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option is not to have high speed rail at all come through the Altamont and have all high speed <br />rail service operate through the Pacheco Pass, which is longer from Sacramento to the Bay <br />Area and is possible and was the original plan. The negative for Pleasanton is that the ACE <br />service gets only partially upgraded to the 45 mph train and not to the 70 mph train. If it were to <br />stop at Isabel/Stanley, it would continue on through the Union Pacific corridor and not back to 1- <br />580. <br />Councilmember Cook-Kallio confirmed that if it goes through Pacheco Pass it would go through <br />downtown San Jose and Gilroy. <br />City Manager Fialho felt the question was whether it could stop in Livermore with a transfer from <br />BART and have that be the terminus rather than continuing on. Ms. Nelson said she was not <br />sure this has been looked at as an alternative, but could be done as a phased option, but it <br />would require all high speed traffic from Sacramento and Central Valley to terminate in <br />Livermore. <br />Councilmember McGovern questioned the number of trains proposed and Ms. Nelson said they <br />were probably talking about 6-12 high speed trains a day, and service every 15-20 minutes for <br />upgraded ACE trains. Councilmember McGovern confirmed trains would not have horns at <br />grade separations, they would not run 24 hours a day and BART's current hours were from 5:30 <br />a.m. to 1:00 a.m. Ms. Nelson noted the electrified trains were significantly quieter than diesel <br />trains, less vibration with speeds under 150 mph. <br />Councilmember Sullivan said he has ridden the bullet train in Japan and felt it was a great way <br />to travel, but he has been in stations where trains came through which felt like a 747 was flying <br />past you. He asked if the Council was being asked to endorse one of the two alternatives. <br />Deputy Director of Public Works Tassano said before the Council was not to endorse either <br />alternatives, but to provide language that the City would include in response to the EIR for the <br />high speed rail. Part of this discussion was to how it works in with the overall regional plan. He <br />noted the alternatives include the I-580/1-680 option as well as the Union Pacific corridor, but not <br />necessarily weighing in on either option. He felt the Council may want to provide clarity on <br />options it may be looking for and said comments must be provided back on the EIR for the high <br />speed rail before September 28, 2007. <br />City Manager Fialho said Pleasanton and Livermore has had as a policy for some time the <br />interest of expanding BART somewhere in Livermore, whether it is at the Isabel/Stanley or <br />Greenville locations. He felt the ultimate goal for Livermore is how to connect these two <br />projects, provide a mechanism to expand BART and utilize and leverage the dollars associated <br />with high speed rail to have that accomplished. He felt the City has obvious concerns with high <br />speed rail at any level below, at or above going through the middle of Pleasanton, the concerns <br />of which have been made clear at all meetings. <br />Mayor Hosterman felt the Altamont alignment is delusional and that there was no way the Tri- <br />Valley would support it; however, she said it was important to support additional study on both <br />of the alignments and possibly what would become clear is that the Pacheco Pass alignment <br />truly is the preferred route. But, what it does is provide the Council with an opportunity to work <br />with other agencies in being supportive of additional study and also recall that in this additional <br />study, we will be able to move forward with a BART EIR process in looking at the extension of <br />BART beyond Greenville Road and she felt this was critical to us in the Tri-Valley. <br />City Council Minutes 8 September 18, 2007 <br />