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A Bridge Stuck In Troubled Waters President Clinton became
somewhat notorious for constructing so many metaphorical "Bridges to the
21st Century" during his 1993-2001 tenure as Commander In Chief.
The South Park Bridge will never attain the cosmic status of all
the Clinton bridges, but it does a pretty good job illustrating what's
wrong with public transportation planning and governance in our state and
region.
The bridge crosses the Duwamish River to link South Park to the
rest of south Seattle. It is closed for the next few days for repairs. But
the big news is the bridge could be closed for good, maybe by the end of
2010, unless it receives an infusion of about $100 million in cash fast
from the federal government.
This dire possibility is the outcome
of a two decade struggle by King County and the city governments of
Seattle and Tukwila to figure out who owns the bridge and who should pay
how much to replace it.
Part of the problem is rooted in the
state's dysfunctional system for annexing unincorporated areas to cities.
After the bridge was built by King County in the late 1920s near the
growing site of Boeing Field, much of the surrounding countryside was
gobbled up through annexations by Seattle and Tukwila. As a result,
government boundary lines and legal responsibilities wound up dicing and
slicing up the bridge route as follows.
Approaching the bridge from
the north, motorists travel 16th Avenue South, which is inside the City of
Seattle. From the north end of the bridge to its mid point, you are
traveling through the City of Tukwila. From the mid point of the bridge to
the south end, you are in unincorporated King County and you remain in KC
until you drive by the County Line Tavern before continuing down 14th
Avenue South, which is back in the City of Seattle.
But, before
traveling down 14th you should stop at the County Line and suck down four
or five beers so you can better comprehend how this all came to be and why
there's a pretty decent chance the bridge is toast.
Washington was
a US territory for 35 years before it was granted statehood in 1889. That
was the third longest period of time that any territory waited to become a
state. By the time statehood arrived, our founders were obsessed with
"local control." This was due to their frustrations with territorial
officials, who received their authority from the powers-that-be in
Washington DC instead of people around here.
As a result, our
state constitution was written to strictly curb the power of the state
while giving as much power as possible to counties, cities and towns. Our
system was also festooned with as many local elected officials as possible
to assure accountability and ample opportunities for citizens to "throw
the bums out." The local bias of the constitution was later enhanced by
generous powers of initiative and referendum to assure the people could
put just about any proposition on the ballot for a popular
vote.
Great. It was and is a terrific structure for local control,
local elected officials, would-be local office holders, local political
activists, families and friends of local elected officials and activists,
and complainers or visionaries of all types, stripes and persuasions.
But, when the automobile entered the landscape at the start of the
20th Century, it also turned out to be one of the worst systems to build
regional networks of roads, highways or bridges and don't even go there if
the subject is Viaducts.
Which layer of government pays what and
who is in charge of what? Because the state possesses limited powers to
tell local governments what to do, many projects are resolved on a case by
case basis, which is great for government planners, environmental
reviewers, reviewer reviewers, lawyers, lobbyists, and community outreach
specialists. But, it is a pretty lousy system for setting up rebar and
pouring concrete.
Combine this ad hoc transportation "system" with
the tortured "ownership" structure of the South Park Bridge, and the
result was nearly two decades of government bickering.
Nearly 20
years after engineers first identified the need to replace the bridge, the
public finance plan presently stacks up as follows.
Tukwila gave
King County about $2 million in cash and agreed to buy a high maintenance
county swimming pool for another million. In exchange, King County took
responsibility for the worn-our bridge.
The county plans to come up with about $30 million to help build
a new bridge. That money will most likely come from fees charged to
unincorporated county residents, the vast majority of whom live in east
King County and most of whom probably believe "South Park" is a not a
place in Seattle, but an A+ cartoon show on cable TV.
Seattle, the
major public property owner surrounding the bridge, has agreed to
contribute no funding because, well, because it's Seattle. But, Seattle
did agree that if it someday maybe annexes the new bridge, it will then
probably almost certainly accept responsibility for bridge maintenance.
Unless, of course, three pot smokers from Fremont conduct a successful
initiative drive that forbids the use of city taxes for bridges or
anything else that might impact the Himalayan glaciers that aren't melting
as fast as we thought they were but are still melting too fast for
comfort.
But the real key to the deal was the local governments
rearched 100 percent complete agreement that they should ask the federal
government for $99 million to round out the construction
budget.
The request was submitted to a federal stimulus program. A
decision is expected February 17. The South Park Bridge is competing with
projects from all over the nation as well as a City of Seattle proposal to
help fund the badly needed and extremely chic Two-Way Mercer project in
South Lake Union.
The South Park Bridge is extremely not chic and
it is not clear what kind of shot it has at hitting federal pay dirt.
About 20,000 vehicles use the bridge every work day. Trucks
account for about 14 percent of the traffic flow. Most of the traffic is
expected to divert to the already crowded First Avenue South
Bridge.
County planners believe the detour will take most bridge
users about 3 miles out of their way. That doesn't include stops at the
County Line to contemplate the not so metaphorical links between the sorry
tale of the South Park Bridge and the still uncertain futures of the
Alaskan Way Viaduct and State Route 520.

Major construction
work began on I-405 in Renton
Many I-405 drivers in Renton have
noticed large bridge piers going up to support the new Benson Road S.
bridge. On Thursday, Feb. 4, crews started placeing the first of 20
girders (large I-beam supports) that span the freeway. To safely lift
these into place, they'll close lanes and coordinate with the Washington
State Patrol to perform rolling slowdowns. They'll work most nights until
the last girder is set into place around Friday, Feb. 12. For a detailed
work schedule, be sure to visit the I-405 Construction Web site, http://wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/I405/.
The rolling slowdowns will occur between 112th Ave. SE and I-5 as
part of the Renton Stage 2 widening project. If you're in the area, we
suggest you use alternative routes like I-5 and I-90 – otherwise you could
experience 15-minute delays or more.
What do you mean "rolling
slowdown?"
To perform a rolling slowdown, Washington State Patrol
troopers line their vehicles across the freeway in front of traffic and
travel at a slow pace. When they get the word that a girder is safely in
place, they speed up and allow traffic to pass.
East Marginal Way Grade Seperation
Feb 15, 2010-mid
2011 Duwamish Ave S will be fully closed to through traffic (except local
access). In addition, the right lane of S Spokane St between the river and
East Marginal Way will be closed for the duration of the project.
Sodo Construction Update
-Lane closure on the 1st
Ave S Bridge over the Argo yard, Feb 18, 9AM to Noon, for
inspection.
This information can also be found online: http://www.seattle.gov/transportation/sodo_latest.htm
Lane closure on Aurora Bridge
-Feb 22-24 9AM to Noon
Crews will close the northbound right lane over the Aurora Bridge daily
for maintenance work.
Upcoming Paving Projects
Bridging the Gap dollars at
work.
- Mid March Crews will be paving Airport Way S between S
Royal Brougham Way and S Spokane St. - Mid April Crews will be paving S
Dearborn St between 5th Ave S and 10th Ave S. - May Crews will be
paving S Columbian Way between 15th Ave S and Beacon Ave S.
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