The authority would begin to engage with communities that would potentially be impacted, and begin carrying out an environmental impact review and study, a key step to getting approval for Cascadia High Speed Rail, and a requirement of the Federal Railroad Administration. A sister process would be needed north of the border in British Columbia. Reports from the newly created Cascadia High Speed Rail authority will be submitted by June 30th, 2020 on any needed addendums, agreements, regulations or laws that would be needed to make the high speed corridor a reality..

The authority will build upon earlier reports from the Washington DOT, released in 2018, and a business case study, which is currently in development, and ensure that whatever high-speed rail technology is ultimately chosen will be capable of reaching at least 250 miles per hour at top speed. The move comes upon large victories for high speed rail in 2017 and 2018, when the state legislature committed $1.2 million–of which was $750,000 in direct state grants–to a business case study for high-speed rail from Vancouver, British Columbia to Portland.

The 76 page study released in December of 2017, commisioned by the Washington Department of Transportation - examined three different types of technology, including high speed rail – which tops out at 365km/hr (226mph), maglev 430-600km/hr (267-330mph) and hyperloop (unknown??), and looked at potential routes, costs, stations locations, costs, ridership and how to collaborate across an international border. Since then, the consultant for the state has been earnestly working on the study, which is due for completion by the of June.

“We are excited for passage of legislation this session that will fund creation of an ultra high-speed rail authority, bringing passenger rail that operates at speeds up to 250 miles per hour to Cascadia,” said Paige Malott, vice president of Cascadia Rail, a grassroots non-profit organization. “We look forward to supporting our partners in British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon in building the fastest rail line in North America and empowering our region to be more connected.”

The business case study will identify potential station locations and how communities along the rail line might be impacted and affected. This will include examining service levels, needs, ridership, construction costs, financing options, operations and fares. An interstate advisory group was commissioned as part of the study. So far two meetings have been held to guide the study and corridor planning process. The advisory group also urged consultants to consider how high-speed rail could affect greenhouse gas emissions, analyze social equity in corridor planning, and model how far riders would travel to access high-speed rail. The business case study builds upon an earlier feasibility study that was completed in late 2017. The initial feasibility study suggested that Cascadia high-speed rail would be economically viable.

While the $3.25 million dollars is a great place to start from, at $1.62 million per year, it will only allow for an staff of around ten hired positions to do the initial reports, studies, and to begin to build relationships with Oregon and British Columbia - a position from which it will need to grow if the conditions continue to look favorable.

As reported by the Urbanist - If the business case study is anything to judge by, the State of Oregon and Province of British Columbia are in line to add money to the pot, increasing the two-year startup budget for the interstate high-speed rail authority. Last year, Oregon promised to pitch in $200,000 while British Columbia committed another $300,000 (in Canadian dollars). Microsoft also joined the team with $300,000 in private funding for the business case study after contributing another $200,000 for initial feasibility study the year prior.

Results of funding for the bill will likely be available by April, towards the end of the new house session.