Sound Transit’s purported plans
for ST3 are just another indication of their inability to deal with the area’s
transit needs. Their ST3 plans for
the east side are a perfect example. They’ve apparently finally recognized that
East Link can’t possibly “meet growing transit and mobility demands by
increasing person-moving capacity across Lake Washington on I-90 by up to 60
percent” they claimed in 2008 DEIS.
They’ve dropped their earlier ST2040 plans for extending East Link to
Bothell, Issaquah, and Renton.
However, that recognition has not
“influenced” their decision to close down the I-90 Bridge center roadway for
light rail next year precluding ever initiating BRT there, the only way to
provide needed cross-lake capacity.
The resulting increased congestion on the bridge outer roadways will
simply add to the I-90 congestion in the Eastgate area. East Link construction will devastate
the route into Bellevue and disrupt the city with the tunnel for up to 6
years.
When completed the vast majority
of eastside commuters won’t even have access to East Link. The ST claim for 50,000 riders by 2030
is belied by the fact they’ve recently dropped plans for transferring 40,000 of
those 50,000 riders from buses at South Bellevue and Mercer Island light
rail stations. It’s not clear how
many riders they now anticipate.
Whatever that number East Link will change forever the commute into and
out of Seattle.
Rather than deal with the
cross-lake commuting problems Sound Transit’s ST3 proposal simply ignores
it. They attempt to garner
eastside support with “eastside-to-eastside” improvements. Their Feb 8th ST3
presentation to the Bellevue City Council included a separate light rail line
between Totem Lake and Issaquah, BRT between Kirkland and Bellevue, and BRT
between Lynnwood and Tukwila on I-405.
It’s difficult to believe that
enough commuters would use light rail between Totem Lake and Issaquah to ever justify
the cost of constructing and operating light rail. ST’s belated interest in BRT is a welcome improvement. The decision to initiate BRT between
Kirkland and Bellevue would surely benefit Kirkland commuters who currently
have no direct bus connections between the South Kirkland P&R and Bellevue
T/C.
However ST3 “neglects” to even
propose BRT for cross-lake commuting on SR520. Doing so in combination with a T/C at the UW light rail
station could have provided an attractive transit option for thousands of commuters
from both sides of the lake. Their
failure to insist on a UW T/C near the stadium with BRT on SR520 along with
their failure to ever consider BRT on I-90 Bridge exemplifies their
incompetence.
BRT is also something they could
begin doing in 6 months rather than waiting 6 years for ST3. On I-405 they could initially double or
triple the 7 buses per hour (ST532 and ST535) they currently route during peak
commute from Everett and Lynwood. Some of the added routes could skip intermediate stations to
reduce transit times and some could be routed to the Overlake T/C to attract
“Microsoft” employees. On SR520
they could similarly increase cross-lake capacity with more buses both from
P&R lots on the eastside to UW station and from UW station to Bellevue and
Overlake T/C’s.
The initial capital expenditures
would be minimal and the only limitation would be the number of parking spaces
commuters would have for access to the bus routes. Parking for thousands of additional cars are needed along
I-5, I-405 and throughout eastside before BRT will have any effect on
congestion. The fact the added
parking was never considered in Prop 1 and has yet to be included as part of
ST3 is a clear indication ST simply doesn’t understand the concept of BRT and
is only proposing it to attract eastside support rather than ease eastside
congestion.
In conclusion, ST failure to ever
consider BRT on I-90 Bridge has already been a disaster for eastside
commuters. It’s only going to get
worse when they close the bridge center roadway next year. Their ST3 proposal forces eastside
voters to contribute a major portion of the additional $1 billion each year to
perpetuate this debacle. Despite
ST claims to the contrary, voter rejection of ST3 is the most likely way to
force them to “reconsider” it in the future.