Below is a Mercury News Story that outlines Atherton’s
and
http://www.mercurynews.com/peninsula/ci_10139005
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By Will Oremus
Bay Area News Group
Article
Launched: 08/08/2008 08:18:31 AM PDT
The two
The suit comes as voters statewide are beginning to consider a $10
billion start-up bond for the project on the November ballot. If Proposition 1
passes, construction on the 800-mile high-speed rail network could begin by
2011.
The lawsuit against the California High Speed Rail Authority
extends a long-running controversy over the trains' route through the Bay Area.
In July, the authority approved an environmental report concluding that the
line should run up the Peninsula rather than through the
The decision thrilled some groups, including Caltrain, whose
tracks would be widened, improved and elevated to accommodate the high-speed
trains. It dismayed others, for a variety of reasons.
Some rail advocacy groups, environmentalists, and cities such as
"We have residents that have lived in
Atherton more than 40 years along the tracks," said Atherton Council
Member Charles Marsala. "Are they going to relocate these people?"
Those disparate interests have joined forces in
the lawsuit, which Attorney Stuart Flashman said he plans to file today in
Sacramento County Superior Court.
"A lot of the concern is that the
(authority's) board wasn't given accurate information about the relative
impacts of the two alignments," Flashman said. "The staff of the high
speed rail authority, I don't know if I'd say they cooked the books, but they
tilted things very strongly to make it look like (the
In other words, Flashman said, the supposedly
neutral environmental report was "pretty clearly manipulated by
Not at all, countered Dan Leavitt, deputy
director of the rail authority.
"We are fully prepared to defend the
document," he said. "We believe the work was done soundly."
A big advantage of the Peninsula alignment,
Leavitt added, is that it doesn't require the trains to cross the
Besides, Leavitt said, the electric trains --
which would slow from a top speed of 220 mph to about 100 or 125 in populated
areas -- would be quieter than Caltrain's diesels, and the elevated tracks
would eliminate the need for horns and clanging crossing bells.
For Menlo Park Council Member Kelly Fergusson,
however, those positives are outweighed by the prospect of rail overpasses
forming "this wall dividing our city."
"I think that the high speed rail authority
has shown a great deal of disrespect to these communities by completely
ignoring our comments" in its environmental report, she said. Legal action
is "unfortunately our only option at this point."
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