Posts Tagged ‘San Jose’

San Jose airport gets $7.2M in stimulus funds

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

San Jose airport gets $7.2M in stimulus funds

Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal – by David Goll

Mineta San Jose International Airport has received $7.2 million in federal stimulus funds and grants.

It was announced Monday by airport officials that the Federal Aviation Administration approved release of the funds, which will be used for the first phase of the new taxiway extension on the airport’s west side, which is scheduled to start Sept. 8.

That project will enhance the safety of general aviation aircraft and reduce the risk of accidents on the airfield, according to airport officials. The stimulus funds will finance $5.2 million of the project, with the FAA contributing $2 million through the federal Airport Improvement Program and the airport $482,000.

The project is expected to create more than 80 construction jobs.

“This project is creating local jobs and making our airport safer,” San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed said in a statement. “The new taxiway also will help us support more general aviation, which will be good for the airport, San Jose and Silicon Valley.”

Part of the project will include the airport closing its principal commercial approach runway, Runway 30 Left, for about two weeks beginning in late September, allowing crews to begin work on the first portion of the new taxiway.


David Goll can be reached at 408-299-1853 or dgoll@bizjournals.com

via Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal

BART takes initial step to Silicon Valley

Saturday, August 29th, 2009

BART takes initial step to Silicon Valley

Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal – David Goll

A “notice to proceed” will be issued Monday by BART to a joint venture that will begin construction of the 5.4-mile Warm Springs line in Fremont necessary for the eventual extension to San Jose and Santa Clara.

The notice is being issued to Shimmick Construction Co. of Oakland and the Skanska USA Civil West California District Inc. of Riverside. The two construction firms will be responsible for the underground portion of the project.

“Construction to extend BART service 5.4 miles southward to a new station in Fremont’s Warm Springs District will begin this fall,” BART board president Thomas Blalock said in a statement. “I am pleased to announce that the final bid for this long-awaited phase of the extension is $136 million — 45 percent below our original engineer’s estimate of $249 million.”

A second bid for surface work on the project will be issued later this year.

When finished in 2014, the Warm Springs line will become the jumping-off point for the eventual 16.1-mile extension to downtown San Jose and into Santa Clara. That $6.1 billion construction project will be overseen by the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, which still plans to pursue it despite its current budget constraints.

The Silicon Valley extension is currently in the federal environmental review process to obtain environmental clearance that will clear it for final project design and construction.

David Goll can be reached at 408-299-1853 or dgoll@bizjournals.com

via Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal

California seeks $1.1B rail stimulus

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

California seeks $1.1B rail stimulus

Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal – by David Goll

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger submitted 42 applications for $1.1 billion in federal stimulus funds Monday to help pay for intercity rail projects, including funds for a future high-speed rail station and Caltrain beneath San Francisco’s Transbay Terminal.

Applications seeking federal stimulus funds specifically for the state’s proposed 800-mile high-speed rail network connecting Southern California to the Bay Area and Sacramento will be filed Oct. 2.

Rod Diridon Sr., executive director of the San Jose State University’s Mineta Transportation Institute and member of the California High-Speed Rail Authority’s board of directors, said the October high-speed rail application should include requests totaling “several billion dollars.” He has said in the past that could be between $4 billion and $6 billion.

Diridon said that application, being handled by the High-Speed Rail Authority, would focus on funding the stretches with the most advanced planning — San Jose to San Francisco, Anaheim to Los Angeles and portions of the Central Valley.

He said about $400 million of the application sent Monday would go toward a “box” to be built 100 feet below the redeveloped Transbay Terminal that would contain a future station for high-speed rail and Caltrain service connecting San Jose and San Francisco. Proposals for spending the remaining $700 million are scattered around the state for various intercity rail projects, Diridon said.

President Obama, who has expressed strong support of high-speed rail, set aside a total of $8 billion in stimulus funds for high-speed and intercity rail projects nationwide. Besides California, which has been credited by federal transportation officials as having the most advanced high-speed rail proposal, other high-speed systems are proposed for the Northeast, Florida, Midwest, Pacific Northwest and other areas.

California’s high-speed rail system received approval for nearly $10 billion in funding from California voters in November 2008

“By approving a nearly $10 billion bond in November, voters spoke loud and clear that rail, including intercity, commuter and high-speed, must play a greater role in addressing the transportation and environmental challenges we face in the 21st century,” Schwarzenegger said in a statement. “On top of stimulating the California economy, federal investment in California’s rail systems will help lay a sustainable foundation for economic growth, help us meet our environmental goals and improve quality of life here in California.”


David Goll can be reached at 408.299.1853 or dgoll@bizjournals.com.

via Silicon Valley San Jose Business Journal

Judge’s order may delay CA high-speed rail

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Sacramento judge’s order may delay high-speed rail

Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal – by David Goll

A Sacramento County Superior Court judge said Wednesday that portions of an environmental review of high-speed rail service will have to be rewritten, which might lead to delays in the project and loss of billions of dollars in state and federal funds.

Judge Michael P. Kenny ruled that the California High-Speed Rail Authority had failed to address concerns by Union Pacific Railroad about sharing its right-of-way in a stretch of the system further south, between San Jose and Gilroy, in its environmental review.

The ruling grew out of a lawsuit filed by the cities of Menlo Park and Atherton that challenged the adequacy of an environmental impact report conducted by the rail authority. Officials are meeting regularly with Union Pacific representatives to iron out any concerns they have about right-of-way issues between San Jose and Gilroy.

Rod Diridon, an authority board member and executive director of San Jose State University’s Mineta Transportation Institute, minimized the impact of Kenny’s 21-page ruling, saying it upheld most of the environmental study.

He added that rail authority members are waiting until a more detailed interpretation of the ruling is made available Thursday by the office of state Attorney General Jerry Brown.

However, he warned that delays caused by lawsuits could derail immediate plans for portions of the $45 billion, 800-mile high-speed rail network that would connect Southern California with the Bay Area and Sacramento.

“Losing even one month in our schedule in this region could cause us to lose federal stimulus funds, Proposition 1A state funds and up to $3 billion worth of badly needed jobs in our state,” Diridon said .

State officials seeking a portion of the $8 billion in stimulus funds must file by Oct. 2 of this year to be in the running.

High-speed rail opponents say Judge Kenny’s ruling means the rail authority will have to reconsider connecting the Bay Area to the system through Pacheco Pass.

Rail authority officials chose Pacheco Pass for the rail line instead of an alternative location, Altamont Pass between Livermore and Tracy.

“We are confident that a fair and complete analysis will demonstrate to the Authority that the Pacheco Pass route, with its lower ridership, lower revenue and its major impacts along the San Francisco Peninsula, is not the best choice,” David Schonbrunn, spokesman for the High-Speed Rail Litigation Coalition, said in a statement.


David Goll can be reached at 408-299-1853 or dgoll@bizjournals.com.

via Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal