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California's Coast Rail Corridor: an overview - sh.itjust.works
sh.itjust.worksIn November 2024, the California State Transportation Agency (CalSTA) awarded
the latest round of funding
[https://calsta.ca.gov/-/media/calsta-media/documents/tircp-cycle_7_project-award-list_2024-10-23_final_a11y.pdf]
to various transit and rail projects, including $63 million towards development
of the Coast Rail Corridor. This corridor will link the existing, successful
rail systems in Northern and Southern California by conventional rail, per the
state’s rail plan [https://dot.ca.gov/programs/rail/california-state-rail-plan].
This project does not overlap with ongoing efforts to build the inland High
Speed Rail system. The Coast Rail Corridor was first formally described in a
study undertaken by the San Luis Obispo Council Of Governments (SLOCOG)
[https://www.slocog.org/programs/public-transportation/rail/coast-rail-coordinating-council-crcc/coast-rail-corridor-study],
a group of municipalities in San Luis Obispo (SLO) County
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Luis_Obispo_County,_California], located in
the Central Coast region of California. The area includes the prominent CalPoly
SLO university [https://www.calpoly.edu/] campus and is approximately halfway
between Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area. As background, the existing
state rail system includes two privately-owned Class I freight railroads (UP and
BNSF), various publicly-owned shortline railroads (eg Caltrain
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caltrain], Metrolink
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metrolink_(California)], SMART
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonoma%E2%80%93Marin_Area_Rail_Transit], NCTD
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_County_Transit_District]), and light-rail
and metro rail systems that don’t connect to the national system (eg BART
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bay_Area_Rapid_Transit], SacRT
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SacRT_light_rail], LA Metro). On the heavy rails,
existing services include the two interstate, long-distance trains
owned-and-operated nationally by Amtrak (California Zephyr
[https://www.amtrak.com/california-zephyr-train], Coast Starlight
[https://www.amtrak.com/coast-starlight-train], Texas Eagle
[https://www.amtrak.com/texas-eagle-train], and Southwest Chief
[https://www.amtrak.com/southwest-chief-train]) and regional/suburban/commuter
trains that are state-subsidized but co-branded under the Amtrak California
[https://amtrakcalifornia.com/] name (Capitol Corridor
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitol_Corridor], Pacific Surfliner
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Surfliner], San Joaquins
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Joaquins]), or are independently operated by
a Joint Powers Agreement (JPA) composed of served municipalities (eg Caltrain,
ACE [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altamont_Corridor_Express], Metrolink). Some
confusion arises when the name of the train service, the name of the JPA, or the
name of the rail owner, are the same. Relevant to the Coast Rail Corridor are
the Capitol Corridor, Pacific Surfliner, and Coast Starlight services. The
Capitol Corridor operates in Northern California, from the heart of Silicon
Valley in San Jose along the East Bay via Oakland and Martinez, north to the
state capitol Sacramento and its suburbs in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada
mountain range. The majority of this service operates on UP’s Coast Line
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coast_Line_(California)] and Niles
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niles_Subdivision] and Martinez Subdivisions
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martinez_Subdivision], and a small segment on
Caltrain’s tracks. The Pacific Surfliner operates predominantly in Southern
California with a segment into Central California. The route begins in San Diego
along the coast through Orange County and Los Angeles, then proceeding further
along the coast through Santa Barbara to San Luis Obispo. This route uses track
owned by UP, BNSF, Metrolink, and NCTD. But the relevant portion north of Los
Angeles towards SLO is UP’s Coast Line. Amtrak’s Coast Starlight service is a
daily roundtrip service from Los Angeles to Seattle, Washington, via SLO, San
Jose, Martinez, Sacramento, operating mostly on UP’s Coast Line in California.
Without a state subsidy, this service is often more expensive between the same
destinations, with far less frequency and relative comfort onboard. The Coast
Rail Corridor identifies the section of UP’s Coast Line located south of the
Capitol Corridor in San Jose, and north of the Pacific Surfliner in SLO, to
quantify what rail improvements can be made to enable additional passenger
service beyond the two daily one-way Coast Starlight trains. If enabled, this
corridor would parallel the inland San Joaquins route from Bakersfield (almost
LA; inland) to Sacramento, and would yield the first wholly-in-state all-rail
link between the two state-sponsored systems in NorCal and SoCal. Existing
connecting bus services between the two systems would be repurposed to provide
more frequent connections outside of peak hours. As the study describes, UP is
amenable to making improvements to the Coast Line – especially since UP wouldn’t
be ponying up the cash – with the proviso that tunnels along the route be
modified to enable double-stack freight trains. As a note, all passenger trains
operated by Capitol Corridor, Pacific Surfliner, and Coast Starlight use bilevel
train cars, which are 4.9 meters
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Car_(railcar)] tall above the rails.
Whereas two stacked shipping containers would be at least 5.8 meters tall, so a
double-stack freight car is even taller than that. Other changes would include
upgrading various existing one-way sidings
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siding_(rail)] – adjacent tracks that stub off
the mainline and terminate, used to park traincars – to have remote controlled
switches [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railroad_switch], and add crossover
tracks so trains can pass each other. Most of UP’s Coast Line is single-track,
and these upgrades would provide double-track meeting points for when freight
and passenger trains need to pass. The exact location where the trains would
meet depends on the scheduling, which limits how many new passengers trains can
run on this route. In addition to infrastructure changes, the study explores how
new service or expanded existing service can use the upgraded route. The three
options explored included an expansion of the Capitol Corridor down to SLO, an
expansion of the Pacific Surfliner up to Salinas (just south of San Jose), and
entirely new through-running service from San Francisco to Los Angeles. From a
cost perspective, the third option was the most expensive, requiring a new
governance agency, new rolling stock, new operator contracts, and negotiations
with Caltrain to use their tracks to San Francisco. Note that Caltrain in 2024
now operates the state’s first all-electric mainline railroad
[https://www.caltrain.com/news/caltrain-commences-fully-electrified-service],
and is unlikely to want diesel-only locomotives returning to their tracks. The
first two options would require only small changes in the terms of their
respective JPAs to serve additional territory, and as the study notes, economies
of scale exist when adding rolling stock to an existing service, as the number
of necessary spare locomotives and cars does not grow one-to-one. A key
distinguishment between the two options is layover facilities. The Capitol
Corridor is able to park trains at their Oakland Maintenance Facility
[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amtrak_Oakland_Maintenance_Facility], at
Sacramento station, and at the terminus stations in San Jose and Auburn. The
Pacific Surfliner parks trains in Los Angeles or their San Diego maintenance
facility
[https://www.pacificsurfliner.com/blog/project-spotlight-san-diego-county-maintenance-and-layover-facility/],
plus space at the SLO station for only one train. A project to expand this
station’s layover capability
[https://www.pacificsurfliner.com/blog/central-coast-layover-facility-project/]
was funded in 2023
[https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/state-awards-31-million-to-lossan-agency-to-enhance-pacific-surfliner-service-301736891.html]
but will only add a second train parking space and the maintenance capability
for that train. Although the study did not examine the location in detail, a
layover facility is needed somewhere on the Coast Rail Corridor, since the
length of the corridor will require standby trains, should there be equipment
failure or track failure along the route. Ideally, this facility would be
centrally located, or as close as practical, within the corridor and still be
near its maintenance facility. The Oakland facility is nearer than the San Diego
facility, and it would be cheaper to build more layover tracks in SLO than on
expensive real estate in the Bay Area. But that’s my speculation. The long term
vision is for every-other-hour trains running up and down the corridor,
connecting communities along the coast between the LA and Bay Area mega regions.
In terms of equipment necessary, the state DOT could reallocate its common
rolling stock from the San Joaquins to the Capitol Corridor, since the San
Joaquins is slowly receiving new single-level Siemens Venture cars
[https://amtraksanjoaquins.com/venture-cars/]. With SLOCOG funded for the track
improvements, they hope to wrap those up by 2028. The study – authored in 2021 –
originally envisioned new trains on the corridor running in 2027, so assuming
the rolling stock becomes available and Capitol Corridor is in a position to
operate on the corridor, it’s entirely possible to see new corridor trains by
2030, IMO.
Lemmy content at: https://sh.itjust.works/post/29311761
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