The
White House on Friday announced $8.2 billion in federal funding
for rail projects across the country, including the California
project billed at the first U.S. speed rail project with speeds
of 220 miles per hour.
California Governor Gavin Newsom, who in October asked President
Joe Biden to approve funding, said the award was "a vote of
confidence in today’s vision and comes at a critical turning
point, providing the project new momentum."
The administration also awarded $3 billion for a planned high
speed rail line between Las Vegas and Los Angeles.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told reporters Thursday
the California project "is facing a lot of the challenges that
come with being the very first at anything" and added winning
rail awards faced an "extraordinary level of scrutiny."
The costs for the California high-speed rail project, which
voters approved $10 billion in 2008, have risen sharply and the
authority has not identified key funding needed for the project
that has faced numerous delays.
The full San Francisco to Los Angeles project was initially
estimated to cost around $40 billion but has now jumped to
between $88 billion and $128 billion.
The rail authority estimated costs for an initial 171-mile
segment connecting Merced to Bakersfield rose from $25.7 billion
to at least $32 billion and is hoping initial service will begin
in 2030.
The Obama administration awarded California $3.5 billion in 2010
and the state has dedicated another $4.2 billion to the project.
California wants $8 billion in total from the Biden
administration for the project after recently winning another
$202 million in federal funds for grade separation projects.
In 2021, the Biden administration restored funding for the
California project after then-President Donald Trump pulled
funding for the project, hobbled by delays and rising costs,
calling it a "disaster." Many Republicans in Congress want to
bar the White House from awarding more funding to the project.
(Reporting by David Shepardson, Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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