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Burlingame Takes Strong Stance On High-Speed Rail

Burlingame City Councilmembers took a stronger stance against high-speed rail, calling for reversing funding for the project or bringing it back to the voters with a ballot measure.

 

The Burlingame City Council, whose members have long been against the California high-speed rail as currently planned, discussed next steps in stopping the railway at its Tuesday meeting, most notably encouraging a ballot measure bringing high-speed rail before California voters once again.

“Until we just say stop this, we're going to continue to have this cloud over our heads,” said Councilmember and Peninsula Cities Consortium (PCC) representative Cathy Baylock, noting all of the work City staff has put into studying and responding to high-speed rail in the past three years. “I’m still skeptical that the Governor will do anything about it, and I feel really strongly it's time for us to just say 'This is not what we signed up for.'”

When voters first approved the rail in 2008, it was estimated at abour $36 billion and passed with roughly 52 percent of votes. The project has since grown to cost approximately $98 billion, and the Authority has released environmental reports, business plans and ridership studies received with skepticism.

“[The High Speed Rail Authority doesn’t] expect any private investment until 10 years out and $30 billion goes into the ground…the reward is privatized and the risk is socialized,” said Councilmember Brownrigg. “It’s just a terrible, terrible idea. It does seem to me that putting it to the voters is the right thing.”

Brownrigg said people know much more about the project now, and legislators need to revisit if high-speed rail is on course with what residents want.

Burlingame City Councilmembers believe that, if placed before voters again, high-speed rail with its current plan would fail.

Members also discussed encouraging state and federal legislators stop or reverse funding for high-speed rail.

“I think there should be something on the ballot to end the funding if our legislators don’t defund it themselves,” said Mayor Jerry Deal. “We need to do something. If we don’t, they’ll just keep playing the game they’ve been playing, holding us off as long as they can.”

Deal said if high-speed rail isn’t stopped, it will drain transportation money in California for years to come, money members feel is desperately needed elsewhere, like with electrifying Caltrain and linking Bay Area transit systems.

“What I would like to see…is for us to take a position saying not just that we think the current plan does not make sense…but to say what we do need for transportation,” said Councilmember Terry Nagel.  “If we could start a plan to have the money reallocated…that would make more sense.”

Nagel noted the expense and backlash from construction and union groups a ballot measure entails, and said she was uncertain if a ballot measure would fail given the power of special interest groups.

However, Baylock countered that as long as high-speed rail exists, all transit money will go towards it, and a ballot measure would be necessary to unfund the project and redirect funds towards local transit.

While councilmembers also discussed drafting a resolution on the council point of view, Brownrigg said supporting a ballot measure might prove more powerful, as a letter or resolution sent to legislators could be interpreted as Not In My Back Yard (NIMBY) politics. He also encouraged waiting to make a final decision until the High-Speed Rail Authority completes a draft business plan, a process expected to wrap up in the next couple of months.

Vice Mayor Ann Keighran suggested Baylock bring up the issue at a PCC meeting, perhaps encouraging multiple cities to draft letters to legislators requesting they either draft legislation to stop funding to high-speed rail or put it back on the ballot.

Earlier this week, a peer review group issued a report criticizing high-speed rail’s plan, and suggested it be put on hold.

The first segment of the rail, which plans to run from San Francisco to Los Angeles and Anaheim, would be a 130-mile segment in the Central Valley.

Related Topics: Burlingame City Council, High-Speed Rail, High-Speed Rail Authority, and Local Government

Bruce Trevithick

5:07 pm on Thursday, January 5, 2012

So typical to see my old hometown being the leader in putting up road blocks to progress. Burlingame has got to be the NIMBY capital of the world!

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Foghorn Leghorn

8:21 am on Sunday, January 8, 2012

Just pointing out the absurd with absurdity when I say that Bruce's and Fiona's vision of progress is a skateboard park on Burlingame Ave. You want to be a tool for a Union and Government swindle ? Do it on your own dime. HSR proponents without a direct stake in it are nothing are little more than useful idiots Progress? Not! Only the continuation of growth of a festering oligarchy.

Anjessello

5:25 pm on Thursday, January 5, 2012

It's benefiting China or Korea, which ever one has it because they are going to sell the train to CA, so theres more money to it. It is way tooo much moneya and would be so memorandum to everyone just to have the 200mph train pass right by down town, How do you know a lady with a baby carriage wont accidently get hit, plus who want to wake up to construction for 4 or so years. I'd rather see flying cars like "Back to the Future" instead of that, I'm still waiting for a "Back to the Future" Car" or skateboard

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Ted Crocker

5:58 pm on Thursday, January 5, 2012

Bruce, Do know that the Council supported HSR through Burlingame so long as it was not built on an aerial structure (think of the defunct Embarcadero Freeway through Burlingame) or a berm? This is despite being unable to get answers to any of their questions for over two years. Burlingame is not alone. Statewide, this project is broken. It is not at all what the voters approved. The Burlingame council is trying to protect what has taken over a century to build. The "greater good" is not a reason for the HSRA to build whatever it wants. The irony is the added length of the route derived through politics combined with the concrete heavy design ( http://calrailnews.com/crn0811extract.pdf ), exacerbated by the lies will waste far more money than it would have cost to do it right, AND the HSRA already could have started. But nooo, the HSRA was too arrogant and the politicians too concerned about their careers to do anything other than perpetuate the project. Now that the lies and lack of funding have caught up to the HSRA, and the Obama/Brown led Dems lack the ethical fortitude to do what is right, as with many other towns, the Burlingame council members are taking a stand to prevent this albatross from sitting over its citizens' heads for the next 30 years knowing it could eventually destroy what we cherish. If the fed or state come up with the money to do it right, then the conversation can change. Until then, the council is right to ask for a revote.

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Fiona Hamilton

11:36 am on Saturday, January 7, 2012

Countries beyond the Burlingame border have efficient high speed rail.

I hope a follow up article will inform us how much this latest "train block" will cost Burlingame.

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