Saturday’s Seattle Times Editorial is
just the latest example of their past ineptitude when it comes to transportation
matters. It begins with the highly
dubious assertion:
To ensure that the May 23 bridge collapse was a rare,
freak accident, lawmakers should move swiftly and pass and pass a
transportation-funding package paid mostly with a 10-cent increase in the gas
tax.
A far more cost effective way of
avoiding problems would be to revise the “permitting” procedures for over-size
vehicles. They follow that with
the following threat:
Failure to include $450 million for
the crossing — as Oregon already has — would set back 12 years of work and cost
$850 million in federal funding tied to light rail. King and his colleagues
should budge, and allow Vancouver to tie into Oregon’s 52 miles of light rail.
The idea federal authorities would
refuse to fund part of the Columbia Bridge because it doesn’t include light
rail is also highly speculative.
The Times pro-light-rail attitude has
blinded them to a far better way to fund the areas local transportation than
the 10-cent gas tax increase namely: redirecting the $20 billion Sound Transit
is currently planning to spend over the next 10 years on light rail.
The 10-cent gas tax would annually
raise about $200-250 million or a tenth of what ST will spend each year
extending light rail to Bellevue, Federal Way, and Lynnwood. Stopping East Link would prevent the
devastation of large areas of Bellevue and stop light rail’s confiscation of the
center roadway that will increase, not decrease, cross-lake congestion (See 6/19/13 Post).
Stopping Central Link extensions to
Federal Way and Lynnwood would keep ST from incurring a huge public
construction debt and the need for large increases in subsidies necessitated by
the longer routes. Again transit
times for light rail on both extensions would likely be longer than those
currently available with buses (6/21/13 Post).
In conclusion, the best way for the Seattle Times to
improve transportation funding is to urge the
legislators to use their WSDOT oversight to insist ST hire outside consultants
to justify their light rail expansion plans by conducting a cost/benefit
analysis for each extension. One would think a state DOT would have done this without any legislative direction. Unfortunately the WSDOT has been an active partner with ST for years (7/19/12 Post). (Last years financial audit was, to put
it charitably, “incomplete” (11/06/12 Post).) It’s
highly unlikely any extension could survive a competent review.