Monday, January 15, 2018

Press Release: Transportation Workshop

Transportation Experts Address Rail Service for I-15 Corridor

By Mary-Ellen (Elena) Garcia

The dream of traveling quickly and efficiently between Ontario and San Diego on a publicly-funded rail service is, it seems, tantalizingly possible but also challenging to implement. This seems to be the logical conclusion of a half-day workshop held on October 27, 2017, sponsored by the Santa Margarita Group of the Sierra Club. Michael Momeni, Ph.D., workshop organizer, gathered a panel of four experts to address various aspects of such a commuter rail system, including its technical, political, and economic issues. What follows here is a summary of their remarks.
John Rogers, P.E., F.ASCE Los Angeles Section President, addressed the geotechnical considerations of such a project. If a rail line of 106 miles were projected, connecting Rancho Cucamonga and Mission Valley (San Diego), the line would intersect with 9 freeways or highways; 97 highways or watercourse crossings and three railroad crossings.  Ideally it would connect destination hubs between the two end points, such as San Bernardino, Riverside, Corona and so on. Considerations for riders to get to and from the line would include issues such as parking a vehicle, using local public transportation, and ride sharing, to name a few. Right-of-way issues would include the fact that freeway medians could only support either light- or high-speed rail, but not both.  Further, stations on medians would need to provide elevators or stairs for passengers and access from and to parking or loading/unloading areas. Final considerations were the geological realities found along  the 1-15 corridor, such as earthquake fault lines, landslide areas, soil liquefaction, potential for dam inundation and seismic settlement.  This presentation included 17 maps showing where there were potential locations for different types of these geologic constraints.
 John Standiford, Deputy Executive Director for the Riverside County Transportation Commission (RCTC), spoke about the next generation rail study and the countywide long-range transportation plan. The RCTC is a member of the Southern California Rail Authority, or MetroLink, and is collaborating with the CalTrans Division of Rail on the Coachella Valley-San Gorgonio Pass Rail Study, which will identify and  prioritize rail investments through 2040. The goal of the study is to provide daily train service between Los Angeles’s Union Station and the Coachella Valley. Currently a service development plan is being studied, with anticipated approval by NEPA/CEQA in 2019. The Next Generation Rail Study hopes to identify other high-traffic corridors in the county and to discuss alternative transportation technologies for investment and infrastructure implementation.
Steve Fox, Senior Regional Planner for the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG), discussed the Los Angeles-San Bernardino Inter-County Transit and Rail Connectivity Study. Significant improvements in rail service and highway infrastructure are already underway or are being planned for the inter-county corridor. L.A. Metro and the San Bernardino Transportation Authority have joined in this study with a number of goals, one seeking to evaluate the efficiency and effectiveness of providing both light rail and commuter rail service in the same corridor. Another is to make sure that transportation planning benefits residents of San Bernardino County and serves the Ontario Airport. An overarching goal, subsuming interim study objectives, is to determine the optimum mix of commuter rail, light rail, BRT, and express bus in the corridor. Fleshing out various aspects of the study, slides detailed the inter-county objectives, travel market analysis and transportation alternatives and also presented several maps of potential configurations.
The last speaker was Michelle Boehm, Southern California Regional Director of the California High-Speed Rail Authority, who spoke on high-speed rail development from Ontario to San Diego. The Authority is responsible for planning, designing, building and operating the high-speed rail system, which will run from San Francisco to the Los Angeles basin in under three hours. It will eventually extend to Sacramento and San Diego, 800 miles in all. It will connect all major population centers in California, tie local economies together, provide new mobility options, establish long-term economic growth, and help revitalize station areas.
The Los Angeles to San Diego project section via the Inland Empire is part of Phase 2 of the California High-Speed Rail system. It will connect Los Angeles and San Diego in just 1 hour 20 minutes, and close the existing passenger rail gap between the Inland Empire and San Diego County. This system will use 100% renewable energy, virtually eliminating emissions and improving air quality. Routing alternatives along the approximately 170-mile corridor are currently being evaluated. Stations are being considered in locations including Ontario Airport, San Bernardino, Riverside, Corona, Murrieta, Escondido, and San Diego. The various aspects of the projects, including maps, economic impacts, small business participation, and increased job opportunities, are detailed in the many slides that illustrate her presentation.
Organizer Momeni, Chair of the Transportation Task Force for the Santa Margarita Group, advocates commuter rail for the Inland Empire as he writes:” It would stimulate economic development within the corridor. It would reduce the use of Interstate 15/215 by single commuters.  It would link to the existing commuter train services both in San Diego and Los Angeles counties.  It would improve air quality within the region by removing a large number of commuter cars from the highways. It would improve the safety and quality of life for commuters.”  It was not surprising that his dream was supported by much of what had been covered when the workshop wrapped up at 2:00 pm.
For more information on speakers and copies of the slides used in their presentations, see:

Saturday, January 13, 2018

Lawsuit Challenges Development That Could Doom California's Santa Ana Mountain Lions


TEMECULA, Calif.— Conservation organizations sued the city of Temecula today for approving the Altair housing development, which would endanger the local mountain lion population by disrupting critical wildlife corridors. The groups include the Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club, Mountain Lion Foundation and Cougar Connection.

Please read the following article:

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/news/press_releases/2018/altair-housing-development-01-11-2018.php