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Sullivan agreed, but he asked to add the option to the list that we also study the I-580 median <br />option because it is not on the list currently. <br />Councilmember McGovern felt the Council could look at the Tri-Valley PAC support the <br />continuing evaluation of the regional rail plan, recommend it for a BART extension to Isabel and <br />beyond because we have always supported BART to Livermore, and even if it were to go to <br />Greenville, she would be in support of this as well, and she confirmed this would not tie the city <br />in any high speed rail. City Manager Fialho confirmed she wanted to address the BART <br />extension, and when the Council goes to the high speed rail, the Council can talk about I-580 <br />and others. He said the two bullets are related to one another; one is the extension and the <br />other is the environmental review process to develop soon after as it relates to the BART <br />extension. <br />Mayor Hosterman opened the item for public comment. <br />Tom Radulovich, BART Board Director, San Francisco, said there are a number of complex <br />decisions; one is high speed rail alignment, and he felt the hybrid was promising. He hoped one <br />of the things that would come out of the regional rail study was to try and find a solution to high <br />speed rail and how BART should connect. He felt they were close to a consensus around an <br />alternative that looks good and that they want to take into further study. The thing that has <br />bedeviled them was that they could not address all three of those travel markets and a way to <br />move people around the Tri-Valley, and he felt what is proposed is something more complex but <br />actually solves the problem. He discussed the option without the hybrid without benefits, and he <br />felt high speed investment could be made through Altamont, not enough to require huge <br />structures or very high frequency, but enough to justify some improvements that will improve the <br />environmental conditions in the Tri-Valley as the service ramps up. Regarding freight, they want <br />to move its sea level. They hoped that if they can de-congest the I-80 corridor or the sea level <br />corridor around the Carquinez Strait, the Union Pacific will naturally go to the sea level route <br />because they use a lot less diesel to get around there. <br />Councilmember Sullivan questioned and confirmed that the City's BART director weighed in on <br />the matter and supported this direction as a member of the policy advisory committee. <br />Mayor Hosterman closed public comment. <br />Councilmember Sullivan confirmed with Ms. Nelson that the second study includes extending <br />BART to IsabeVStanley or Greenville and includes the best way to connect to ACE Trains. <br />Motion: It was m/s by McGovern/Sullivan to support the TAC's continuing evaluation of the <br />Regional Rail Plan, and the recommendation for a BART extension to Isabel/Stanley and <br />beyond. Motion passed by the following vote: <br />Ayes: Cook-Kallio, McGovern, Sullivan, Thorne, Mayor Hosterman <br />Noes: None <br />Absent: None <br />Regarding additional comments to the EIR which should be included in the letter prior to the 28`h <br />regarding high speed rail, Councilmember McGovern suggested indicating that if this is studied, <br />there should be no significant right-of-way takes or no major aerial structures in Pleasanton. <br />She felt it was hard to envision any high speed rail through Pleasanton. She confirmed visual <br />impacts, noise and vibration would be studied in the EIR. <br />City Council Minutes 12 September 18, 2007 <br />