The Dec. 22nd
Seattle Times B1 article, “Sound Transit finds $200M savings for Lynnwood rail
line” epitomizes Traffic Lab’s failure to “Get it”. For a “project
that digs into the region’s transportation issues” and “spotlights promising approaches
to easing gridlock” the article fails to do either. The article reports, despite Sound Transit savings, CEO
Rogoff’s concerns about Lynnwood extension budget problems due to “Suburban
cities requests" and loss in car-tab taxes from not being able to “overvalue
newer vehicles,” are overshadowed by the loss of the $1.17 grant from the Federal
Transportation Administration (FTA).
Rogoff was apparently
“involved” with the grant since his biography included the following:
In May 2009 the
Senate confirmed Rogoff as the President’s Federal Transit Administrator. As the
nation’s chief public transit official, Rogoff led the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA). In July 2014, the United
States Senate confirmed Peter M. Rogoff to the position of Under Secretary of
Transportation for Policy in the U.S. Department of Transportation. As
Federal Transit Administrator, Rogoff negotiated and signed a record number of
full funding grant agreements with transit agencies across the nation to expand
rail and bus rapid transit infrastructure.
Some may consider Rogoff’s
background as justifying County Executive Dow Constantine’s decision to hire
him as Sound Transit CEO. Others
may conclude he was hired as a “reward” for the grant. Rogoff’s biography didn’t include any details as to what
qualified him for either federal position. What was his academic background or previous involvement
with public transit?
Whatever Rogoff’s background,
apparently neither he nor the Transit Lab recognize problems with funding the
Lynnwood extension “pale in comparison” to the fact it will do absolutely
nothing to increase transit capacity into Seattle. Transportation system capacity is defined by the number of
vehicles per hour times the number of riders in each vehicle. Sound Transit’s decision to extend
Central Link rather than create a 2nd tunnel limits that
capacity.
The PSRC concluded in an
April 2004 Technical Workbook, “Central Puget Sound Region, High Capacity
Transit Corridor Assessment” the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel (DSTT) limited
capacity to 8880 rph. They
based that on the assumption the DSTT station lengths limited the number of
trains to 4 cars, that safe operation required a minimum of 4 minutes between
trains and that each 74-seat car can accommodate up to 148 riders. (“Unfortunately” the PSRC Technical
Workbook is no longer available on the Internet.) The Sound Transit 2008 East Link DEIS described East Link
operation as “having headways of 9-15 minutes” presumably reflecting its half of
the DSTT trains .
Clearly spending billions
extending light rail beyond Northgate will do nothing to increase it. Sound
Transit could achieve the 8880 rph capacity increase to Lynnwood with an additional100
bus routes an hour without
spending a dime on light rail.
The Dec 22nd article
included Sound Transit claim the Lynnwood extension would add 67,000 daily
riders despite a Nov 4th, 2016 Traffic Lab article conceding ST3
extensions wouldn’t reduce congestion. They neglected
to mention that prior to the vote last fall, Sound Transit had projected the
ST3 extension to Everett would add up to 45,000 riders. Even a fraction of Sound Transits
projected ridership from the two extensions would end access at Northgate and
other stations nearer Seattle.
Clearly CEO Rogoff and the
Seattle Times Traffic Lab need to “get it” regarding the Lynnwood extension.
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