Despite some progress, state's high-speed rail is $100 billion short and many years from reality (2024)

California’s high-speed rail train could feature an indoor play area for children and seating options that would allow people to meet as a group or cocoon in a reading nook. Recently released drawings of the imagined interior, station platforms and a video walk-through of a model train car offered a glimpse into the future of the transit system and its promise to transform the state.

But how — and if — it will ever live up to that promise to connect Los Angeles to San Francisco by train in less than three hours still remains unknown. While some progress has been made in the last 15 years, the timeline for completion has moved back by more than a decade and cost estimates have grown by the billions.

Transit experts and state policy advisers have continued to question how the lofty project will be paid for as the proposed cost has increased without guaranteed funding sources. Projected ridership has also dipped since the pandemic.

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“Schedules are stretching out, demand estimates have fallen and financing is inadequate and unstable,” said high-speed rail peer-review group chair Louis Thompson at a recent state legislative hearing. The state-appointed panel advises the California High-Speed Rail Authority.

Rail Authority Chief Executive Brian Kelly, who plans to step down this year, and other rail officials have also acknowledged the questionable funding of a rail system with less than a quarter of its length under construction three years after the the first phase was supposed to be completed.

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Here’s where things stand:

When will the train start running and where will it go?

Voters first approved a high-speed rail proposal in 2008 that would connect Los Angeles to San Francisco by 2020. That end date has changed considerably over time.

There is no set timeline for when anyone will be able to ride the entire 494-stretch from Anaheim to San Francisco.

The current focus centers on the Central Valley, where officials estimate the 171-mile line from Merced to Bakersfield will be finished between 2030 and 2033.

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There are currently 119 miles under construction stretching from Madera to Shafter. An environmental review cleared the expansion to Merced and Bakersfield, but the authority has not yet fully secured funding to do so.

While construction has been a boon for the area that was hard-hit by the Great Recession when the rail system was passed, bringing in more than 12,000 jobs to the Central Valley, the train has been out of sight for much of the state.

“We’re starting in the most underpopulated portion of the route,” said Ethan Elkind, director of the climate program at UC Berkeley Law’s Center for Law, Energy and the Environment. “The voters and the taxpayers in the [more] populated areas see no benefit from the system.”

There’s economic and social advantages for connecting areas in the Central Valley to “thriving coastal economies because we have a very unequal society in California,” Elkind said. But no one knows when that will definitively happen.

Officials expect that the 463-mile stretch between Los Angeles and San Francisco will be environmentally cleared by May, pending approval of a key section between Palmdale and Burbank. Funding for that additional construction has not been locked down.

The high-speed rail peer-review group has recommended the Legislature commission an “independent review of the economic and financial justification for the project” before “recommitting” to the first phase.

How much will the project cost?

Officials estimate it could cost about $35 billion to finish the first line from Bakersfield to Merced and roughly $100 billion more to complete the route from Los Angeles to San Francisco — about $100 billion more than what was originally proposed years ago. And the source of most funds is unclear.

High-speed rail development relies on state and federal funding and California’s cap-and-trade incentive, which is set to expire in 2030. The authority hopes to secure private investments in the future, according to its most recent business plan, but currently uses none.

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Politics

For Subscribers

New high-speed train from Vegas to SoCal will be a model for the nation — if it succeeds

The White House is betting that Florida’s Brightline can build a successful high-speed rail line. But the Las Vegas-to-Southern California route has challenges.

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The outcome of the November election could have an effect on future funding.

“We want a federal partner that celebrates California and that celebrates what high-speed rail not only brings to our state, but really, to our nation,” state assembly Transportation Chair Lori D. Wilson (D-Suisun City) said.

The Trump administration previously tried to pull back funding for the project, while the Biden administration has been more supportive. It recently awarded the state more than $3 billion for the project, which will go toward the completion of the Central Valley line.

The authority is still about $7 billion short for what’s needed to finish the Central Valley line, in addition to the tens of billions of dollars needed to fund the rest of the route.

“There is no source of that money right now,” Thompson told The Times. “If and when they reach the point where they want to get out of the Central Valley, then the state itself is going to have to find a lot more money.”

Once the first line is complete, a second phase is supposed to connect Merced to Sacramento and Los Angeles to San Diego, expanding the line to about 800 miles.

Why the delay?

Transit experts have said the mega-project launched before it was ready to. As Thompson told the Legislature in 2019, “we got the cart before the horse.”

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Kelly acknowledged the misstep at a recent hearing.

“It got federal monies to start in a specific location and those dollars had to be spent under an unrealistic timeline,” he said. “The authority wanted to advance work to keep the federal dollars which was understandable, but in so doing, it got into construction before some of the pre-construction activities were done.”

The rail authority essentially tried to learn how to develop the country’s first high-speed rail system in real time.

“They were hiring consultants, they were getting sued, they were spending a lot of money and nothing was getting built,” Elkind said.

Environmental reviews and lawsuits over the authority’s plans to disrupt housing complexes and developments have caused other setbacks. So has political jockeying and the project’s need for buy-in from voters across the state’s 58 counties. Over the years, local leaders have opined about where the train should go and which communities should directly benefit, leading to shifts in strategy that have prolonged the process.

Instead of taking a direct route up Interstate 5, for example, the train’s route veered through the eastern cities of the Central Valley to get support from county leaders and the federal government.

“That takes the route out of the most direct path and opens up a lot of land-use controversies, a lot of expense and hassle,” Elkind said.

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Despite some progress, state's high-speed rail is $100 billion short and many years from reality (3)

Work continues on California’s high-speed rail project.

(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

How has the project affected communities?

The project has posed benefits and challenges for some communities. Thousands of construction jobs have been created in the Central Valley and some areas have seen a rise in businesses and redeveloped downtown areas in anticipation of the future rail.

“It becomes an equalizer,” Merced’s deputy city manager Frank Quintero said about the system’s ability to connect the Central Valley with other metropolitan areas. “Now we’re going to be as desirable as the Bay Area as a whole and Southern California.”

Construction and the possibility of construction has also brought some issues. In downtown Fresno, for example, a thoroughfare road has been closed for eight years. In Bakersfield, business owners have sought clarity about when they’ll have to move, and where they will relocate to, making planning difficult.

There are some logistical questions that have yet to be answered too, including how people will ultimately get to future stations in areas that have limited public transit.

Will the high-speed rail work with the Brightline rail?

The federal government has awarded a $3-billion grant to private railroad Brightline for the development of a high-speed rail line between Rancho Cucamonga and Las Vegas. It is a much more simple venture, not crossing though cities and farmlands, running down the wide median of Interstate 15 in the desert. The project is aiming to open by the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

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Kelly recently said that the hope is that the state’s high-speed rail will eventually integrate with the Brightline rail, potentially filling a transit gap between stations.

More to Read

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  • LAX People Mover on track for completion after board approves extra $400 million

    July 18, 2024

  • Despite seismic concerns, last segment of Los Angeles-to-San Francisco high-speed rail line is cleared environmentally

    June 27, 2024

Despite some progress, state's high-speed rail is $100 billion short and many years from reality (2024)

FAQs

How long will the bullet train take from Los Angeles to San Francisco? ›

Phase 1 targets a nonstop travel time of 2 hours and 40 minutes from San Francisco to Los Angeles, compared to about nine hours on the existing Amtrak San Joaquins. A map of planned high-speed rail routes in California. The separate Brightline West is indicated in yellow. DB E.C.O.

Will building high-speed rail create hundreds of thousands of jobs every $1 billion in investment creates 24000 jobs? ›

Every $1 billion spent on rail creates 24,000 jobs. Every $1 invested in rail creates $4 in economic benefits.

Why doesn t the U.S. have more high-speed rail? ›

The U.S., on the other hand, looks on. Not because we lack the technical know-how to build high-speed rail, but because politicians lack the will to fund it, according to Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner. “It's a financial conversation, not a technical one,” he told Fortune in an interview.

What percent of Americans want high-speed rail? ›

High-speed rail enjoys strong, bipartisan support in the US. A new poll by Newsweek finds that 60 percent of respondents favor the construction of more HSR lines; just 6 percent oppose it.

Are they building a bullet train from LA to Vegas? ›

Project Overview

At 186+ miles per hour, trains will take passengers from Las Vegas, NV, to Southern California in 2 hours and 10 minutes, twice as fast as the average drive time. Brightline West broke ground in early 2024 and is expected to take approximately four years to build.

Is the California bullet train still being built? ›

FRESNO, Calif.

–The California High-Speed Rail Authority (Authority) has released its Spring 2024 Progress Report highlighting continued progress being made on California's high-speed rail project, including work on the Central Valley system's largest construction site, the Hanford Viaduct.

What percentage of railroads does Warren Buffett own? ›

In 2009, Buffett completed the buying of the company. He bought the rest of BNSF for $34 billion, or roughly $100 a share. The buy gave him an extra 77.4% stake in BNSF, or 100% control. The buy equaled around $44 billion.

Will high-speed rail help the economy? ›

An increasing number of studies suggest that HSR could have many economic and environmental benefits for the U.S. This perspective outlines these potential benefits, which include job growth and increased economic activity; creation of an entirely new domestic manufacturing base; station area development and improved ...

What jobs will high-speed rail create? ›

So far, he added, the program “has had more than 70 graduates.” When the high-speed rail system goes into operation it will add a host of other job possibilities, including operation planners, station managers and workers, train operators and dispatchers, system security, maintenance engineers.

How long would a bullet train take from New York to California? ›

If the train were truly non- stop: It's about 2800 miles from New York City to Los Angeles. If the train could go 300 miles per hour non-stop the entire distance, it would take about 9.5 hours to cover that distance.

Why high-speed rail is obsolete? ›

It doesn't make any sense, so it doesn't make sense to purchase or to invest in bullet trains that have the capacity to go more than 200 miles per hour, say because of route designs, or because there are too many sharp curves, or because there are too many old bridges and deteriorating tunnels.

Are bullet trains safe? ›

Bullet Train Speeds and Safety

Despite these insane speeds, bullet trains are remarkably safe. In fact, the Shinkansen has had no accidents since its creation in 1964. That's over 50 years accident-free. Punctuality and safety are only two of the train's most advantageous features.

Why do people want high-speed rail? ›

High-speed trains can significantly impact urban development and land use by encouraging more concentrated, efficient urban growth patterns. They can lead to the revitalization of city centers and promote denser, mixed-use developments near train stations.

Do we need high-speed rail? ›

Social Benefits

In addition to sprawl, a large country like the United States often has vast distances between populated areas. High-speed rail reduces the travelling distance between far flung suburbs and center cities. High-speed rail can also help to ease congestion of urban areas with mega-large populations.

Is the US investing in high-speed rail? ›

Today, the Biden-Harris Administration is announcing $8.2 billion in new funding for 10 major passenger rail projects across the country, including the first world-class high-speed rail projects in our country's history.

How long will the California high-speed rail take? ›

The system will run from San Francisco to the Los Angeles basin in under three hours at speeds capable of over 200 miles per hour. The system will eventually extend to Sacramento and San Diego, totaling 800 miles with up to 24 stations.

How fast is high-speed rail SF to LA? ›

California's massive and ambitious project to connect downtown Los Angeles with the Bay Area via electric trains capable of reaching speeds of over 200 mph has cleared its biggest hurdle to date.

Will the California bullet train be electric? ›

"It'll be 100% electrified. It will use renewable power. It will literally be, not an embellishment, the greenest train in the world." Given that no major high-speed railway is fully powered by renewables currently, that may be true if the $12 billion Brightline West project opens on schedule by 2028.

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