The proposed $12 billion high-speed rail project backed by Fortress Investment Group connecting Las Vegas to Southern California has won a $3 billion federal grant from the bipartisan infrastructure law.
The money will come from the US Department of Transportation’s Federal-State Partnership for Intercity Passenger Rail Grant to help build the 218-mile (350 kilometers), all-electric high-speed rail service. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, signed into law by President Joe Biden in 2021, allocates $1.2 trillion for transportation and infrastructure spending.
“Bringing high-speed rail to Southern Nevada just makes sense, given the tens of millions of visitors we have each year,” Nevada’s US Senator Cortez Masto said in a statement Tuesday.
Brightline West, if it reaches the 180 miles per hour as envisioned, would be the first high-speed service in the US Amtrak’s 457-mile Acela service on the East Coast tops out at 150 miles per hour and is variously labeled high-speed or “higher-speed.”
The company says it hopes to break ground in early 2024 with construction to take about 4 years.
“This is a historic moment that will serve as a foundation for a new industry, and a remarkable project that will serve as the blueprint for how we can repeat this model throughout the country,” said Fortress co-founder Wes Edens in a statement.
The project has been in the works for years. In 2020, Fortress failed to sell $3.2 billion in municipal debt for the speculative venture as investors balked. The bond issue would have financed construction for a 169-mile line connecting Las Vegas to a desert town called Apple Valley, 90 miles away from downtown Los Angeles. Fortress has since moved its proposed California terminus closer to Los Angeles.