Six years after Californian voters passed Proposition 1A to begin work on an 836km high-speed rail line between San Francisco and Los Angeles, work has actually begun. Last week the first demolition crews began knocking down and carting away bars and apartments in Fresno, the Central Valley town where the first section of the line is to be constructed.
Trains on the line would travel at speeds of up to 350kmh, reducing the time taken to travel between the state’s main urban centres to two hours and forty minutes. But the $68bn projects still faces a variety of financial and legal hurdles before it can be considered to be properly under way.
For more international stories visit the CIOB’s global construction website GCR
Initial funding was provided by the issuing of $9.95bn in bonds by the State of California. However, the project took a blow in November when the Sacramento County Superior Court issued two rulings that prevented the release of funding from the passage of Proposition 1A.
It ruled that the State of California did not have a valid financing plan, as required by the proposition, and required the California High-Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) to rescind its business plan and create a new one. It also ruled that the state had not properly approved the sale of bonds to finance the project and declined to validate the bonds.
There is also a problem with federal funding. A report last year by the Government Accountability Office commented that, so far, only $3.3bn of the $42bn to be contributed by the Federal Railroad Administration had been approved. The report said: “The remaining $38.7bn has not been identified in federal budgets or appropriations” but would amount to about $2.5bn annually, more than the government’s spending on the whole of Amtrak.
Read the rest of the article at GCR
Comments are closed.