FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Nov. 1, 2011
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CONTACT: Rachel
Wall,
916-384-9026 cell
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HIGH-SPEED RAIL RELEASES
NEW BUSINESS PLAN
Voter-Approved
System Will Create 100,000 Jobs in Next 5 Years,
More Than 1 Million Jobs
Over Life of Project
SACRAMENTO, Calif. – The California
High-Speed Rail Authority today released a new business plan that lays the
foundation for an economically viable high speed rail system that will create
100,000 jobs in the next five years, and is expected to generate another 1
million jobs moving forward. California’s high speed rail system, the
first in the nation, is also expected to reduce carbon emissions by 3 million
tons annually.
The new business plan describes a phased
approach to construction that will allow the Authority to adapt to changing
financial conditions as it moves forward, segment by segment. The plan also
updates cost estimates, ridership figures and funding expectations to reflect
current economic realities. The result is a fiscally sound project that will
attract and drive private investment, generate strong revenues and operate
without any public subsidies, just as other high speed rail networks do throughout
the world.
“We have carefully constructed a business
plan that is mindful of the economic and budgetary constraints facing both the
state and the nation,” said Authority Board Chairman Thomas J. Umberg. “It will
deliver to California and Californians a cost-effective, efficient, and
sensible alternative to more highways and increased airport congestion.”
As the state’s population grows from 38
million people today to 60 million people by mid-century, it is estimated that
without high speed rail California will need as much as $171 billion to meet
its transportation needs. That means an additional 2,300 lane-miles of
highways, 4 runways, and 115 airline gates will need to be built.
California’s high speed rail system will also
be better for the environment than auto and air travel. The system is expected
to reduce carbon emissions by more than 3 million tons annually and save
Californians 146 million hours in travel time each
year.
Construction will begin next year with a
130-mile segment stretching from just north of Bakersfield to just south of
Merced. The funding for this piece, which will serve as the “backbone” of the
system, has already been identified through federal funds and the
voter-approved Proposition 1A. This initial Central Valley section is expected
to create 100,000 jobs in the next five years.
Board members, including new gubernatorial
appointees Dan Richard and Mike Rossi, brought a seasoned business perspective
to developing the plan, which outlines the future of the largest infrastructure
project underway in the United States.
“Our role was to incorporate a business
perspective into the plan to prove that it is financially viable,” Richard
said. “What we present today is the culmination of a lot of sweat and hard work
to ensure that taxpayers are getting the best bang for the buck.”
“After conducting an in-depth analysis I am
convinced that this is an open and balanced business plan,” said Rossi. “This
is a current, realistic and transparent plan and identifies the funds and
financing necessary to implement high-speed rail in California.”
Authority Board Member Jim Hartnett praised
the plan as “a new direction, reflecting community input, focusing on the
concerns of local and regional rail systems as a partner in a blended approach.”
“Taking advantage of existing infrastructure
will be cost-effective and reflect the coordination needed to implement this
critically important infrastructure project,” Hartnett said.
Each segment of the construction project will
have its own value and independent utility, and depending upon the availability
of funding, each segment will complement the previous one while augmenting
existing local and regional rail networks in a cooperative and coordinated
fashion. Regional rail systems in Los Angeles and San Francisco have been
receptive to the idea of blending existing services with the new system.
Additionally, no public operating subsidy
will be necessary for the rail system. Like successful systems around the
world, California’s high speed rail system will initially be built with public
sector funds and when the system is operational ridership will drive revenues
that, in turn, will attract further private-sector investment.
To protect the taxpayers’ investment, the
economic assumptions including inflation, cost of materials and ridership
projections, included in this plan are realistic and conservative. The
ridership projections have been rigorously tested by a peer-review panel of
international experts.
High-speed rail officials were accompanied in
releasing the new Business Plan by transportations stakeholders, including ACE
Executive Director Stacey Mortensen and Mike Scanlon, who leads the San Mateo
County Transit District (SamTrans), Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board,
which owns and manages Caltrain, and the San Mateo County Transportation
Authority.
The new business plan is available
online on the High-Speed Rail Authority’s website. The public will have 60 days
to comment and help shape the final plan, which will be completed and provided
to the Legislature in January 2012.
Additional comments on the
release of the Draft 2012 Business Plan:
“As CTC Chair I would like to
offer my support for the draft business plan being offered here today and look
forward to working closely with the Authority in exploring ways we can work
together to coordinate efforts to make high speed rail a reality,” said Dario
J. Frommer, Chairman of the California Transportation Commission. “This
business plan is certainly a positive step in the right direction.”
"One of the strengths of
this Business Plan is the clear path it lays between beginning construction in
the Central Valley next year and achieving a full high-speed rail system that
spans the state, expanding our transportation options in a way that's safe,
fast, clean and affordable,” said Fresno Mayor Ashley Swearengin. “Starting
construction in the Central Valley makes good sense economically,
environmentally and practically. It allows us to stretch every public dollar we
have the fullest, and it allows the greatest flexibility as the project moves
toward connecting major population centers. I look forward to reviewing the
business plan and determining the path forward for adding high speed rail to
our mix of transportation options in California."
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