Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Will Amtrak Joe Save California's Troubled High-Speed Rail Project?
Joe-Mathews
By Joe Mathews
Published 4 years ago on
April 22, 2021

Share

Dear Joe,

I should call you Mr. President, but there’s no time for formalities. You better move fast if you’re going to save California’s high-speed rail project.

portrait of columnist Joe Mathews

Joe Mathews

Opinion

No malarkey: It has to be you. California has shown itself incapable of funding, managing, or building deep popular support for this $80 billion train, which would be the first truly high-speed rail system in the United States. You — Amtrak Joe, with your personal devotion to rail and your $2 trillion infrastructure proposal — are the last hope for making it a reality.

Is it worth the political risk of associating yourself with an epic failure? You and your advisors are cautious people who don’t want to give Republicans who oppose infrastructure spending a tempting target. But If you can fix this problematic and high-profile project, you will demonstrate just how committed you are to remaking this country’s infrastructure, and fulfilling your campaign promise to “build back better.”

California Has Completely Bungled a Valuable Project

To succeed, you’ll have to change the mindset around the project. Most of the attention paid to high-speed rail focuses on its lack of money — the state has less than $30 billion of the $80 billion-plus needed for completion. But the project’s biggest problem is not money but management.

Thirteen years after California voters approved the railway, the California High-Speed Rail Authority still hasn’t managed the basic task of assembling the land necessary for the first piece of the line in the Central Valley. The agency, and its contractors, lack the combination of size, engineering expertise, and management chops to handle a construction project of this scale.

 Most of the attention paid to high-speed rail focuses on its lack of money — the state has less than $30 billion of the $80 billion-plus needed for completion. But the project’s biggest problem is not money but management.

California politicians, instead of supporting the project, are taking it apart. In 2019, Gov. Gavin Newsom abruptly abandoned the plan to connect the Bay Area to the Central Valley, leaving behind a diminished railway from Bakersfield to Merced. By making high-speed rail a Central Valley-only regional project, Newsom hurt support for rail in other regions, whose politicians are now trying to grab high-speed rail funds for their own local projects.

Joe, high-speed rail will die — unless you intervene soon. The good news is that California’s mismanagement has given your administration many leverage points to justify an intervention.

Federal Money Can Be Used as Leverage

One leverage point is $929 million in rail funding that the Trump administration pulled back in 2019 after Newsom abandoned the Bay-Area-to-San-Joaquin plan. The second involves $2.6 billion the state received for high-speed rail from the 2009 federal stimulus bill that it still hasn’t spent. California is almost certain to miss a 2022 deadline for using the money, which means you have the power to take it back.

Since you control $3.5 billion that this project needs to stay afloat, you can force Californians to confront the question: Are we serious about completing this train or not?

Your demands should be straightforward. As a condition of California getting the money it needs to keep the project alive — not to mention the tens of billions of additional federal dollars that will be necessary to complete it—you can demand major changes in the management. First, require the replacement of today’s weak and part-time board, and flailing CEO, with a leadership team that you trust. Second, insist on the replacement with today’s expensive and ineffective contractors with an engineering and management heavyweight —I’m thinking California giant, Bechtel — that can handle a project of this scale.

Unless It’s LA to SF, What’s the Point?

Third, insist that the project plan take the high-speed rail from the Bay Area all the way to L.A. Otherwise, what’s the point?

If California won’t meet your demands, or if our leaders undermine the project, you should pull back the money and leave the state to clean up its own unfinished mess.

One cautionary note: Don’t make any big promises now about future funding. Only once your preferred team is in place should you offer a schedule of future federal payments. Joe, we Californians need to be kept on a short leash.

You’ll have to shrug off criticism from Californians who say that the state, having put bond money and cap-and-trade dollars into the project, deserves to hold the reins. The hard truth about California is that we’ve never built much of anything big without federal assistance — our aqueducts, our highways, and our internet all required Washington’s help.

But the biggest thing you’ll need is the resolve to walk away. If California won’t meet your demands, or if our leaders undermine the project, you should pull back the money and leave the state to clean up its own unfinished mess.

Your love must be tough, but high-speed rail is worth the trouble. The project also isn’t as big a loser as it appears. Already, thousands of people are building new crossings and bridges in the Central Valley. And with a proven record of success in other countries, high-speed could provide a convenient, climate-friendly alternative to flying or driving around our state, and country.

But none of that will happen, Joe, unless you kick California in the butt right now.

About the Author

Joe Mathews writes the Connecting California column for Zócalo Public Square.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

One Person Killed in Explosion Outside Fertility Clinic; Police Say Act Was ‘Intentional’

DON'T MISS

Trump Wants a Deal With Iran, but It May Be Weaker Than His Supporters Demand

DON'T MISS

Duffy Blamed Biden for Air Traffic Woes. It’s a Decades-Old Problem.

DON'T MISS

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

DON'T MISS

Police and Firefighters Respond to an Explosion Rocking the California City of Palm Springs

DON'T MISS

Clovis Goes Full Throttle With Biggest Old Town Motorama Yet

DON'T MISS

Israel Launches a New Military Operation in Gaza a Day After Trump Leaves the Middle East

DON'T MISS

Kristen Stewart Was Always Ready to Direct

DON'T MISS

Walz Calls Trump a ‘Tyrant’ Who Is Trampling Americans’ Rights and Violating the Rule of Law

DON'T MISS

Severe Weather Leaves at Least 23 Dead, Including 14 in Storm-Battered Kentucky

UP NEXT

Trump Wants a Deal With Iran, but It May Be Weaker Than His Supporters Demand

UP NEXT

Duffy Blamed Biden for Air Traffic Woes. It’s a Decades-Old Problem.

UP NEXT

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

UP NEXT

Police and Firefighters Respond to an Explosion Rocking the California City of Palm Springs

UP NEXT

Clovis Goes Full Throttle With Biggest Old Town Motorama Yet

UP NEXT

Israel Launches a New Military Operation in Gaza a Day After Trump Leaves the Middle East

UP NEXT

Kristen Stewart Was Always Ready to Direct

UP NEXT

Walz Calls Trump a ‘Tyrant’ Who Is Trampling Americans’ Rights and Violating the Rule of Law

UP NEXT

Severe Weather Leaves at Least 23 Dead, Including 14 in Storm-Battered Kentucky

UP NEXT

Trump Says He Will Call Putin, Then Zelenskyy, on Monday to Push for Ukraine Ceasefire

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

1 day ago

Police and Firefighters Respond to an Explosion Rocking the California City of Palm Springs

1 day ago

Clovis Goes Full Throttle With Biggest Old Town Motorama Yet

1 day ago

Israel Launches a New Military Operation in Gaza a Day After Trump Leaves the Middle East

1 day ago

Kristen Stewart Was Always Ready to Direct

1 day ago

Walz Calls Trump a ‘Tyrant’ Who Is Trampling Americans’ Rights and Violating the Rule of Law

1 day ago

Severe Weather Leaves at Least 23 Dead, Including 14 in Storm-Battered Kentucky

1 day ago

Trump Says He Will Call Putin, Then Zelenskyy, on Monday to Push for Ukraine Ceasefire

1 day ago

‘Eat the Tariffs!’: Trump Warns Walmart Not to Pass Costs to Customers

1 day ago

Biden Audio Release Pressures Democrats Who Would Rather Talk About Trump

1 day ago

One Person Killed in Explosion Outside Fertility Clinic; Police Say Act Was ‘Intentional’

An explosion that heavily damaged a fertility clinic in the upscale California city of Palm Springs appears to have been intentional, local ...

1 day ago

1 day ago

One Person Killed in Explosion Outside Fertility Clinic; Police Say Act Was ‘Intentional’

1 day ago

Trump Wants a Deal With Iran, but It May Be Weaker Than His Supporters Demand

1 day ago

Duffy Blamed Biden for Air Traffic Woes. It’s a Decades-Old Problem.

1 day ago

The Day Grok Lost Its Mind

1 day ago

Police and Firefighters Respond to an Explosion Rocking the California City of Palm Springs

The Old Town Motorama in Clovis is expected to draw up to 35,000 people Saturday for its biggest classic car show yet.
1 day ago

Clovis Goes Full Throttle With Biggest Old Town Motorama Yet

1 day ago

Israel Launches a New Military Operation in Gaza a Day After Trump Leaves the Middle East

1 day ago

Kristen Stewart Was Always Ready to Direct

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend