BayRail general meeting

Caltrain

June 15, 2004

June 15, 2004 — In an exhausting hearing that ended past 3 a.m. the next day, BayRail Alliance and other groups succeed in getting the SF Board of Supervisors to unanimously uphold the Transbay EIR against appeals filed by some neighborhood interests and a private developer.

June 7, 2005

June 7, 2005 — BayRail Alliance, working with TRANSDEF, files a “friend of the court” (amicus) brief along with the Sierra Club, TRAC, San Francisco Tomorrow, and TALC, requesting speedy appeal of a ruling on the Transbay Terminal project’s Environmental Impact Report (EIR). A ruling by a judge in favor of private developer Jack Myers has halted preliminary planning and engineering for the project. The groups ask the appeals court to stay (halt) the judge’s order pending appeal. This succeeds in producing a speedy stay of the order, allowing planning and engineering for the Transbay Project to proceed. Myers later drops the appeal after the City of San Francisco agrees to pay $34 million to acquire his property through eminent domain.

April 22, 2004

April 22, 2004 — BayRail Alliance, working with other groups in San Francisco, overcomes opposition from a greedy developer and some neighborhood interests and convinces the SF Board of Supervisors to approve environmental documents for the Transbay Terminal project, which includes extending Caltrain and future high-speed rail.

September 1992

September 1992 — PR2000 working with local bicycle advocates succeeds in getting Caltrain to try a pilot Bikes-on-Board program. On November 24, 1995, Caltrain increases the number of bicycles allowed per train to 24 making Caltrain the least-restrictive and most accessible rail system to bicyclists in the country.

Caltrain: September 2003

September 2003 — After years of delay, Caltrain implements full proof-of-payment fare collection, thereby realizing one of BayRail Alliance's original five goals for Caltrain.

2001 - Transbay Terminal

2001 — PR2000 changes its name to BayRail Alliance and launches a campaign for the passage of Assembly Bill 1419, which the state legislature approves by a 1-vote margin, to transfer Transbay Terminal land and development rights from Caltrans to San Francisco Redevelopment Agency to build new terminal and Caltrain extension. The Redevelopment Agency has pledged all of the proceeds (tax increment) from the development to the rebuilding of the Transbay Terminal and Caltrain Downtown extension. This amount is estimated at $1.2B of the $1.8B cost of the project.Governor Davis vetoes the bill, but directs Caltrans to support the land transfer administratively.

2000

2000 — PR2000 successfully lobbies the Santa Clara County board of supervisors to keep a 1996 Measure B promise to voters for more frequent Caltrain service, which results in them putting the squeeze on VTA. VTA provides funding to help boost weekday Caltrain mid-day service from hourly to half-hourly, with matching funds from San Francisco and San Mateo counties.

November 1999

November 2, 1999 — After a campaign by SF-based groups and PR2000, SF voters pass Prop. H with 69% of the vote. It requires city officials to seek funding for, and build, Caltrain downtown extension to a new or rebuilt terminal on the present site of the Transbay Transit Terminal, to protect right-of-way for the extension, and also to "pursue electrification of the Caltrain line from San Francisco to San Jose prior to or concurrent with the extension of Caltrain downtown".

1996-98 - Willie Brown opposes DTX

1996-98 — San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown opposes the Caltrain downtown extension, and blocks completion of studies needed to build it. This results in reprogramming of funds to “Rapid Rail” plan, emphasizing rehabilitation of rail line before any major upgrades. After SF activists including PR2000 campaign to place a ballot initiative to move the downtown extension project forward, Mayor Willie Brown reverses his position again, to support the downtown extension, shortly before Prop H qualifies for the ballot.

1996 - SFO/Millbrae extension lawsuit

1996— PR2000 joins in lawsuit against BART-SFO project now planned to extend to Millbrae, precluding the promised direct connection between Caltrain and SFO AirTrain. Suit ultimately would prove unsuccessful.
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