FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
February 9, 2011
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CONTACT: Rachel Wall
916.384.9026
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California High-Speed Rail Authority Opens Doors to Private
Interest
Private Sector to Describe Interest in Nation's Largest
Infrastructure Project
SACRAMENTO
– California is opening its doors to private companies – small and large,
privately and publicly owned, domestic and international, in all relevant
fields – to seek their interest in participating in the development of
California’s high-speed rail system, the largest infrastructure project in the
nation.
The
California High-Speed Rail Authority on Wednesday issued a “request for expressions of interest” (RFEI) as a first
step in the procurement process that will award contracts for the first $5.5
billion in construction and ultimately for the design and construction of the
entire system, its trainsets, and its operations and maintenance.
“Every
day, we hear from the private sector that companies are eagerly looking forward
to helping develop California’s high-speed train system. This request for
expressions of interest is the chance for companies large and small – from the
self-employed business person in the Central Valley to multinational
corporations – to tell us exactly what roles they hope to play in making
high-speed rail travel a reality in California,” said Roelof van Ark, chief
executive officer of the California High-Speed Rail Authority. “With
Proposition 1A, Californians did their part with state funding, and the federal
government has stepped up with a pledge for a long-term commitment to
high-speed rail. We are now eager to hear from the private sector.”
Companies
have until March 16, 2011, to respond. The RFEI applies to either the initial
construction segment – about 120 miles through California’s Central Valley – as
well as any future phase of the project, including its financing, its core
systems (trains, electrification, signaling, etc.), its operations and its
maintenance.
The RFEI
is not a required, binding part of the procurement process, but it is an opportunity
for the private sector to formally weigh in on the largest infrastructure
project in the nation by outlining their interest in the project. It also gives
the California High-Speed Rail Authority a tool to shape the procurement
process going forward.
This
request for expressions of interest will be followed by the legally required
steps in that process: a request for qualifications in spring 2011 and a
request for proposals in late 2011.
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