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California High Speed Rail Project

California High Speed Rail Project. Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce May 27, 2010. CARRD. Californians Advocating Responsible Rail Design Founders Nadia Naik, Sara Armstrong, Elizabeth Alexis, Rita Wespi Palo Alto base, State wide focus We are not transportation experts, we are not lawyers

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California High Speed Rail Project

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  1. California High Speed Rail Project Palo Alto Chamber of Commerce May 27, 2010

  2. CARRD • Californians Advocating Responsible Rail Design • Founders • Nadia Naik, Sara Armstrong, Elizabeth Alexis, Rita Wespi • Palo Alto base, State wide focus • We are not transportation experts, we are not lawyers • Contact info  • website: www.calhsr.com • email: info@carrdnet.org

  3. CARRD Approach • Process focus  • Collaborative, open, constructive approach • We do NOT advocate for a particular implementation or route • Engage community and encourage participation • Wisdom of crowds, creative solutions • Tools for self-advocacy • Watchdogs for • Transparency – push to get more information public • Accountability – demand professionalism, accuracy • Oversight – encourage State Senate, Peer Review

  4. 1980’s – California begins researching HSR 1993 – California Inter-City High Speed Rail Commission 1994 – Federal “High Speed Rail Development Act” creates five national HSR corridors 2002 – First bond measure proposed but delayed 2004 – Statewide system studied 2005 – Ridership surveys and studies 2008 – Bay Area to Central Valley EIR November 2008 - Prop 1A authorized State Bond Funds plan, construct and operate a High Speed Train system from San Francisco to Los Angeles/Anaheim California High Speed Rail Project

  5. 800 mile network Electric powered trains via overhead contact wires Maximum speed of 220 miles per hour Fully grade-separated, dedicated track alignment Automated safety systems (Positive train control) HSR System

  6. California HSR Governance High Speed Rail Authority 9 appointed Board members less than dozen state employees 4 tiered web of consultants / contractors do the bulk of the work Legislature – controls State bond funds Senate Transportation & Housing - Lowenthal Senate Budget Subcommittee 2 – Simitian Legislative Analysts Office Peer Review Committee 8 appointed members (5 of 8 so far) No staff, no meetings (yet). Update: budget allocated Federal Agencies – FRA, FTA

  7. Funding Plan • Backbone System Cost: $42.6 billion • Federal Grants $17 - $19 billion • State Bond Funds $9 billion (Prop 1A) • Local Contributions $4 - $5 billion • Private Investors $10 - $12 billion • Awarded $2.25 billion stimulus funds (we only get it if we make the deadlines) • Plan calls for $3 Billion in Federal funding every year for 6 yrs

  8. Environmental Review Process Mandated by California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Administrative, linear process Applicant studies impacts, mitigations, alternatives Lead Agency certifies the studies Responsible for enforcing CEQA: you! You must participate in the process to have any recourse if you don’t like the final decision

  9. Bay Area - CentralValley 2008 Statewide EIR 2005 San Jose - Merced Merced - Fresno Bakersfield - Palmdale San Francisco - San Jose Palmdale – Los Angeles Los Angeles - Anaheim Fresno - Bakersfield Tiered Approach to CEQA Ridership Study / Analysis / Model

  10. Program Level analyzed two routes East Bay via Altamont Peninsula via Pacheco Pacheco Route / Caltrain Corridor Selected Litigation challenged the decision. EIR decertified and re-circulated. Altamont corridor will be an “overlay” to main HSR line Bay Area to Central Valley

  11. Caltrain Corridor Caltrain + HSRA = Peninsula Rail Program Caltrain and Freight will continue operations during construction San Francisco to San Jose

  12. Structural & Operational changes

  13. SF – SJ Build Costs &Timeline • Project Costs • $6.14 B in Year of Expenditure $ • ARRA award set up $400M for Transbay Terminal • Timeline • Dec 2010 - Draft EIR • Jul 2011 – Final EIR • Sep 2011 – Record of Decision • Winter 2012 – Begin construction • Summer 2019 – Revenue Service

  14. Palo Alto • Track Configuration • 2 additional tracks needed • Constrained right of way widths near Paly/Southgate • Grade Separations • Alma, Churchill, Meadow, Charleston • Potential HSR Station • Station design options • Local requirements & contributions • Selection Process

  15. 96 ft 85 ft 79 ft Alma Cal Ave University San Antonio Peers Park Charleston Embarcadero Meadow Palo Alto Right of Way* *Approximate – not perfectly to scale. Not official diagram.

  16. Aerial Viaduct

  17. At Grade (Cars can NOT go over like they do today) Highly Variable based road and property configuration

  18. Trench

  19. Cut and Cover

  20. Deep Bored Tunnel – High Speed Rail ONLY

  21. Palo Alto Alternatives Carried Forward

  22. Palo Alto Alternatives Eliminated • Berm/Retained fill eliminated • Where: throughout Palo Alto • Why: community objection • Open Trench, Closed Trench, Viaduct • Where: Alma • Why: El Palo Alto & San Fransisquito Creek, Historic Train Station • Underground Station & deep tunnel Caltrain • Where: corridor wide • Why: cost constraints

  23. Mid Peninsula Station • One or none of • Redwood City, Palo Alto, Mountain View • Palo Alto has second highest Caltrain ridership (followed by Mountain View) • Station designs currently being studied • Local requirements • Parking, transit facilities • Funding support • City of Palo Alto has not taken a formal position

  24. Getting Involved • With HSRA • Officially  via comments to the Environmental Review process • As a CSS Stakeholder • With your community • PAN and other grassroots groups • City of Palo Alto   • Palo Alto HSR Subcommittee meetings (1st & 3rd Thurs 8:30 am) • Peninsula Cities Consortium  • www.peninsularail.com • County, State and National Legislators • Talk to your friends

  25. Tips on writing a good comment • Be Objective and Specific • Whenever possible, present facts or expert opinions. • If not, provide personal experience or your personal observations. Don't just complain • Separate your concerns into clearly identifiable paragraphs or headings. Don't mix topics.

  26. Air Quality Noise / Vibration Traffic and Circulation Land Use, Development, Planning, & Growth Biological Resources Wetlands / Waters of the U.S. Flood Hazards, Floodplains, and Water Quality Visual Quality & Aesthetics Parks & Recreational Facilities Historic / Archeological Resources Hazards and Hazardous Materials Community Impacts / Environmental Justice Construction Impacts Cumulative Impacts Areas of Study

  27. Catalog community assets • Identify “sensitive” areas • Historic Resources • Natural Resources • Open space, trees, wildlife, wetlands/creeks • Sensitive areas • Schools, hospitals, places of worship, funeral homes • Parklands • Business Interests • Describe community values

  28. Identify Impacts & Mitigations • Identify the specific impact in question • Explain the significance of effect • Consider ways to avoid or reduce severity • Describe additional mitigation measure(s) needed • Recommend changes in proposed mitigations • Support your recommendations • Quantify your concerns whenever possible

  29. Suggest Alternatives • Offer specific alternatives • Describe how they meet the requirements of the project • Can be on specific alignments, operations, financing, etc • Suggest different analysis methodologies

  30. Help provide accurate record • Point out any inconsistencies in the document or the data • Point out outdated information or • Errors in logic • Focus on the sufficiency of the information in identifying and analyzing the possible impacts of the project on the environment

  31. Remember • Don’t be overwhelmed • You know your community – just write about it • The burden of proof is on the Authority – not you! • If you don’t offer ideas, we miss a chance for “Best Practices” Democracy is not a spectator sport!

  32. Thank You! For more information:www.calhsr.com info@carrdnet.org

  33. Collaborative approach Involves all stakeholders Works by consensus Balance transportation needs and community values Proven Process Adopted by Peninsula Rail Program for SF-SJ First time it is being used on a Rail Project “Toolkit” to collect community information Context Sensitive Solutions

  34. Climate • Incredibly ambitious & complex project • Technical, funding, political, environmental, procedural challenges • Recognized benefits • Tremendous costs • Bunker mentality • Community Skepticism • Extent of impacts • Lack of specificity • Change is often painful • Economic meltdown, budget crisis

  35. Grassroots Landscape Groups throughout the State – each with their own focus Common theme: Serve to educate elected officials & public on the issues Act as watchdogs for process – request information and access to data used for decisions Speak publicly at Senate, Assembly, City meetings, etc.

  36. Context Sensitive Solutions Steps

  37. Context Sensitive Solutions • Collaborative approach • Involves all stakeholders • Works by consensus • Balance transportation needs and community values • Proven Process • Adopted by Peninsula Rail Program for SF-SJ • First time it is being used on a Rail Project • “Toolkit” to collect community information

  38. CSS Toolkit • Available at Caltrain/Peninsula Rail Program Website • Seeks community feedback on all alignment options • Serves as a framework • Do not feel confined by the template – you can elaborate • You can write your comments too! • Early participation is the best way to ensure your ideas and concerns are incorporated

  39. Altamont Corridor Project

  40. Cumulative Impacts Altamont + Pacheco Ridership Claims May 6, 2010: legal action seeks to reopen Court’s decision New Altamont route proposal Union Pacific Position “no part of the high-speed rail corridor may be located on (or above, except for overpasses) UP’s rights of way at any location. To the extent the Authority ignores this position, its revised EIR is deficient.” Bay Area to Central Valley Issues

  41. Example – Noise Pollution • Provide inventory of sensitive areas • assume most impactful alternative • 900 feet on either side of tracks • 1/4 mile radius from Stations • Be Specific • document location, population, hours, layout • reference standards (City, Federal, WHO, etc) • request specific analyses and mitigations • Identify any omissions, inaccuracies and errors in the document

  42. Menlo Park Alternatives

  43. Menlo Park • Track Configuration • 2 additional tracks needed • Right of Way width < 100 ft thru most of City • Wakins ~ 85 ft • Encinal ~ 75 ft • Glenwood – Oak Grove ~ 60 ft • South of Station ~ 80-100 ft • Grade Separations • (Watkins), Encinal, Glenwood, Oak Grove, Ravenswood, (Alma) • Caltrain Station reconfiguration

  44. Alternatives for Menlo Park

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