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The San Mateo County Transit District (SamTrans) and Cross Bay Transit Partners (CBTP) are hosting outreach meetings this week about building a transit line on the defunct Dumbarton Rail Corridor, connecting the East Bay and the Peninsula.
As previously reported, this is part of an ongoing partnership, partially funded by Facebook, to develop transit uses for the corridor, which (as seen in the map below) connects Redwood City over to Menlo Park/East Palo Alto and then, via a wrecked rail bridge, to Newark and Union City in the East Bay. The line goes right by the Facebook office complex in Menlo Park, so it could be an important transportation link for its employees.
This latest study is a "public-private partnership to explore opportunities to improve transportation by establishing a new, high-quality, high-capacity public transit system along the Dumbarton corridor in the San Francisco Bay Area," according to a SamTrans release.
Image: Crossbay Transit Partners
According to a post in Green Caltrain, the blog of the advocacy group "Friends of Caltrain":
The rail public/private initiative is advancing separately from a study initiated by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and Alameda County Transportation Commission (ACTC) on East Bay Rail hubs, which is looking at where east bay rail connections would be among Dumbarton, BART, ACE and Capitol Corridor.
The rail initiative is moving forward separately from an MTC initiative to speed buses and carpools on the Dumbarton Corridor, dubbed Dumbarton Forward. A report for that project was circulating last summer but hasn’t yet surfaced.
How these initiatives will relate to each other in practice is another one of the good questions to ask at the public meetings.
CBTP had its first outreach meeting on Saturday in Newark.
The meeting in Newark. Photo: SamTrans's twitter feed
According to Levin's post about the meeting, "Regarding rail connections beyond Newark to Fremont and Union City, BART and ACE/Capitol Corridor, Winsome Bowen of Facebook said that the project would need to work with the Union Pacific freight railroad to gain rights to use the rails beyond the SamTrans right of way in Newark."
Levin, who also spoke with Streetsblog, said she is thankful that when the project begins environmental impact clearances it won't have to contend with "Levels of Service" requirements. We no longer have a regime, she added, that "...considers making inconvenience to solo drivers an environmental impact."
What kind of trains will run on the line? That's not yet determined. "Engineering studies, scheduled to start over the next few months, will look at various transportation methods and technologies," wrote Dale Bonner of CBTP in an email to Streetsblog.
Wednesday, Feb. 27 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. at the Veterans Memorial Senior Center, 1455 Madison Ave., Redwood City
Thursday, Feb. 28 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m. at the Centerville Community Center, 3355 Country Dr., Fremont
Saturday, March 2 10:30 a.m.-12 p.m. at the Menlo Park Senior Center, 110 Terminal Ave., Menlo Park
Meanwhile, the Silicon Valley Bicycle Coalition has been fighting to make sure some kind of bike and pedestrian facility is built along the Peninsula side, connecting from Redwood City to the Dumbarton highway bridge's existing bike path. The SVBC's Emma Shlaes told Streetsblog that in earlier studies, SamTrans was planning to eliminate the bike trail. "They were like we don’t think we have room for a trail, and we said we disagree, and that would be losing a huge opportunity," she said. The goal of the Coalition, she said, is to do something similar to what was done with the SMART train in Marin, which has a dedicated bike path alongside the tracks.
The Coalition sent a joint letter to the study authors, and a bike facility is back in this latest study.
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