MTC Engineers Regional Consensus on
High-Speed and
Commuter Rail Package to Benefit From Economic Stimulus Funds
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OAKLAND,
Calif., June 24, 2009 … MTC today adopted
a plan for using federal economic stimulus funds to expedite
the arrival of high-speed rail service to the San Francisco
Bay Area while at the same time upgrading commuter rail service
along the Peninsula Corridor that runs from San Francisco through
Silicon Valley to San Jose. The package is the result of a
collaborative effort by MTC, the cities of San Francisco
and San Jose, and stakeholder transportation agencies along
the route.
“Civic and transportation
leaders representing the San Francisco/Silicon Valley Corridor … and
from the greater Bay Area are joining together to accelerate
the arrival of California High-Speed Rail between San Francisco
and Los Angeles/Anaheim by preparing the historic Caltrain rail corridor for
a new level of service appropriate for the 21st century,” according to
the report’s vision statement.
The plan lays out nearly $3.4 billion in regional rail projects,
with just over half of that to come from the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act (ARRA) passed by Congress in February of this year. Together,
these projects are projected to result in more than 100,000
jobs.
The biggest chunk — $1.8 billion — would go for a series
of investments associated with the replacement of San Francisco’s
1930s-era Transbay Terminal with a modern, eye-catching facility
that would serve as the terminus for the Peninsula’s
Caltrain service along with the mainline route of the planned
California High-Speed Rail line. Taking on a new name, the
Transbay Transit
Center, the facility is envisioned as a Grand
Central Station of the West.
The infusion of federal stimulus money would allow sponsors
to advance construction of the underground train station structure
for the Transbay Transit Center so that it happens concurrently
with construction of the above-ground portions of the building.
This would save the project an estimated $100 million compared
to excavating under the completed building later on, as was
the original plan. Original plans also called for accommodating
high-speed trains with curved platforms; the infusion of new
money would allow sponsors to lengthen the platforms so that
the trains can come in straight, and function more efficiently.
Part of the funding would go toward a subway extension of tracks
from Caltrain’s current S.F. terminus at 4th and Townsend
streets to the Transbay Transit Center site in the heart of
Downtown San Francisco.
In addition to the $1.8 billion for projects related to the
Transbay Transit Center, the plan provides $100 million to
upgrade the current Caltrain 4th and Townsend terminus to handle
expanded commuter rail service as well as to function as an
overflow station for high-speed trains.
At the other end of the 50-mile San Francisco/Silicon Valley
rail corridor, the Diridon Station in San Jose is in line for
a $150 million in expansions and upgrades — including a double-deck
configuration — to accommodate high-speed rail as well as
increased commuter and intercity rail service operated by Caltrain,
the Altamont Commuter Express (ACE) that connects the Central
Valley with the Bay Area, the Capitols line that runs between
San Jose and Sacramento, and Amtrak. The BART extension to
San Jose also will connect to the Diridon station. Usage
is expected to go from the current 130 trains a day to over
600 trains per day.
The package also provides $785 million to electrify the corridor
so Caltrain can convert its commuter service from diesel power
to electric technology, which is cleaner and quieter, and to
pave the way for high-speed rail. This item includes funding
to purchase electric locomotives or electric multiple-unit
train sets for Caltrain. Another $275 million would go toward
grade separations in San Bruno, which would benefit both Caltrain
and high-speed rail. Likewise, the $231 million earmarked for
positive train control would improve safety for both Caltrain
and high-speed rail. The improvements would work together to
reduce travel time between San Francisco and San Jose via Caltrain
to 30 minutes.
“We believe this package represents the strongest possible position for
the Bay Area. It paves the way for high-speed rail while delivering significant
improvements to the corridor by the middle of this decade,” MTC Executive
Director Steve Heminger told the MTC commissioners at their Legislation Committee
meeting earlier this month.The package was endorsed on June 11, 2009, by San Francisco Mayor Gavin
Newsom and San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed. The package
will be forwarded to the governor's office for inclusion in a statewide pitch for a slice of
the federal stimulus funds set aside for high-speed rail projects.
— Brenda Kahn