SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California is moving toward awarding a $1.65 billion contract to design and construct the tracks and system for the first segment of its beleaguered high-speed rail project.
The California High Speed Rail Authority's board of directors on Tuesday approved releasing a request for qualified bidders for the project. Rail officials hope to issue the contract by next summer.
The contract would cover a 119-mile segment of rail in the Central Valley. The firm it's awarded to would be responsible for designing and building rail infrastructure including tracks, a signaling system, platforms and the overhead electrification system. It would maintain the tracks for a set period of time, likely 30 years.
A U.S. subsidiary of a German rail company has already been awarded a contract for early operation of the train.