North Coast Trail (& SMART to takeover North Coast Railroad Authority, NCRA ) ?

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Great Redwood Trail budget approved by legislative committees, and NCRA settles bitter EIR lawsuit

Budget subcommittees approve $3 million for NCRA audit/Trail master planning
Thursday, April 11, 2019
Sacramento, CA – It has been a week of great news for The Great Redwood Trail which will stretch through California’s rugged North Coast.

Both the Senate and Assembly Budget Subcommittees on Resources and Transportation approved the Governor’s request for $3 million dollars to carry out the next steps outlined in Senator McGuire’s landmark legislation SB 1029. And separately the North Coast Railroad Authority’s (NCRA) Board of Directors approved a legal settlement, bringing an end to a near decade old bitter fight over their EIR.

“It’s been a great week for the North Coast and for the Great Redwood Trail,” said Senator Mike McGuire. “Settling the lawsuit, which had gone on for way too long, allows for the next chapter to unfold. The $3 million requested by the Governor and approved by the Legislative budget committees, will usher in a new day for the North Coast. The funds will be put to work to wind down NCRA and formally kick off the all-important master planning process for the Great Redwood Trail.”

The Assembly and Senate subcommittees overwhelmingly approved the governor’s request for the implementation funding. This budget follows the course laid out by SB 1029, authorizing $1 million for an initial assessment of the right-of-way for the Trail, $1.5 million for research on the estimated 1,900 property easements along the 300 mile rail-to-trail line, and $500,000 to complete the audit of NCRA’s finances and the possible transfer of a portion of the line to the Sonoma Marin Area Rail Transit District (SMART). These findings will help facilitate the closure of NCRA and the transfer of the right-of-way to successor agencies.

In another major development:

After hiring new legal counsel earlier this year, the NCRA Board of Directors authorized their staff to begin settlement negotiations with the litigants in the Environmental Impact Report lawsuit that reached the California and US Supreme courts. NCRA counsel met with the Friends of the Eel River and Californians for Alternatives to Toxics, co-litigants in the case, and worked out an agreement that involves decertifying the controversial EIR and approving legal fees already awarded by the court. For further details on the settlement, please contact Mitch Stogner, NCRA’s Executive Director.

“Resolving the issues that have plagued this rail line over the last 30 years will not be quick or easy, and we know there is a lot of work in front of us. That said, we’re off to a strong start and have made dramatic progress over the last year, and I’m excited to start working with the community on the ultimate design of the Great Redwood Trail and beginning the transition of a functionally bankrupt rail agency to a thriving trail organization,” Senator McGuire said.

The Trail will replace the crumbing railroad on much of the 300-mile-long track, and will become a significant economic driver for the rural North Coast communities it winds through. California outdoor recreational economy is one of the fastest growing economic sectors of the Golden State. It generates over $92 billion a year, is responsible for nearly 700,000 jobs, over $30 billion in wages, and brings over $6 billion in tax revenues back to state and local communities. Once completed, the Trail will attract hundreds of thousands of locals and visitors alike to hike this spectacular landscape and inject needed funds into the greater North Coast region.

Earlier this year a whopping $32 million was secured to build out urban portions of the Trail in Marin, Mendocino and Humboldt counties. The funds came through trail grant programs from both the California Transportation Commission and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.

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Proposed North Coast Hiking Trail (& SMART to own NCRA)?

The North Coast Hiking Trail

State Sen. Mike McGuire is proposing to reorganize management of the North Coast’s railroad system aimed at enabling people to walk — not ride — along a trail from San Francisco Bay to Humboldt Bay, including the spectacular Eel River Canyon in Mendocino and Humboldt counties.
“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” said McGuire, D-Healdsburg, to create a “world-class experience in our own backyard.”
Caryl Hart, a former Sonoma County parks director, joined McGuire in hailing the proposed trail as an opportunity to traverse the coastal redwoods from Cloverdale to Arcata.
“It’s a dream,” she said likening the trail along the tracks to the Pacific Crest Trail through the Sierra Nevada and giving the local area an economic boost in the process. “I really think it has the potential to be a bedrock of the economy of the North Coast.”

SMART to takeover North Coast Railroad Authority (NCRA) ?

Freight train operations between Napa and Windsor will continue and possibly expand into Mendocino County but are unlikely to ever run farther north than Willits because of the formidable cost of restoring the rail line through the canyon, which runs for about 50 miles north of Dos Rios, where the Main and Middle forks of the Eel River converge. The canyon is a wild, remote place with few public access points, rich in wildlife, with an officially designated wild and scenic river flowing by a slide-damaged railroad and collapsed tunnels. The southern leg of the trail would run along the North Bay commuter rail line that began passenger service last year and intends to ultimately run from Larkspur to Cloverdale. The trail’s northern segment, running from Willits to Arcata, would be developed and managed by a new public entity called the Great Redwood Trail Agency to be established in the next two years.

McGuire’s plan, contained in a bill he intends to amend by Friday, would abolish the debt-ridden public agency that has overseen North Coast freight rail service since 1989, transferring its northern assets to the proposed trail agency and southern assets to an as-yet undetermined manager, possibly Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit, the commuter rail operator. “All options are on the table,” McGuire said, adding that SMART could be the “successor agency” to manage the rail line.

The Bill, SB 1029

The bill, SB 1029, sets an April 1, 2019, deadline for the transfer of railroad assets to the new managing agencies. The northern segment will initially be ceded to Caltrans, which will conduct an environmental assessment of the rail line prior to turning it over to the trail agency by Jan. 1, 2021.
Also to be determined is funding for the two management agencies; that will be part of state budget discussions running through May, McGuire said.
Farhad Mansourian, SMART general manager, declined through a spokeswoman to comment on McGuire’s bill.
The North Coast Railroad Authority (NCRA), which has managed the entire 316-mile rail line from Napa to Arcata for the past 29 years, is not standing in the way of McGuire’s plan.

The agency’s board of directors unanimously gave McGuire’s measure, SB 1029, a qualified endorsement at its meeting Wednesday in Ukiah on a motion offered by rookie board member Hart. “The bottom line is I think this organization sees the handwriting on the wall,” said Hart, who resigned as Sonoma County’s parks director last year and was attending her first NCRA board meeting. Mitch Stogner, the NCRA’s executive director, said the reorganization — which would eliminate his job — would likely bring state financial support for the first time to North Coast freight service, which was restored by the NCRA in 2011 and currently runs from Napa to Windsor. “Maybe the state is finally ready to make a commitment to this rail corridor, and that’s good,” he said. “Whatever you call the governing body is not that important.”

NCRA, formed by state lawmakers in 1989, loses about $250,000 a year and has amassed a debt of about $5 million. It receives no state funding.
The agency has two full-time employees — Stogner and his assistant — and four contract employees, and has been harshly criticized by a state transportation board for failing to develop a detailed account of its finances or plans for future operations.
James Ghielmetti, a California Transportation Commission member, said in January the NCRA’s strategic plan “in its current from doesn’t make any sense at all.”
McGuire said last month he shared the commission’s concerns, adding that NCRA must present a viable longterm financial plan before the Legislature would consider funding for the agency.
Stogner, who has run the NCRA since 2003, has consistently pointed to a pair of vetoes by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger that denied funding for the agency responsible for managing a 316-mile rail corridor.
The agency’s future, he has said, depends on securing a state subsidy of $500,000 to $1 million a year.

Hart said her motion to back McGuire’s bill hinged on its consistency with the NCRA’s strategic plan ( thot they had no "plans for future operations" ?)   calling for extending freight rail service in Sonoma and Mendocino counties, and developing it in Humboldt County, while setting aside the stretch in between, including the Eel River Canyon, for a future trail.
The cost of restoring the rail line through the canyon is estimated to cost as much as $1 billion and is vigorously opposed by environmentalists.

Freight carrier Northwestern Pacific, NWP

Doug Bosco, a co-owner of Northwestern Pacific, NWP, the rail line’s only freight carrier under a longterm contract with NCRA, said he assumes the operation will continue under the new management structure. “We’d have to reach some sort of agreement,” he said, adding that the state “would have to account for Northwestern Pacific’s lease.” Bosco is a former North Coast congressman and an investor in Sonoma Media Investments, which owns The Press Democrat.
NWP, a private company, hauls lumber products, grain and livestock feed, rock, cement and other commodities on two to three nighttime trips between Napa and Windsor, partly on tracks it shares with SMART. The company would pick up added business if its trains could reach Cloverdale, where it would serve local businesses as well as lumber companies farther north that would haul products by truck to Cloverdale, Bosco said. [a ploy to further justify expense of SMART to Cloverdale? So SMART sales-taxpayers are to fund the NCRA $250,000 annual loses? ( and $5 million debt?) How can it not be more COST EFFECTIVE to drive these trucks all the way thru Windsor to Napa? (Unless NCRA is virtually giving away its service) ]

Ron F May 2020: SMART is going to get a $4 million dollar grant. They are being forced to buy this line from the original JOA with NCRA/NWP.
The NWP is the primary trash hauler for Sonoma and Mendocino Counties. Two of those 5 accounts are government, Taxpayer funded.
Since the landfills in these two counties closed, their trash has been shipped to Fallon, Nev. The freight line is essential and it has to stay operational to serve these two counties. This could be one of the reasons SMART board is basically being "forced" to buy and operate this bankrupt line. SMART finds more ways to waste taxpayer funds.

NCRA and NWP are a JOA. Many of the NCRA board members are also NWP board members. NCRA losses are NWP's losses. NWP has been a loser for 70 years. Two other bankruptcies before this one.
The taxpayer funded NWP and NCRA with a $42 million dollar grant from 3 government entities.

This is a "lose, lose" agreement that is meant to keep NWP operational even though there is no revenue to back the acquisition.
It will drain SMART funds and have a hard time gaining Federal Transportation Administration approval as it does not meet the requirements for grants.
This is going to be a financial disaster for SMART.

SMART takes on the NWP, a failed freight line that started up with $42 million in taxpayer funds.

This is the 3rd bankruptcy on this line. Two other companies tried to make this freight line profitable but failed. Now SMART gets a chance to fail. This is INSANITY. A failing passenger service buys a failing freight service and this makes sense ?


Read North Coast Railroad Director Bernie Meyers’ Brilliant FAQ on NCRA Matters, 2013

Lost Coast Output source  [Ed. note — Bernie Meyers — a lawyer, antitrust prosecutor, former Novato City Council member, and occasional Lost Coast Outpost Op-Ed columnist — is stepping down from the board of directors of the North Coast Railroad Authority, where he has served as one of Marin County’s appointees for the last six years.

As a parting gift to the public, Meyers has penned this incredible FAQ that lays out the authority and its 1,000 troubles in great gaudy detail. This will forever more be the URL to which you send your friends when they ask: “NCRA? What’s that? What’s the controversy?  Mr. Meyers: We thank you for your service.]

meyers

Questions & Answers About the North Coast Railroad Authority (NCRA)

What is the NCRA?

It is an Executive Director and a Legal Counsel who direct activities in connection with a freight rail right-of-way.

What do they do?

They mainly oversee a lease with a freight line operator, “NWP”. NWP is headed by a former NCRA Executive Director and a General Counsel who was a member of the California Legislature and the US House of Representatives.

Are there others at the NCRA?

Yes. There is an Executive Assistant and an on-call engineer. Of late, there is also a part-time real estate assistant.

What is the term of the lease?

With potential extensions, about a century.

How much money does the Lease require NWP pay to the NCRA?

Nothing, until NWP has a year in which it makes $5 million in net profits.

When might that happen?

It depends, but it is very possible to not occur this century.

Well, once the $5 million threshold has been achieved, will NWP be required to pay lots of money to NCRA?

No. Any money NWP pays is placed in a fund, and there is a cap on the fund. Once the cap is reached, no further fees need be paid, except that if the fund balance falls below the cap, fees to bring the fund back up to the cap are to be paid. Also, NWP has to OK all the fund’s expenditures. And when the lease expires, all of the money then in the fund is given to NWP.

How can that be?

Ask who negotiated the Lease.

Who negotiated the Lease?

For the NCRA, the Executive Director and the Legal Counsel. For NWP, the former Executive Director and the General Counsel.

Was there a connection between NCRA’s Executive Director and the NWP?

No, except that the NCRA Executive Director was the Chief-of-Staff for the NWP General Counsel while the General Counsel was in the Legislature and in Congress.

How do the lease terms compare with similar leases between state railroad entities and private operators?

Not favorably. Generally, others are for terms of between 5 and 20 years, with possible renewals if conditions are met. For example, a 2007 Ohio lease provides for 5-year renewals if various conditions are met, including a review of shipper satisfaction, safety, car loadings, track maintenance and financials. Then there are best practice provisions, energy efficiency provisions, and conflict-of-interest provisions.

Did the NCRA staff publically compare the NCRA-NWP lease terms with the terms of similar leases from other state owned rail lines and explain why it chose the differences?

No.

Might there be other reasons why the lease has these terms?

Yes. The line was not functioning for five years before the lease was negotiated. The northern part of the line runs through a very active geological area and is very expensive to maintain. Some of the line’s old customers were no longer in business and the others had switched to other means of shipment. Timber production had fallen from its heyday and was unlikely to reach its prior levels. There were public funds available for repairs, but were only sufficient to repair part of the line. The major potential source of freight revenue was from aggregate in the Eel River Canyon (Island Mountain) where the repairs would far exceed available public funds.

So NWP was the only operator willing to give operations a try?

No.

Was there a request for rail operators sent out for public bidding?

Yes.

Was NWP the only responder?

No. There were five responders. Three were apparently viable contenders. Two of the others promised to pay NCRA a portion of their revenues and a monthly stipend. But NWP was deemed the winner. The lease negotiations then commenced and ended three months later.

Did NWP make some payments to NCRA besides those required by the lease?

Yes. In a side agreement to the lease, NWP agreed to pay $20,000/month until such time as it would have to pay trackage fees under the lease, and NWP would get credit for these side agreement payments when it later was to make trackage payments. But NWP changed the agreement to end the monthly payments earlier. Later it turned the side agreement payments it had previously made into a receivable owed to it by NCRA. So over the last six years, NWP has paid about $30,000 in trackage fees to NCRA and is not paying anything now.

When the lease was signed in September 2006 did NWP think that there was enough public funds to rehabilitate the line to Willits?

No. Prior cost estimates were known to no longer be applicable. The funding was thought sufficient to get the line repaired to Windsor and perhaps a bit further.

Does NCRA have a mandate requiring it to get the line up and running over its entire right-of-way, no matter what?

No. The NCRA is based on the California Government Code (Section 93000 et seq). It was to prepare a plan for the acquisition and operation of the railroad line at no expense to the state. In evaluating the plan NCRA is not required to forgo common sense. It is not required to expend public funds to no avail. It should determine whether its operations are fiscally prudent.

Tell me about the right-of-way.

It is about 310 miles long, running from near Lombard (near Napa), west to Novato, in Marin County, and then northward through Sonoma County, Mendocino County, a small bit of Trinity County and then up around Humboldt Bay (Samoa) in Humboldt County. It started operations a century ago when SP and Santa Fe ran timber and passengers along the line. In 1929, SP took it over. Over time, the amount of freight diminished and some of the operations were sold to an entity that soon went bankrupt. In 1989 the California Legislature formed the NCRA, which then bought part of the line. The southern end of the line (from Healdsburg south) is owned by what is now known as SMART and NCRA has a freight (and excursion) easement over SMART’s line, while SMART has a passenger easement over a portion of NCRA’s line. The line was SP’s most expensive line to maintain. It suffered devastating flooding in 1964. SP rebuilt it. Again in the 90’s it suffered flooding and eventually, in 1998, the feds shut the line down (EO-21) until repairs could be affected.

Was the line recently repaired?

Partially. It was rehabilitated from Lombard to Windsor, just north of Santa Rosa, about 62 miles. The work started in 2007 and was completed in 2010 (per NCRA) or 2011 (per NWP).

How much was paid for the rehab?

NCRA says it cost $68 million taxpayer dollars. Another $3 million was spent by NWP but most of that has been reimbursed with taxpayer funds.

Was the NWP money spent to cover work done after a public bidding process?

No. NWP was given a no-bid contract.

Was the NWP work completed in accordance with the initial contract price and timeframe?

No. The final cost was about 3 times the initial amount and instead of three months it took over a year.

Did the Board audit the billing?

No. It is a sorry story. Don’t get me started.

Was that the last no-bid contract awarded to NWP?

No. NWP has been awarded a no-bid contract for the cleanup of toxics at the Ukiah Depot.

Does NWP have experience in cleaning up toxics?

No. It has hired a contractor to do so. NWP adds 7% to the contractor’s bills for itself.

Who directs NCRA’s Executive Director and Legal Counsel?

Under California law, the NCRA has a nine member Board of Directors. Two each are appointed for two-year terms by the Boards of Supervisors of each of the four counties, and one is chosen from among the cities along the right-of-way.

Who oversees the Board?

Nobody.

Does the Board give periodic reports to anyone?

Not really. It does have an outside auditor review its books from time-to-time. Its most recent audit covers the fiscal year ending on June 30, 2011.

2011? This is 2013!

2011.

How about reports to the California Transportation Commission, or the Cal Legislature, or Caltrans, or the feds, or any of the Boards of Supervisors?

For the most part, no. Generally there are no reporting requirements. Because the NCRA misspent some taxpayer funds over a decade ago, Caltrans listed the NCRA as a High Risk Agency. This meant that if NCRA spent taxpayer grant funds administered by Caltrans, before Caltrans reimbursed NCRA, Caltrans required that the contract be bid out and that NCRA pay the contractor bills. If NCRA did not have sufficient funds to pay the contractor, NCRA had to borrow funds and then pay off the loan when Caltrans reimbursed NCRA. NCRA had over a decade to remove itself from the High Risk designation, but it chose not to. This cost NCRA over half-a-million extra taxpayer dollars – so far. So there have been reports of a sort to Caltrans.

There were other reports to the CTC on those occasions when NCRA sought to obtain state funds to do the rehabilitation work and as the funds were spent down.

The Marin County Board of Supervisors twice invited NCRA to appear (2010, 2013). The first time, the NCRA Chairman said NCRA would do so, but then it did not. The second time it declined to appear. While there might have been NCRA reports to other Boards, none are known. The Marin representatives have periodically made individual agendized public reports to the Marin Board. Other representatives may have acted similarly, but none are known.

NCRA also reports yearly to the California Comptroller. But the numbers shown in the Comptroller’s reports are clearly erroneous. The erroneous numbers were repeatedly brought to the Executive Director’s attention. Apparently, NCRA has not taken any action to correct the numbers.

Is NCRA financially stable?

Looking at its finances, it appears to be near bankruptcy. The current budget can only be balanced by assuming that significant obligations will not be paid. Prior years’ budgets showed expenses well in excess of revenues. It has a long list of creditors with claims well in excess of NCRA’s yearly revenues.

How will NCRA repay its creditors and continue to exist?

NCRA has assets. Perhaps it most easily liquidated asset is the 10 or so acres it owns in Ukiah (the Ukiah Depot property). The property needs to be cleansed of toxics, but after that, 3 to 4 acres are to be sold to the California Courts for a new courthouse. The remaining acreage can then be sold to one or more developers. The millions of dollars expected from these sales should pay off most, if not all, of the creditors.

NCRA also owns property in the Eel River Canyon. The value of these properties is unknown, but substantial enough that NWP insisted that NCRA not grant any security interest in them or sell them without NWP’s OK.

Is there a list of creditors, showing who is owed what and the order of repayment, and is it regularly updated?

No. No list and no updates.

Are staff members creditors?

Yes. Legal Counsel is owed several hundred thousand dollars. The on-call engineer is also owed a substantial amount.

Who audits the amounts due staff members?

No one has audited Counsel’s billings.

NCRA covers a large area – four California Counties. Does it hold public meetings?

Yes. It generally meets monthly, on the second Wednesday of the month, rotating through each of the four counties. It has a small office in Ukiah.

How does NCRA keep the public informed about its activities?

On Friday it posts in its Ukiah office the agenda for the succeeding Wednesday. Generally it also has a packet of material available there which covers the agenda items.

But the line stretches 150 miles north and 150 miles south of Ukiah. How does the public get the information about the upcoming meetings?

The agenda is posted on the NCRA website. Sometimes it is posted on Friday. Often it is not posted until later, including Monday and even Tuesday. Likewise, the packet is generally posted on Monday or even Tuesday. Copies of the agenda and packet are also mailed to interested parties, on the preceding Friday or the next day or so.

Are the meetings broadcast in real time?

No.

Are all of the proceedings available on the website soon after the meetings are concluded, including final versions of the action items and all of the public’s submissions?

No. Minutes are approved at a succeeding meeting, but they are action item minutes, not verbatim minutes. There is a recording made of each regular Board meeting and often posted on the website, but the quality lacks something. Public submissions at meetings are not put on the website.

What independent study is there of the line’s future prospects for hauling freight and carrying excursion and commute passengers?

In 2002 a study was done for the Humboldt Bay Harbor District.

What did it conclude?

That the line would be very expensive to maintain, and under all but exceptional circumstances the line would not be able to make money for the 25 years of the study.

Has there been a more recent study?

No. In about 2010 NWP supposedly did a market analysis of at least a part of the line, and used it to support a joint (with NCRA) loan application to the feds. But NWP did not allow the NCRA Board to see the analysis.

In its requests for grants does NCRA include any independent market analyses showing what benefits would inure from the grant funds?

No. The most recent application (TIGER V) only used NWP’s estimate of new freight it would haul.

Can the Board members be replaced at the next election?

No. As noted above, Board members are appointed for two-year terms, and they may seek reappointment for additional terms. They are not elected by a vote of the people.

Are Directors free to voice their opinions about actions taken by NCRA?

Not according to the NCRA. In December 2012 the Board adopted a “Code of Ethics” which requires all Directors to uphold all Board decisions once the Board has voted. If followed, this would inhibit, if not prohibit, full, fair reports to the appointing Boards of Supervisors and others.

Isn’t that a violation of each Director’s rights under the First Amendment?

Apparently.

Can the NCRA be changed?

Yes. It could go to the California Legislature and explain what it has accomplished in its existence, what its problems are, how it got to where it is, what its potential for success is, and what the Legislature might do to authorize NCRA to operate differently. Then the public could weigh in as well. There would be a full and frank discussion about what is needed to revamp NCRA and the governing statute would be changed to encompass the conclusions.

Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. No, really. How might the NCRA be changed?

A member of the Legislature could ask for the Joint Legislative Committee to review NCRA’s operations, audit its finances, and then give a recommendation as to how NCRA could be changed so as to provide benefit to the State. Then the public could weigh in as well. There would be a full and frank discussion about what is needed to revamp NCRA and the governing statute would be changed to encompass the conclusions.

An alternative would be for NCRA to declare bankruptcy as soon as possible. That way it would still have some assets to cover its legitimate debts and put an end to its ongoing financial debacle. It would probably also prompt the Legislature to proceed as noted above.

NCRA ROUTE MAP          NCRA suit against SMART , 2016      Environmentalists case against NCRA

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Nov 2018 source Marin IJ

In the last days of September, Gov. Jerry Brown signed Senate Bill 1029, the Great Redwood Trail Act.

The bill launches the most comprehensive changes to occur in local rail circles in the past 30 years. Most prominent is that the legislation sets in motion actions needed to dissolve the Northern California Railroad Authority and replace it with the Great Redwood Trails Authority. NCRA has been financially struggling for administrative funding for most of its 30-year history.

While the dissolution of NCRA has been viewed by some as the end of freight rail on the North Coast, the opposite is true. The current operator of limited twice-a-week freight service between Lombard and Windsor is operated, under contract, by Northwestern Pacific NWPCo). NCRA ROUTE MAP  This contract franchise also includes possible freight service north as need and funds become available.

To further the possibility of freight service north of Windsor, the bill included $4 million for the Sonoma-Marin Area Rail Transit Authority, SMART, to buy out NWPCo’s contract. If these negotiations are successful, SMART, which has
NOT a highly successful rails/trails reputation,  could ultimately manage freight/trails from Lombard to Cloverdale and beyond. It is still undetermined whether the current tracks north of Windsor could accommodate freight or tourist service which would be limited to 25 mph.

Time and weather have eliminated all thoughts of rail service north of Willits. Countless sections of track have collapsed or fallen into the Eel River during storms. Cost of slide repairs are in the millions. Sen. Mike McGuire has worked for several years to create the vision for the Great Redwood Trail. He has worked with various trail advocate groups and the state Legislature. His bill, SB 1029, passed both houses in Sacramento without a negative vote. The bill also had widespread support as it worked its way through the Legislature. The NCRA board was one of the supporting organizations.

The NCRA board now assumes the additional role of managing the transition to the Great Redwood Trail, while managing current responsibilities of freight rail from Lombard to Windsor, a new courthouse development on surplus freight yard property in Ukiah, and the safety and security of the entire line from Lombard to Arcata.

Unknown at this time is the exact amount of debt owed by NCRA. The exact amount will be determined by studies to be carried out by state agencies, with a report due in July 2020. Additional legislation is being developed to complete the Great Redwoods Trail Authority organization.

Meanwhile, the role shift for the NCRA Board of Directors may be “delicate” to say the least, as some of the members are or were committed primarily to establishing freight rail along the North Coast. The reality of the situation in terms of uncertain need for freight rail and major track destruction, along with hundreds of miles of some of the most wild and beautiful scenery in North America demands greater access to all.

While most of the activity in the early development of the Great Redwood Trail will take place north of Marin County, there are two appointed Marin representatives on NCRA board, Jerry Peters and myself, Peter Breen. Because NCRA‘s rail authority extends from Napa to Humboldt County, Marin’s representatives will have an equal say in the future of both the Great Redwood Trail and the dissolution of NCRA.

To the most casual observer, SB 1029 appears something less than a complete package. It allows continued freight service. More importantly, it puts into play the establishment of a long desired walking trail through the redwoods. At the same time, it provides a rich legacy for the NCRA, which was the dream of Marin supervisors Robert Roumiguiere and Gary Giacomini 35 years ago when they went to Washington, D.C. and secured the initial federal funding to protect the original right of way from Lombard to Arcata.

Peter Breen, of San Anselmo, is one of the two Marin representatives on the board of the Northern California Railroad Authority. He is a former San Anselmo council member and previously served on the SMART board.

• Transit Ridership has been falling since 2014SMART HISTORYMarin GPS Traffic StudyMoving the San Rafael Transit CenterSearch for the Holy RailCounty's Traffic PlanSMART MapNorth Coast Trail (& SMART to takeover North Coast Railroad Authority, NCRA ) ? •    
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