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Politics

Fixing our big flat tire

Sound Transit, the Viaduct, 520, the Mercer Mess — everywhere you turn, there's a Puget Sound transportation problem awaiting solution. It's time for citizens to demand leadership from leaders and to push for reform of agencies and even government.

Fixing our big flat tire

by

Ted Van Dyk

Repuplish

Sound Transit, the Viaduct, 520, the Mercer Mess — everywhere you turn, there's a Puget Sound transportation problem awaiting solution. It's time for citizens to demand leadership from leaders and to push for reform of agencies and even government.

The Sound Transit board will decide on Thursday, July 24, whether to submit a multibillion-dollar ballot measure to voters this fall. It mainly would fund a three-county extension beyond Seattle of a light rail line that is not yet completed in the city.

Meantime, we are embroiled in wrangling about plans and financing of replacement or repair of the Alaskan Way Viaduct and replacement of the Highway 520 bridge, as well as Mayor Greg Nickels' expensive proposal for Mercer Mess reconfiguration (which would not relieve traffic congestion) to make the road network more compatible with Vulcan's South Lake Union development.

All of this at a time of economic stress, falling state and local tax revenue, and increasing pressure on state and local business and personal taxpayers.

Here is an agenda for structural and policy change which would address these matters.

Not possible under the Seattle Way, you say? Sure it is. This kind of action is possible in any jurisdiction, anywhere in the United States.

Here is a secret about elected officials. Almost all of them are more greatly motivated by fear of disapproval, by those with political money and juice, than by a positive motivation to get things done on behalf of ordinary constituents. When voters and taxpayers get angry and demand action, the equation changes. It particularly can change in an election year such as this.