Gregoire is taking the lead in recasting transportation plans
Nothing like a close election to focus the mind of political leaders. The best current example is Gov. Chris Gregoire, stung by defeat of Proposition 1 and the still-unresolved Viaduct and 520 decisions. She's suddenly acting courageous and creative about forging some new plans for central Puget Sound transportation.
Some interesting minds are also trying to create a package for Dino Rossi, running against the governor. So the new forum for the debate about roads and transit will now shift to the campaigns. That could be progress.
On Tuesday, Gov. Gregoire paid a visit to the Tacoma News Tribune's editorial board, saying very interesting things, according to editor David Seago's blog. She said she was prepared to look seriously at bills creating an overall regional transportation governance body, putting roads and transit authority in one largely elected body for King, Snohomish, and Pierce counties. Then this bombshell:
And the notion of "sub-area equity," Gregoire said emphatically, has got to go. That gave us a little shudder, because the principle that the money raised in each county should be spent each county is pretty much Holy Writ in Pierce and Snohomish counties.
The problem with sub-area equity, Gregoire contended, is that local goodies get piled atop the most serious regional priorities, for reasons of local politics, that the total cost of any package balloons and it topples of its own weight.
A pretty good description, I admit, of what happened with Proposition 1 on both the transit and road sides. But, as I told the governor, "we little people in the sticks" have a legitimate fear of getting little more than table scraps while the Seattle-centric mega-projects get taken care first.
Combine these remarks with Gregoire's recent change of mind on the Viaduct, where she now is open to a surface-plus-transit solution, and you have the makings of a broader, more modern approach to transportation planning in the Greater Seattle area. Opponents of Prop. 1 are cheered and will probably be welcome at the new planning table.
The first political showdown will be Sound Transit's decision next February whether to go back to the ballot in 2008, this time with no roads component. House Speaker Frank Chopp opposes the 2008 submission, fearing that some of his Democratic candidates in the suburbs will be forced to take a stand on a tax increase. Olympia has threatened Sound Transit that if they go ahead with the 2008 vote, they can expect to be punished by enactment of a regional governance entity that will weaken Sound Transit's autonomy and its dedicated taxes. Waiting to 2010 for the Sound Transit II vote may also give enough time for the regional governance entity to be enacted.
The other political question is whether Rossi will actually craft a comprehensive roads/transit/congestion plan, thus forcing Gregoire to have a better one. Rossi advisors are split over letting Dino run against Gregoire's record with no explicit plans of his own, or showing leadership by pulling together a detailed plan. He'll probably only get specific if polling shows he's behind.







Comments:
Posted Wed, Dec 19, 1:58 p.m. inappropriate
Sub-Area Equity STAYS: From the story: "And the notion of "sub-area equity," Gregoire said emphatically, has got to go."
Although her heart's in the right place, she's wrong on this one. The voters in the Sound Transit Region put the sub-area equity measure into place to ensure that money raised in each of the areas would be spent there.
If it weren't for that, everyone in Bellevue would be paying taxes to ST for nothing but Seattle light rail!
Maybe for future projects (like the SR 520 work) there could be general taxes for a specific project, but LEAVE ST ALONE ALREADY. Light rail construction to the airport is almost done!
Posted Fri, Dec 21, 6:48 a.m. inappropriate
King County Thing: So where's all the support for reorganizing everything in all of the other counties? The band of bigger government promoters seems mostly a Seattle/King County crowd of Republicans disenchanted with their county and a democrat or two thrown in. People in the other three counties that would be reorganized by this aren't so hot on the idea, and can be downright hostile about it. They're not dumb. They see King County running everything, which it will in any one-man, one-vote drawing of districts.
This is a stunt the Republicans are setting up for when Dino Rossi gets desperate in a few months. The Governor is obviously seriously misreading this issue. If she gets popped by it she'll only have herself to blame. This is hardly a way for her to grow votes where she needs them.
Voters want smaller solutions, not big tax and toll solutions for things they'll never use selected by people they don't know.
Under any scenario the King County Executive can be expected to go his or her own way, along with the Seattle Times, and take down most anything the bigger government crowd puts up. Will a Governor Rossi support big new taxes John Stanton wants from his new big government?
Will Frank Chopp take the big tax vote required to pass the Stanton/Rice proposal in 2008? NO. Will democrats establish a new bigger government in 2008 that is mostly the product of a few King County elites? NO. Will anybody find the money to pay a whole new batch of elected officials salaries and benefits in 2008? NO. Will the legislature pass a law prohibiting Sound Transit from a 2008 vote to create a new government? NO. Will this whole charade distract from work needed to make progress on transportation people want to see? It already is. Consider it a Christmas gift to Dino Rossi.