Councilmembers re-align mid-year transportation spending Increased funding for immediate safety and mobility needs

Home » Councilmembers re-align mid-year transportation spending Increased funding for immediate safety and mobility needs

City of Seattle
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/17/2013

Councilmember Tim Burgess

Councilmember Tom Rasmussen

Councilmembers re-align mid-year transportation spending
Increased funding for immediate safety and mobility needs

SeattleCity Council Budget Committee Chair Tim Burgess and Transportation Committee Chair Tom Rasmussen released a list of mid-year transportation spending priorities to be funded by some of the $7.25M of the Spokane Street Viaduct project savings and 2013 debt service savings.

The proposed spending package adds and reallocates more than $3 million from the Mayor’s original proposal to fund safety improvements and backlogged maintenance to enable the work to begin as soon as possible. The transportation budget will be considered by the Government Performance and Finance Committee at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, June 19.

“We must fix what we have, finish what we’ve started and plan wisely for the future for all transportation modes. Our proposal will help balance these needs, which are crucial to keeping people safe and our economy moving in the right direction,” said Councilmember Tim Burgess. “We have a road and bridge maintenance backlog that grows by tens of millions of dollars each year. We have planning for bus and high capacity transit projects underway now that will require half a billion dollars in funding that we do not have. Our proposal is intended to ensure every City dollar that goes to transportation will be spent to meet current critical safety, maintenance and transit needs.”

The funding package will include safety improvements recommended by the Mayor at East Marginal Way (the site of a recent fatal bicycle accident) and NE 75th Street (the site of a recent pedestrian accident with multiple fatalities). The package will also fund a full traffic signal long sought for at the intersection of 47th Avenue SW and SW Admiral Way (the site of a fatal pedestrian accident in 2006) in addition to freight mobility spot improvements, traffic signals, and other pedestrian safety and maintenance projects.

“The City’s primary focus should be on making safety and maintenance repairs now and on improving transit service in critical bus corridors such as Eastlake Avenue,” said Councilmember Tom Rasmussen.

Funding for additional automated school zone speed cameras is included in the package. The councilmembers will soon introduce separate legislation establishing a financial policy mandating that revenue from existing school zone cameras and any future ones be used exclusively for pedestrian and road safety improvements around schools.

The proposed transportation package does not include funding for a Ship Canal crossing study because Sound Transit and the Seattle Department of Transportation are conducting a high capacity transit study for the downtown to Ballard corridor now. Discussion of a ship canal crossing will follow the results of that study. The package also changes the scope of the proposed Eastlake High Capacity Transit study to focus on more immediate bus corridor improvements.

Legislation for this supplemental spending package will be introduced to the Full Council this afternoon and considered by the Government Performance and Finance Committee at 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, June 19.

[View in Council Newsroom]