File #: 2017-4019   
Type: New Business
Body: Recreation and Park Commission
On agenda: 3/9/2017
Title: Approve Letter of Support to the California Transportation Commission for the Cross Alameda Trail Project Through Jean Sweeney Open Space Park.
Attachments: 1. Rec and Parks Commission
Title

Approve Letter of Support to the California Transportation Commission for the Cross Alameda Trail Project Through Jean Sweeney Open Space Park.

Body

To: Honorable Chair and Members of the Recreation and Park Commission

From: Amy Wooldridge, Recreation and Parks Director

Re: Approve Letter of Support to the California Transportation Commission for the Cross Alameda Trail Project Through Jean Sweeney Open Space Park.


BACKGROUND

The Cross Alameda Trail is a 4 mile long path that spans the length of the City of Alameda, from the former Alameda Naval Base to the Miller Sweeney Bridge, connecting to the City of Oakland. The section of the Cross Alameda Trail runs through the Jean Sweeney Open Space Park, which is a 27-acre park that is being developed on former railroad property and has tremendous community and political support. This trail section will connect with two other trail sections now in development and provide off-street bicycle/pedestrian access for Alameda residents, commuters, families, children who need safe routes to school, people accessing a major transportation hub at one end of the trail, and people connecting with valuable services at the adjacent Alameda Food Bank. This trail project is the first phase of the Jean Sweeney Open Space Park development and a cornerstone upon which the remaining park development is built.

DISCUSSION

Although the Cross Alameda Trail project is ready to go out to bid, the project was inadvertently left off the 2017 federal transportation budget (TIP) project list. The project is halted until the TIP budget amendment is approved, which will be in mid-April. A 6-month extension was originally requested because the project design required a soil remediation work plan approved by the Dept. of Toxic Substance Control (DTSC) and it took significantly longer than originally anticipated to secure those approvals from DTSC. The 6-month extension leaves the City only 5 weeks to formally bid the project, f...

Click here for full text