Trump administration to cancel $929 million in California high-speed rail funding
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/...219-story.html
  The  fate of California’s high-speed rail project was cast into further  doubt Tuesday when the federal government announced plans to cancel $929  million in grant funds, a move U.S. officials linked to violations of  the grant agreement but some view as political payback.
 
   The action marks an escalation in the battle between President 
Trump and the state of California since Gov. Gavin 
Newsom said last week that the project lacked a path to complete a statewide system and vowed to scale back the $77-billion mega-project.
 
    The  Transportation Department also said it was “actively exploring every  legal option” to get back an additional $2.5-billion grant that is being  used to finance the construction of 119 miles of rail line in the  Central Valley.
 
   The  two federal grants represent about one-fourth of all the funding for  the project to date — money critical to completing the Central Valley  portion and finishing environmental reviews for other segments between  San Francisco and Los Angeles. If the funds are lost or tied up in a  long legal battle, the state would probably have to either make up the  money elsewhere or further curtail the project.
 
                          
                
     
     
      
 
 
 
   Newsom on Tuesday vowed to block the move, arguing that it was political payback by the Trump administration.
 
      
   “It’s  no coincidence that the Administration’s threat comes 24 hours after  California led 16 states in challenging the President’s farcical  ‘national emergency,’” Newsom said in a statement, referring to Trump’s  emergency declaration to secure funding for his wall on the Mexican  border. “The President even tied the two issues together in a tweet this  morning. This is clear political retribution by President Trump, and we  won’t sit idly by. This is California’s money, and we are going to  fight for it.”
 
   Earlier in the day, Trump had declared on 
Twitter,  “The failed Fast Train project in California, where the cost overruns  are becoming world record setting, is hundreds of times more expensive  than the desperately needed Wall!”
 
   Ronald  Batory, chief of the Federal Railroad Administration, the  transportation agency that made the grants in 2009 and 2010, laid out a  lengthy legal argument Tuesday for why the state was out of compliance  with the grant agreement. Batory said in a three-page letter to  California High-Speed Rail Authority Chief Executive Brian Kelly that  the state “has materially failed to comply with the terms of the  agreement and has failed to make reasonable progress on the project.”
 
    Batory  alleged that the state had failed to spend required matching funds,  falling short by $100 million as of December. He argued that it will  fail to complete the Central Valley construction by a 2022 deadline  required by the grant. Batory also said the state has not submitted  required financial information — such as reports on what has been  delivered to date — that would allow federal regulators to oversee the  grants. It also has failed to take corrective actions after regulators  raised concerns in 2017 and 2018.
 
   The  letter also cited Newsom’s State of the State speech last week that  outlined a plan to build a limited operating segment between Merced and  Bakersfield as a “significant retreat from the state’s initial vision  and commitment.”
 
   The rail authority said Tuesday afternoon that it would respond in detail to those allegations in coming days.
 
   Newsom  said in his speech that the project needed to be rethought and that the  initial run would be within the Central Valley, not the San  Francisco-to-Los Angeles route voters approved a decade ago.
 
     
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   “But  let’s be real,” Newsom said in the speech to lawmakers. “The current  project, as planned, would cost too much and respectfully take too long.  There’s been too little oversight and not enough transparency.… Right  now, there simply isn’t a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let  alone from San Francisco to L.A. I wish there were. However, we do have  the capacity to complete a high-speed rail link between Merced and  Bakersfield.”
 
   In  the hours that followed Newsom’s speech, Trump demanded that California  return $3.5 billion in federal funds, and headlines proclaimed the  Democratic governor was abandoning the ambitious project championed by  his predecessors — a story line that Newsom denied and one that his team  has scrambled to correct.
 
   Although  Newsom said the full project will eventually be completed, his tough  remarks clearly sent a signal about his tepid support for the project  and triggered some managers in the project office to consider leaving.
 
   Whether  the Trump administration can actually cancel the $929-million grant,  which in legal terms is called “de-obligating” the funds, remains  unclear. The possibility of ordering a refund of the $2.5-billion grant  that is already being spent is even a bigger legal uncertainty.
 
    Former  congressman Jeff Denham, a Central Valley Republican who chaired the  House rail subcommittee and is an outspoken critic of the project, spent  years with his staff trying to figure out whether it would be possible  to de-obligate the funding and ultimately decided it could not be done  by congressional act.
 
   The federal action to terminate the grant wades into uncharted legal territory.
 
   “I  can’t recall of any precedent,” said Art Bauer, a longtime state Senate  Transportation Committee staffer who was deeply involved in the early  planning on the high-speed rail. “They never claw back money. They are  saying you are not getting money we committed to you. They are setting  up a big fight.”
 
   But in this case, Bauer said, “the governor unwittingly gave the federal government a reason to back away from the project.”
 
   Although  the federal regulators alleged that the state violated the terms of the  grant, Bauer said such performance is typical in federal funding for  transportation. “Just look at any highway project. They are never done  on schedule or on budget. They are often not done within the original  scope.
 
   “The  supporters of the project are really going to go through the roof,” he  added. “I imagine a good part of the congressional delegation will gang  up on the Department of Transportation and the federal Railroad  Administration. But there is no love lost.”
 
   The  Trump administration action is likely to add further fuel to critics,  including those in California, who want the project stopped. Assemblyman  Vince Fong (R-Bakersfield) said Tuesday that the entire project should  be scrapped and funds redirected to Central Valley projects that would  benefit the state.
 
    Assemblyman  Jim Patterson (R-Fresno), a vocal critic of the project, said, “It  doesn’t matter what the state says about not giving the money back,” he  said. “The feds can, in fact, claw that money back.”
 
   
Times staff writer Sarah D. Wire in Washington contributed to this report.
Sure it will wind up in the courts, and the Ninth Circuit court of Appeals will find for Kalifornia.  It will then go the SC where Ninth  Court rulings have an 80% reversal rate!
The Feds do have a contractual basis for fund clawback in this instance. 
Should be fun - but likely will cost the State and Feds more in lawyer fees than the money value!!