For some reason, the SF Examiner lands in B'game driveways on Sundays. Maybe that is when the progressive rag makes most of its money off of real estate ads so they need to bump up the print run. This Sunday's edition highlighted that "Monitor warns of two-year Caltrain project delay" and then describes the back and forth between a federal monitor" and Caltrain about what constitutes a delay. The project arrived in B'game about a year ago as noted here. Here is a taste of the warning
“The overall progress of work is far behind the original schedule,” that oversight monitor warned. Foundation placement and the installation of the overhead electrical contact system are “far behind” initial projections, they wrote. But the federal oversight monitor wrote in a June report, “The Electrification contractor’s most recent Schedule Update Narrative for May 2019 shows a Substantial Completion date of March 3, 2022, compared to the contractual date of August 10, 2020, which represents a further slippage.”
Caltrain, for its part, said it is firm that construction is on schedule for 2021, with trains expected to be running by 2022. That date is also a change — Caltrain’s program plan initially showed the electrification project’s “substantial completion” marked for August 2020, but Caltrain acknowledged in its own project report that this date has slipped to September 2021. That project report is also not publicly available on Caltrain’s website, a break in common practice with other transit agencies, leading to concern from Caltrain officials. It is a public document. Instead, the report was provided to the San Francisco Examiner by a source under the condition of anonymity and became the heated subject of discussion at the Caltrain board’s meeting Thursday.
My least favorite part of the piece was the opening teaser line:
Caltrain’s soon-to-come electrified trains may one day whisk commuters from the South Bay to San Francisco with BART-like frequency, easing congestion on freeways and bolstering the local economy.
I'll get into this more later, but suffice it to say the ONLY two ways we will ever see BART-like frequency from Caltrain is if high-speed rail never reaches the Peninsula or if the budget and land-takings go up dramatically to add "passing tracks". There are some nice graphics from Caltrain-HSR reports that illustrate that. Once I find them I will share them, but intuitively we know this to be true. Imagine adding a local bus route around the Indy 500 brickyard track. But Caltrain is stuck--the money for electrification comes from high-cost rail so they have to button-up and press on. Here is the new wall in San Mateo at 25th Ave.-- no room for a passing track there.
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