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Riled Over California's High-Speed Rail

It sounded like such a good idea. But the highly disruptive routes anger many

Last Wednesday afternoon in the basement of a church in Monterey Park, a dozen consultants paced quietly around shiny poster boards illustrating the wonders of California’s high-speed rail. On a projector screen off to the side of the room, a video ran on repeat, celebrating the train’s success in Europe. Free cookies and tiny water bottles sat on a nearby table.

A handful of curious citizens watched the video, perused the poster boards and chatted with representatives of the multibillion-dollar bullet-train program.

“We’re in the honeymoon period,” chuckled one rep. “No one’s mad at us.”

That may be true in the outskirts of L.A. County, but in downtown L.A. and surrounding areas, the honeymoon between residents and the still-obscure board members who control the California High Speed Rail Authority is over.

“They need to work in partnership with us rather than shoving stuff down our throats,” says environmentalist Melanie Winter.

Winter is part of a diverse set of environmental advocates, community leaders, elected officials and taxpayer watchdogs who are banding together in the hopes of changing the direction of the rail authority.

The rail authority’s members have little, if any, connection to actual California voters, who polls say are sick of partisan politics. In fact 20 percent of California voters are now registered as “decline to state” political independents. Meanwhile the rail authority board is almost entirely made up of Democratic and Republican operatives and partisans appointed by Governor Schwarzenegger and the Legislature. Its chairman is Anaheim Mayor Curt Pringle, a Republican with a big stake in the route, since Anaheim is a major hub on the proposed line. The others include David Crane, a Schwarzenegger adviser; longtime Sacramento insider Mehdi Morshed; Silicon Valley Democratic insider Rod Diridon Sr.; Democratic political consultant and MTA board member Richard Katz; former Democratic Congresswoman Lynn Schenk; failed Democratic state Assembly candidate Fran Florez; Operating Engineers Local 3 business manager Russ Burns; and Manatt, Phelps attorney Tom Umberg. Retired judge Quentin L. Kopp is one of the powerful board’s few politically independent members.

Five years ago, ANG Newspapers published an explosive investigation by Sean Holstege, reporting on a meeting led by Democratic politico Willie Brown and attended by Katz, Diridon and Morshed, at which Brown advised a roomful of engineering and construction firms that to win contracts to build California’s bullet train they first had to pony up $1 million in fees for Katz and other political consultants. According to the story, the consultants would then pull strings in the Legislature, aimed at getting a bullet train plan on the ballot. The controversy died, but several insiders present at that May 11, 2004, meeting with the big firms hold posts on the rail board.

Few California voters knew this back story last November, when they approved a vaguely worded, $10 million bond measure to begin construction of high-speed rail. The details were fuzzy on where, exactly, the tracks would go, what they would look like, and whether property might be seized.

A year later, Gov. Schwarzenegger is petitioning the White House for half of the federal government’s $8 billion in high speed–rail stimulus funds — although skeptics say California will not win that much. And the state rail authority is narrowing its plans for the route taken by the 125- to 200 mph supertrains.

Plenty of unanswered questions and neglected concerns remain, say those who’ve been interacting with the rail officials. First there’s the murky cost — not only to build the system but also to promote it, using public funds.

In a move that got them tremendous negative press, the rail authority board decided to spend a whopping $9 million on a public-relations campaign supposedly intended to inform Californians about what’s happening. The authority members chose Mercury Public Affairs, a firm that employs GOP political operatives, including Gov. Schwarzenegger insiders Steve Schmidt and Adam Mendelsohn, as well as former Democratic California Assembly Speaker Fabian Núñez.

A few days ago, in the face of ugly public reaction, the Republican and Democratic insiders on the rail board decided to re-bid the contract, and Mercury dropped out. Now, many bullet train watchdogs question whether California voters, and their vision for the trains, will be taken seriously by the politically driven rail authority board.

One emerging dispute involves a proposal to build the rail line down the middle of I-5. Some activists say the idea makes sense, especially when the alternative would be to run the rail lines through communities and parkland, in some cases cleaving them in half. But state officials seem to have dismissed the I-5 route long before real hearings even took place.

“There hasn’t been a rigorous study of that alternative,” says Damon Nagami, a staff attorney with the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), an organization of high-powered lawyers working with communities affected by potential routes. “We don’t understand why the rail authority wants to eliminate this option at this very early stage.”

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  • Robert 12/21/2009 2:45:00 PM

    This is insane and the Weekly is contributing to the delay of getting a high-speed train with its biased and slanted articles. First and foremost, people need to stop saying "Not in my backyard!" The people near Union Station that are proposing an annex elsewhere don't give a darn about transportation or the environment...they just don't want it in their neighborhood. Let's stop politicizing everything in LA. This is why we doesn't have an effective subway system. Remember voters turning down the Red Line? Voters should not deciding these things. Same goes for the airport. We need elected officials with guts, and we don't have that now! These people are elected to make these tough decisions. If they can't do that, they are not doing their jobs! We also need a High Speed Rail Board that is not elected. Otherwise NIMBYs and so-called environmentalists like the NRDC will just block any progress in the name of public safety and being green. Enough is enough!!!

  • B Oliver 11/12/2009 12:17:00 AM

    There's nothing murky about the city, state, and federal funding of the unlawful national tax credit allocation program. Millions of dollars in tax money and tax credits go to create apartment properties but the government did not set up any government agency to field complaints from applicants who are not treated in accordance with HUD 4350 compliance manual and 24 CFR 5.609. Locals Thomas Safran (a former HUD employee) and his Rittenhouse Square (Los Angeles) and Orange County's Urban Futures blatantly do not comply with federal regulations and do so because they know the CA Governor's Tax Allocation "secret society" Committee and the Office of Constituent Affairs "dead zone" will do nothing to help thousands of state applicants subjected to these deceptions. As reported to Congress' Senator Diane Feinstein, the Governor, and attorney general Jerry Brown. There needs to be an expose. Was it the Governor's office who told Rittenhouse Square not to comply with 24 CFR 5.609? Visit www.hudincomeexclusions.wordpress.com and www.not-hud-compliant.spaces.live.com.

  • Cino 11/11/2009 7:31:00 AM

    Just the mere mention of Fabian "Vuitton" Nunez was enough to make vomit. We could have had this train started had it not been for the WASTE and quid pro quo. LA is choked by nasty cars because of politics and corporations. It is time for the citizens to say NEVER AGAIN!!!!!!

  • morris brown 11/10/2009 11:19:00 AM

    Well the Authority board met on Nov 5h and chose a new PR firm ($1.5 million / year -- $9 million total) During the discussion, Director Diridon directed the new firm Ogilvy to get rid of those rotten apples (menlo park, palo alto and atherton dissenters) View and listen to his comments. Diridon's Rotten Apples comment from the Nov 5th board meeting on YouTube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YRecXlwFXWA Not a single other board member of the High Speed Rail Authority, objected to his dictates. morris brown stone pine lane MP. =============== The full text is: ======== (Diridon dictating to Ogilvy PR firm (hired for $9 million / $1.5 / year) what he wants done and done now) Second is, and I�ll use as an example again one area, but I have an idea that its occurring in other areas too, miss-information is causing serious media relations problems in the mid-peninsula � Atherton, Menlo Park, Palo Alto area especially. That miss information coming sometimes from in-advertently our own staff, but then again its being presented by opponents, blatantly providing false information to the media and then having no correction. No information being provided that would counter that miss-information and I think you related to that earlier. So would you relate to those two examples, not those two specific cases but those examples as kind of in the weeds detail, that you really need to be on immediately, so that it doesn�t , the kind of thing are like a sore that festers, or the rotten apple in the barrel , if you would like to use another example. And you got to get that apple out of the barrel immediately and please figure out a way and let us know at some time in the future and call us individually or give us a report on how you would be creating kind of flying squads of emergency response to nip those problems in the bud. You want to avoid them if you can but if you can�t avoid them you need to have a way of countering them immediately so that , miss-information isn�t allow to float around, its corrected . So please consider that as early tasks.

  • Gerald Foster 11/02/2009 12:57:00 AM

    The only route for a high-speed rail link between Los Angeles and San Francisco is a straight line. Otherwise it will never be high-speed. It will just be another rail connection. From the San Joaquin Valley northwards the terrain is reasonably flat, but what about to the south over the mountains? The cost of a tunnel from Gorman to Santa Clarita would be prohibitive, and then there is still the Newhall Pass. Let�s look at the alternatives. Using the existing twisty route up to Palmdale and then down the Techapichi Loop to Bakersfield. Nothing very high-speed there! Continue on up the east side of the Sierra�s? That won�t help either since there is no way through the Sierra�s to the San Joaquin Valley. East to go north is out of the question. West to Santa Barbara along existing rail bed is the only option but this has its own problems of travelling through highly populated areas with existing rail crossings. And, by adding mileage going west to go north wouldn�t make it high-speed. Because the LA Basin is surrounded by mountains there will always be a problem of trying to make high speed rail work here.

  • Ray 10/31/2009 3:59:00 PM

    Sorry. Hack journalism. Did this reporter just wake up and find themselves in California? This initiative was born under a Republican governor, advanced under a Democrat and significantly continued under a Republican (with a Democrat staffer leading the charge). CAHSR has been supported by a few sittings of the state legislature (under bills co sponsored by both urban and rural members of the senate and assembly. It was then approved by a referendum of the people. The authority's proposals (business plans, EIRs, substantive designs) all transparent and out in the open via websites, scores of public meetings and hearings and paid advertising. So no, this isn't about backroom dealings. And then this... �We don�t understand why the rail authority wants to eliminate this option (the I-5 median) at this very early stage." NRDC Staff Attorney. EARLY STAGE? Are you serious? This is the most 'advanced' HSR project in the nation. It's not at an early stage. Hack journalism and mis-information spreading keeps debates raging about subjects that are CLOSED. Huge factors that keeps California in crisis. The rest of the nation does not function this way. Get your act together.

  • Spokker 10/31/2009 3:52:00 PM

    "It`s a gravy train for consultants. We`ll all be gone by the time the first train runs" We'll be gone, but somehow the consultants have managed to live forever?

  • Rob 10/31/2009 3:48:00 AM

    The only redeemable part of this article was Joe Linton's comments. Existing rail corridors are the only real option for building HSR...I-5 is not for like a thousands reasons. Because the riverside trackage in central LA is the ONLY rail link between points south and points north, it must go there. The worthwhile question is what will it look like. Sinking the rails below ground is not very cost effective. Taking rails off the east side of the river channel would go immensely far in terms of greening the river, but the existing freight carrier will need to be pressured and compesnated. The $-hungry consultants mentioned above are very capable of designing a rail corridor that interacts in a friendly way with proposed green spaces...perhaps even enhances its appeal...conflicts that have already been mitigated in other parts of the world. So far, river advocates and HSR authorities have wasted a lot energy yelling at each other. The public good demands that they work constructivey with each other. Myopia on either side of this issue will be devastating.

  • TaylorYard 10/31/2009 2:20:00 AM

    If you would have looked on CAHSR's website, you would find this animation of the proposed Taylor Yard's section: http://www.cahighspeedrail.ca.gov/gallery.asp?s=taylor-yard Which clearly shows a sunken rail line with a park lid on top. Nothing to see here...

  • Jay 10/30/2009 8:23:00 PM

    What a poor article all ranting opinions and incorect facts AND besides who what to walk along that area of the river??!! There are far better places for parks..Why not spend money buying land for small parks 3-4 acres and put them in the local areas..not along a trasportation lane

  • savvy 10/30/2009 3:06:00 PM

    Well, the PR machine is spinning. Doesn`t like the truth. Kill the messenger.......

  • Daniel Jacobson 10/30/2009 1:19:00 PM

    This is one of the most poorly-written articles I have read on HSR. How this got published is beyond me.

  • JRamos 10/30/2009 7:39:00 AM

    what a horrible article. this one is much better: http://cahsr.blogspot.com/2009/10/la-weeklys-ridiculous-fear-mongering.html

  • Transit Planner 10/30/2009 4:23:00 AM

    The I-5 route is the way to go. Build a high speed bypass line from Santa Clarita to Fremont. Connect it to Los Angeles, Oakland, San Jose and San Francisco using existing tracks. This is how they do it all over the world. It would cost a lot less than a 200 mph. "BART Line" through Palmdale, Fresno and Pacheco Pass.

  • Rich 10/30/2009 3:08:00 AM

    Get the train built already. Union Station is a transportation hub and any other "alternative" to that would be a waste of time and taxpayer money. Why does everything have to always be so blown out of proportion with the Weekly?

  • Rachel 10/30/2009 1:51:00 AM

    I agree with the writer who said stop impeding progress! We voted on this already - build the high-speed train! This train project will bring jobs and connect California in a way that will be good for all. It is important for our future, the parks need to be a secondary priority.

  • Martin Engel 10/29/2009 9:24:00 PM

    Mr. Barker, you�re correct. Of the 10 individuals the reporter called out as party operatives and partisans, only 9 of them serve on the 9-member Board; Mehdi Morshed is the Executive Director. Your correction calls attention to the fact that this problem is not limited to the Board, but extends to the CHSRA�s staff as well. In fact, you yourself worked for Gov. Schwarzenegger until last month when you were appointed Deputy Director -- of Communications. I have trouble ridding my mind of the persistent thought that this project has been, and continues to be the consequence of back-room politicking, insider 'trading,' deception, and the determination to mislead the California public.

  • cynic 10/29/2009 9:05:00 PM

    It`s a gravy train for consultants. We`ll all be gone by the time the first train runs, and by then the costs will be triple, the consultants and the politicians who would have milked it by billions will be gone too; hence no accountability.

  • mewo nix 10/29/2009 8:08:00 PM

    I am SICK of this nonsense. We NEED this hi-speed rail system badly. It's JUST the thing this state needs, and it will GROW communities form here to San Francisco. But I am tired of people trying desperately to impede progress, and for what? Some PARKS? Give me a break. First off, we don't need PARKS in this area at all, and given where the parks are, the LAST thing we need is another McArthur Park. You want to protect the scummy land by the scummy L.A. River? I've been out there, and it's nothing but gangland and scumsville. You want to make greenery and parks along the L.A. River, and I heard it being lauded in another article as being ways to attract tourism to the L.A. River, and those areas recently. WHY would any tourist want to see that? Thunder Road from Grease is NOT what they're going to see... they're going to see graffiti and filth, cholos, bums, drug dealers, and low-lives. I know because I've been down there, and I've been to those communities who are bitching about it. California NEEDS this hi-speed rail system, and it got VOTED ON! Stop trying to make it sound like an environmental issue when it simply ISN'T. Oh, and I've heard the endangered cacti story too... who do you think you're kidding with THAT one? Just STFU and stop trying to impede proper progress that is for the good of not only this STATE, but this COUNTRY. We need hi-speed rail systems to connect the whole country, and if California is at the forefront of that, the rest of the country will follow suit. It will invigorate the economy not only through the creation of jobs to build it, but it will connect communities in ways never realized. It will grow the state, and help us tremendously.

  • Jeff Barker 10/29/2009 8:47:00 AM

    This article contains so many inaccuracies when it comes to the very basic facts (such as who sits on the Authority's Board and the dates of recent events) that all I can say is: it's clear we need to do a better job of delivering the facts about this historic and important project to Californians. We want to build this project right, and that means working with all of the groups and communities along the proposed path as we plan and design the system. -- Jeff Barker Deputy Director California High-Speed Rail Authority

 

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