High Speed Derail

By Diane Solomon
Last November, Californians approved a $9.95 billion down payment for the first electric-powered steel-wheel-on-steel-rail high-speed train system in the nation. They voted yes to an artist’s rendition of sleek tubular trains invisibly zooming through their neighborhoods, connecting California’s major cities and taking them from San Francisco to Los Angeles, and a new green future, in less than 2.5 hours.

But now that public meetings are being held, residents along the Caltrain corridor are worried about what 52 percent of California’s voters actually green-lighted.

In January, the California High-Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) began the development of the Environmental Impact Report/Environmental Impact Statement for two spurs of the system—the San Francisco to San Jose and San Jose to Merced sections. The public was invited to scoping meetings in San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties, which will continue through March.

San Jose’s first meeting, on Feb. 25, was typical in that there were more questions than answers from the CHSRA’s reps. With only a week’s notice, Harvey Darnell, chairman of the Greater Gardner Strong Neighborhood Initiative/Neighborhood Action Coalition (SNI NAC), rallied more than 75 residents and representatives of San Jose’s neighborhood associations to Gardner Community Center, which is located a few blocks from the Caltrain corridor.

Under the current plan, Caltrain will share its right of way with the HST, and in exchange, Caltrain will share the HST’s electrification, advanced signaling system and safer underground or elevated tracks to separate them from crossing automobile and pedestrian traffic.

Caltrain runs north from Gilroy up to San Jose and then alongside Highway 87, crossing Bird Avenue, then Interstate 280, to Diridon Station. It continues past the HP Pavilion along Stockton Avenue to San Francisco.

By 2030, the CHSRA is projecting that 90 percent of all Californians will be taking advantage of the opportunity to travel aboard the 800-mile Sacramento-to–San Diego system at speeds as high as 220 mph for about half the cost of an airline ticket. With 9.1 million riders a year projected to board HSTs in San Francisco, between 5am and 11pm, and 4.1 million at Diridon station, “everybody’s trying to figure out how much impact this is going to have on our daily lives,” says David Chang, who lives on Fuller Avenue, near the train tracks.

Neighborhood opposition to high speed rail has sprung up in several communities. In Palo Alto, protesters holding signs saying “Deceived by Prop. 1A” attended a recent meeting, charging that elevated train tracks above cross streets, and proposed security barriers, will divide their community like a Berlin Wall. In response to the protests, the city of Palo Alto asked the CHSRA to consider running the HST anywhere but the Caltrain corridor. City leaders even asked the agency to build a tunnel under their city.

Meanwhile, the tony cities of Menlo Park and Atherton have sued to route the HST away from the Caltrain corridor. This lawsuit will be heard on May 5 in Sacramento.

Can’t Stop This Train

At a Redwood City meeting last week, CHSRA chairman Judge Quentin Kopp stood out in a floppy bow tie, pink shirt and pinstriped suit. The former San Francisco supervisor and state senator is a charismatic figure from the Willie Brown /Wilkes Bashford era of politicos. Kopp said the Caltrain corridor was chosen because they don’t have to pay for the existing right of way from San Francisco to the Tamian station area in north San JoseCK. Asked if it was a done deal, he said, “You can’t predict lawsuits, but I think it’s called ‘democracy.’ The people of California approved it so there’s a mandate to carry this out.”

Kopp says he’s confident they’ll be able to raise the funding needed to complete the HST from federal, state, regional and private sources. Thirteen billion dollars of the $787 billion recovery package is earmarked for HSTs. CHSRA will apply for about $7 billion.

Ron Diridon Sr., the governor’s appointee to the CHSRA board, is equally optimistic.

He hopes to have an approved EIR/EIS by 2010, construction contracts in place by 2011 and a San Francisco–to-L.A. HST as early as 2018.

He says nothing’s been decided yet so people shouldn’t worry now about losing their homes. But HST opponents express concern about additional space needed to accommodate new tracks.

Gary Kennerley, the regional manager for the San Jose to Merced section, says north of Diridon station they’re counting on Caltrain Express and the HST to share twin tracks, with another set to be shared by Caltrain locals and Union Pacific’s freight trains.

Dan Leavitt, CHSRA deputy director, says “between Diridon station and Gilroy you could be adding just 60 feet because this corridor is constrained.”

“We’re looking at optimal ways of arranging tracks within the right of way,” Leavitt says. “Within six months, we’ll have completed our assessment and we’ll be right out there informing the public.”

Path of Progress

Word of Faith Christian Center is on Fuller Avenue and its pastor, Dr. Willie Nuitt, is doing the math. He thinks his congregation will lose their church.

“We’re right next to the tracks, so whether we want to be involved or not we are,” he says. “If they leave our church, it could be damaged by the weight and the speed of the trains. If we have to move, we want to make sure we can acquire new property with the settlement and have a place to go.”

North Willow Glen Neighborhood Association president Allison England lives on Fuller Street, and is organizing a scoping meeting at Word of Faith on March 24, the day before San Jose’s last official HSR meeting.

“We’ve been suffering from the freight and commuter trains that shake and crack our plaster walls on a regular basis,” England says. “Now, we’ll have to go through all of the dust and nastiness of them building this.

“We knew Caltrain was there when we bought our house but we didn’t buy into this.”

Tim Frank, Sierra Club senior policy adviser, says the state must weigh the benefits to society as a whole.

“You can’t say ‘no’ to this because a small group of people don’t want a piece of the infrastructure running through their back yard,” Frank says. “Some people will pay a price and we should consider their concerns, but we’re getting a transportation network that will serve the whole population of this state, especially when you consider how it will feed into regional and local public transportation systems.”

The Sierra Club and the National Resource Defense Council are both ardent HSR supporters. Both groups supported Proposition 1A. Frank says the people who benefit from the fast trains won’t just be its riders. Everyone will benefit from huge reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and less congestion because every passenger on the HST would otherwise be on an airplane or driving. “It will help everyone who uses freeways, everyone who breathes and everyone who wants to end global warming,” Frank says.

He says this ambitious project is just the beginning of a greener future.

“The HST is just one part of the solution. We need more local transit and we need to build neighborhoods that are more transit-oriented and walkable. But if you compare the HST’s impact on habitat, wildlife and climate change to building the new airports and highways that are needed, HST looks a lot better.” 

San Jose’s final HST Scoping meetings will be held on March 24, 7–9pm, at Word of Faith Christian Center, 873 Delmas Ave., San Jose, and on March 25, 3–7pm, at Roosevelt Community Center, Community Room B, 901 E. Santa Clara St., San Jose.

10 Comments

  1. Just give anyone who lives adjacent to the tracks $5 million dollars.  The total is a trival drop in the bucket out of the total cost, and will resolve any issues residents may have.

  2. Tim Frank of the Sierra Club pretty much sums up this “debate”: A few loud NIMBY’s aren’t going to be allowed to derail a project that will benefit the entire state.  Over 65% of peninsula voters supported Prop. 1A, 63% of East Bay voters, and while I don’t have the SCCo. tally, it’s probably well over 60% in support of high-speed rail.  Look, Palo Alto has 58,600 residents; yet when 50 people stage a march against high-speed rail, the press comes out with outrages headlines of “Palo Alto against high-speed rail in their backyards.”  NONSENSE!  Listen and pay attention to the vast majority of California voters, not a loud group of obstructionists.  In closing: high-speed rail will be built between San Francisco, San Jose, and beyond…story over!

  3. The real question is not 50 or 5000 NIMBYs.  It’s where is Rod Diridon going to get enough money to build the whole project? 

    The answer-  He doesn’t intend to.  He plans to build a stub system in LA and another stub system in SF.  Once he’s burnt through the 10 billion dollars (plus whatever matching funds he can scrounge), he comes back and asks us for more money to connect the two halves.

  4. There’s another alternative—the old Western Pacific trackage through Willow Glen. There are already freeway underpasses in place for this track.

    It crosses the Permanente track (& light rail) near Auzerais, takes a loop through Willow Glen and crosses the Union Pacific/Caltrain track just south of Alma.

    Advantages: Right of way and freeway underpasses already exist.

    Disadvantages: Goes through a residential area of Willow Glen.
    Has a lot of grade crossings.
    There are already plans to turn it into a bicycle trail.

    If you turn on the railroad layer in Google Earth it is still shown, although the rails were removed a couple of years ago.

    Another existing-track solution (as shown by Google Earth) that would bypass Palo Alto would veer east from Redwood City across the bay (there still seems to be a bridge). From there you could come down through Alviso, but that corridor is already at capacity. Or you could continue east through Fremont to the rail lines that go through Milpitas.

    One line from there is the other end of the Western Pacific tracks, that crosses Santa Clara Street near 101. The other possibility is the line that runs through Japantown to the Cahill station.

    The Western Pacific line runs more through industrial areas, whereas the other is through a more residential area. Again the Western Pacific Line crosses Caltrain near Alma.

    Crossing the bay is somewhat inconvenient, but it has the advantage of not going anywhere close to Palo Alto.

    If you were building new track down from San Francisco, the I-280 corridor would be a possibility that is still fairly open. It could link into the existing Permanante track near Foothill Expressway.

  5. just do it !
    in 50-100 years time frame this high speed train will reveal itself as a gigantic benefit for California.

    And yes it must connect only only major cities.
    SF
    SAC
    SJ
    LA
    SD
    FResno

    any developed economic hub has one on the planet Europe/Japan/Shangai

  6. Newsflash from the year 2030:

    Silly bickering delayed HSR in california because of stupid NIMBSKULLS. It’s now clear that the CHSRA should have just taken 1 lane from hwy 101 in each direction. With gasoline now at $40/gal the old hwy 101 is now just a shanty-town occupied by former investment bankers and commodities traders.

    The CHSRA *should* do something to help the NIMBSKULLS come to grips with the fact that they’ll lose their turf war. The sooner they wake up and move their family (if they choose), the sooner they can be happy again.

    HSR is coming to California.

  7. BlueFox (at top) is probably one of those that would get the 5 million wink I’ll support it if I get a cut!

    Personally I can’t wait for this thing to be put in!  If it wasn’t for the fact that I would lose out on a lot of my lifespan, I’d love to hop up in time to see the whole thing in action and take a ride!

    I would NEVER want to live in L.A. by any means but I sure wouldn’t mind visiting my family that lives there more often without much hassle.

    When it comes to our extra need for transportation once we’ve reached our destination (duh, our cars are back at home), we can take those rent-a-buckets that I’ve seen trotting around.  Some sort of mini car you can rent for a day at what I guess is a relatively low cost?

    Who knows but the speedy train is a good idea in my book.  Plus, those moved out of the way will get paid above market value for their homes which are in the dumps anyways market price-wise.

    And you can bet I’m investing in those little toy rent-a-buckets company.  Seems like an obvious choice to a beyond the train transportation solution. 

    Kudos to innovation to an upcoming solution.

    This was your pal, Big Andrew, saying heck yea to a 225mph train.  Rawk on.

  8. BlueFox (at top) is probably one of those that would get the 5 million..

    Actually, I would not get a penny since I live no where near the route.  I was just trying to be fair.  A concept many people have trouble grasping.

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