San Jose BART needs to be scaled down, cites huge costs

Former San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo says the project to bring BART to the city’s downtown needs to be scaled down, citing ballooning costs that have now amounted to $12.2 billion, a stunning admission coming from arguably the transit extension’s greatest supporter over the years.

In an interview on Thursday evening, Liccardo said he would like to see a section of the project — the connection between San Jose’s Diridon Station and Santa Clara — nixed from the proposal and possibly finished at another time, citing the fact that Caltrain already covers the route.

He also said he’s thought about reining in the project since the beginning of 2022, while he was mayor and fending off reports of cost estimates exploding, but was optimistic at the time that federal funding would adequately cover the price of the extension, now considered one of the most expensive transit proposals in America.

“We’ve got a situation in this country where transit construction costs are wildly out of control,” said Liccardo, who is currently running for District 16’s congressional seat. “We need to find better ways to build. And in the meantime, we have to build within our budget.”

Though Liccardo doesn’t currently hold any sway over the BART plans, his flip on it will almost certainly raise serious questions about the future of the project with the Valley Transportation Authority’s administration and Mayor Matt Mahan, another champion of the extension, most seriously the fact that there are plans to spin up the project’s tunnel boring machine starting near Santa Clara’s station. In November, VTA purchased the worm-like device from Germany for $76 million, with plans to start construction in 2025.

In a statement, VTA’s Chief Megaproject Officer Tom Maguire said the agency “has a defined path forward that is voter-approved and supported by the Board of Directors and the public. At present, we are at work on the remaining six-mile extension that will run from Berryessa Station and include stations at 28th Street/Little Portugal, downtown San Jose, Diridon and Santa Clara.”

Mahan was unable to comment before deadline.

The news comes a day after a report from VTA’s auditor general came to light that found that the agency misled the public and its governing board over the cost of the project. The scathing assessment found that VTA had applied for federal funding using cost projections that they were publicly dismissing, and that the agency’s staff was disregarding independent estimates that showed prices for the project rising quickly — a series of actions that auditor Scott Johnson described as a “breach of transparency” in his Jan. 11 report. On Friday, Liccardo declined to comment on the auditor’s findings.

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