U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood made a stop in the valley. He met with mayor Ashley Swearengin to discuss the passenger rail. Secretary LaHood says the train will bring thousand jobs to valley and boost California's economy. Opponents say it's too expensive and won't be effective. LaHood says any big project will face critics.
"You can get on an interstate in America and go anywhere. That's what they did for us. What are we going to do for our kids and grand-kids? We're gonna leave them the next generation of transportation, passenger railways."
(Press Release) U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood Wednesday promoted the Obama Administration’s vision for high-speed rail in a meeting with Fresno Mayor Ashley Swearengin and Sacramento area business leaders. Secretary LaHood stressed high-speed rail’s potential to create new construction and manufacturing jobs while providing California with a transportation network that can support the world’s ninth largest economy.
“High-speed rail is a game changer for U.S. transportation and is critical for a California economy built to last,” said Secretary LaHood. “President Obama has called on us to rebuild America by putting people back to work making sure our country has the safest, fastest, most efficient ways to move people and products. Building a high-speed rail network, beginning here in California’s Central Valley with American workers and American companies, is a great place to start.”
Construction of California’s 220 miles-per-hour high-speed rail system will begin in Fresno later this year and will, according to the California High-Speed Rail Authority, create tens of thousands of jobs over the next five years in a region hit especially hard by the recession. The state’s high-speed rail project would connect Fresno and other communities in the Central Valley to the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles Basin, two of the country’s largest metropolitan areas, with travel times under two hours.
Through a “Buy America” approach to construction, the Obama Administration is ensuring that high-speed rail projects are built with American-made products. In addition, 30 rail companies from around the world have pledged that if selected for high-speed rail contracts, they will hire American workers and expand their bases of operations in the United States.
The Central Valley is the fastest growing part of California, and one of the fastest growing regions in the country. By 2050, the region will double in size to more than 13 million people, making it more populated than Illinois, Pennsylvania or Ohio. Today, the Central Valley supports the fifth busiest intercity passenger corridor in the nation.
California is already home to six of the 10 most congested metropolitan areas and the busiest short-haul air market in the nation. The stress on the state’s infrastructure will become even more pronounced during the next 40 years, as the state’s population is estimated to grow by more than 20 million people. Without constructing the high-speed rail system, the California High-Speed Rail Authority estimates the state would need to invest $171 billion to acquire the equivalent level of capacity—2,300 miles of new highways, 115 new airport gates, and four new airport runways.
“Our highways and airports simply can’t handle the growth,” said Secretary LaHood. “At this make or break moment, America needs a transportation jobs bill that includes resources to continue building a national high-speed rail network.”
California’s intercity passenger rail system is one of several regional rail networks planned across the United States. To date, the U.S. Department of Transportation has invested $10.1 billion to put American communities on track toward new and expanded rail service with improved reliability, speed, and frequency of existing service.
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