High-speed rail agency pushes back deadline for construction bids in valley
BY TIM SHEEHAN The Fresno Bee
The California High-Speed Rail Authority is pushing back Friday's deadline for contractors to submit their bids to design and build the first stretch of high-speed rail line through Fresno and the central San Joaquin Valley.
Authority CEO Jeffrey Morales said Tuesday that questions from five consortiums of building firms have prompted the authority to set Jan. 18 as the new date by which bids must be submitted for a 28-mile stretch of the high-speed rail line from Avenue 17, northeast of Madera, to American Avenue at the south end of Fresno.
"The bidders have been asking for more information and more time to analyze the information," Morales said. "If we take our time at the front end to get it right, it will ultimately be to the benefit of the project" through better bids and possibly lower prices.
The rail authority estimates that this construction segment will cost between $1.2 billion and $1.8 billion. Morales said the agency now anticipates awarding a contract and beginning construction by June 2013.
The Madera-Fresno section is the first of four construction segments from Madera to just north of Bakersfield that, because of federal funding requirements, must be completed by Sept. 30, 2017. Morales said he remains confident that all four sections can be done by that time.






Most CommentedMost Popular
A forceful Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood announced at a tense press conference Thursday that David Sal Silva, whose death earlier this month raised questions about use of force by deputies, died as a result of hypertensive heart disease and was not only intoxicated but had methamphetamine...
The death of a man in custody following a prolonged struggle with Kern County Sheriff's deputies and CHP officers and the subsequent fracas over confiscated witness cellphones have gained international attention and raised concerns here that the incidents could tarnish the county's emerging...
The Kern County Sheriff's Office is out of control. That's one conclusion many people will draw based on the events of the past two weeks and in the context of recent years.
A draft city ordinance that would have restricted abortion in Bakersfield was placed on hold Monday when the Bakersfield City Council's Legislative and Litigation Committee voted 3-0 to table its discussion indefinitely, and instead, ordered the drafting of a resolution that could be less...
Blood stains are still visible on the sidewalk at the corner of Flower Street and Palm Drive, where a Bakersfield man struggled with as many as nine officers and later died this week.
A forceful Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood announced at a tense press conference Thursday that David Sal Silva, whose death earlier this month raised questions about use of force by deputies, died as a result of hypertensive heart disease and was not only intoxicated but had methamphetamine and other drugs in his system at the time of his death.
Classes were canceled at Bakersfield High School Monday after three small bottle bomb explosions struck campus, authorities said.
David Sal Silva’s screams seem like they will never stop.