new trackage be at least capable of 125 mph, so California has a pivotal decision to make. But the original plan was to entice competing manufacturers into bidding on the statewide project. That could still happen, he argues, because Siemens, Talgo, Stadler, and Alstom (now building Avelia Liberty trainsets for Amtrak’s Northeast Corridor) all have “off the shelf” equipment that complies with newly-revised Federal Railroad Administration crashworthiness standards.

Drawing an international parallel with a country that has prioritized high speed rail investment for nearly 40 years, Harnish notes that the main spine of the first French TGV system, opened in the early 1980s, was no more than 120 miles long. “The first segment ran between the suburbs of Paris and the suburbs of Lyon,” he says, “and look what happened after that.”

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