I agree with @seabikeblog that the 2024 #Seattle transportation levy is worth supporting. Is it perfect? No. Are there ways it could fail to meet our expectations? Yes. Is it better than not having it? Absolutely.

I'm tired as hell of the perfect being the enemy of the good.

https://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2024/07/16/endorsement-the-seattle-transportation-levy-will-be-a-massive-investment-in-safe-efficient-streets/

#2024GeneralElection, #2024TransportationFundingMeasure, #Sdot

Endorsement: The Seattle Transportation Levy will be a massive investment in safe, efficient streets

I combined categories to get them to match up as well as I could. You can check my math in this spreadsheet. Now that Mayor Harrell and the City Council have officially sent the $1.55 billion 2024 …

Seattle Bike Blog

Council poised to send $1.55B transportation levy to voters

How Councilmembers voted on proposed amendments during the July 2 committee meeting. The chair’s amendment is a large amendment that included a bunch of requests and additions from councilmembers and raised the total to $1.55 billion.

Seattle voters will have an opportunity this November to pass the largest city investment in transportation infrastructure in recent memory.

Assuming the Seattle City Council does not make any additional changes to their amended levy proposal (spending breakdown PDF) before final approval next week, the 2024 Seattle Transportation Levy will put $1.55 billion into repairing and improving Seattle’s streets over the next eight years, a decent increase over the expiring 9-year Move Seattle Levy even when accounting for inflation.

Transportation advocates and labor groups pushed for a more ambitious $1.75 billion version, but only Cathy Moore (D5) and amendment sponsor Tammy Morales (D2) voted Tuesday for the additional funds. It is notable that Districts 2 and 5 are also the districts most in need of basic transportation infrastructure improvements like bike lanes, sidewalks and traffic calming.

Now that the $1.55 billion version is very likely headed to voters, transportation advocates will need to figure out where they stand on the measure and what role they are going to play in the campaign to approve it. Seattle Subway has already signaled that their org is opposed due to a lack of guaranteed transit funding, they said via social media. This is a worrying sign for the mayor and Council since the pro-levy campaign is going to need volunteers willing to knock on doors and make phone calls, and walk/bike/transit advocates along with organized labor did a lot of that heavy lifting during the 2015 Move Seattle campaign. Any questions about the levy’s dedication to improving transit is a huge liability in transit-loving Seattle.

On the other hand, it’s not clear that voting down this measure would lead to a better levy later, at least not with the current City Council. Seattle’s opportunity to put together the levy of advocates’ dreams passed us by in November 2023 when the voters failed to elect a Council majority promising to champion walking, biking and transit. Instead, the proposed levy largely continues the Move Seattle scope of work, though with notable increases in funding for street paving and sidewalks and the notable absence of funding for the streetcar.

Where the Move Seattle Levy over-promised about many specific improvements, especially for transit corridors and bike lane mileage, the proposed levy is a bit light on specifics. This means advocates are going to need to fight for every single project as they come, just like they always do. The Seattle Transportation Plan, a Mayor Bruce Harrell document, lays out a fairly ambitious future for the city’s streets, and the proposed levy will fund a significant increase in the number of those streets that will be repaved. The question facing advocates is whether they think they can win those battles project-by-project over the next eight years.

Seattle Neighborhood Greenways celebrated that the levy is better than when it was initially proposed, even if it “is only about half of what Seattle needs in the next 8 years to reach its climate goals and reach Vision Zero.” From their blog post:

5 Big Wins Worth Celebrating

  • $66.5 million for a new people streets and public spaces program for the first time in Seattle’s history, including $10 million for pedestrian lighting to increase visibility and safety at night, and a study to Lid I-5, an important next step to provide more public land and urban freeway mitigation.
  • $145 million in funding for sidewalk construction and repair, a 75% increase over the Mayor’s initial proposal in April. This will build 350 blocks of new sidewalks over the next 8 years. This is less than we were pushing for, considering Seattle’s 11,000 blocks of missing sidewalks, but still increases Seattle’s rate of new sidewalk construction by over 40%.
  • $113.5 million for bike safety. While the list of promised bike routes is disappointingly short, this funding represents an increase over the inflation-adjusted Move Seattle Levy and will build critical bike projects including N 130th St, Beacon Ave S, and S Henderson St.
  • $41 million for a new equity-focused program for neighborhood-initiated safety projects. This program was crafted and proposed by SDOT’s Transportation Equity Workgroup to highlight and prioritize community ideas and will increase the equitable distribution of safety-focused spending.
  • $70 million for Vision Zero, including safety projects on all of Seattle’s top 5 most dangerous streets: Aurora Ave N, Martin Luther King Jr. Way S, 4th Ave S, Rainier Ave S, and Lake City Way.
  • I have not seen any major advocacy calls to action to try to get the Council to make any last-minute additions to the levy before passing it during the full council Tuesday (tomorrow), though any additions for transit and safe streets would certainly be helpful and welcome.

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    Council poised to send $1.55B transportation levy to voters

    How Councilmembers voted on proposed amendments during the July 2 committee meeting. The chair’s amendment is a large amendment that included a bunch of requests and additions from councilmem…

    Seattle Bike Blog

    CM Morales’ transportation levy amendment would fund Council priorities without pitting them against each other

    Send letters of support via the easy and quick SNG action alert.

    The City Council’s latest deliberations over the Seattle Transportation Levy saw many members trying to find cuts in the proposal in order to fund work they want to see added, whether it’s additional sidewalk construction in their districts or a Burke-Gilman Trail alternative via Leary and Market. But why make cuts to other important work when the Council can just increase the levy size to fund all these additions?

    That’s the idea behind Councilmember Tammy Morales’ newest amendment, which the Council will discuss Tuesday. By increasing the levy to $1.7 billion over eight years, the Council could fund additions while still remaining within the range that polling suggests voters will approve, according to Seattle Neighborhood Greenways.

    “Thanks to your advocacy, the draft Transportation Levy has significantly improved since we first saw it in April,” Greenways wrote in an email to supporters this week. “But Council is still trying to pit vital priorities against each other. We shouldn’t have to choose between building or repairing sidewalks, or between public open space and protected bike lanes. We need all of these things, and polling shows that voters will pass a levy that funds them.”

    The poll by the Northwest Progressive Institute found strong support for an even larger $1.9 billion levy, suggesting the Council can safely grow the levy without risking voter backlash. Given the extended closure of the West Seattle Bridge and the terrifying spike in traffic deaths, especially of people walking, voters know Seattle needs to increase its funding for improving our streets. And Seattle is a city where the number of people willing to help our city go big outnumber those who vote against all tax increases. The expiring Move Seattle Levy passed with a 17 point margin even in a lower-turnout, odd-year ballot without high-profile federal elections. This is the first year that a Seattle transportation levy will be on the same ballot as the U.S. President, and the conventional wisdom suggests that a higher turnout should yield better results for an ambitious levy like this one.

    Morales announced the amendment during a press conference alongside Seattle Neighborhood Greenways, Disability Rights Washington and the MLK County Labor Council, the Urbanist reported. The Urbanist also included a breakdown of what the extra $150 million would fund, including $20 million for protected bike lanes in south Seattle and $20 million for the Leary/Market Burke-Gilman Trail connection.

    Seattle Neighborhood Greenways is calling on supporters to send Councilmembers letters of support using their handy online form and to sign up to give supportive testimony. More details from SNG:

    Councilmember Morales responded to community advocacy and proposed an amendment that will increase the size of the transportation levy to $1.7B by making council amendments additive instead of pitting vital priorities against each other. CLICK HERE to push Council to vote YES for a $1.7B levy that builds sidewalks and safety projects by Tues, July 2!

    LAST CHANCE TO MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD!

  • SEND AN EMAIL: Send the City Council a written public comment at [email protected], or use this easy form.
  • CALL YOUR COUNCILMEMBERS: Call your city councilmembers instead and leave a voicemail. Nelson (citywide) 206-684-8809, Woo (citywide) 206-684-8808, Saka (D1) 206-684-8801, Morales (D2) 206-684-8802, Hollingsworth (D3) 206-684-8803, Rivera (D4) 206-684-8804, Moore (D5) 206-684-8805, Strauss (D6) 206-684-8806, Kettle (D7) 206-684-8807. 
  • SHOW UP: Speak directly to Council at City Hall Tuesday, July 2, at 9:30 am. You can also sign up to speak virtually. See How-To and talking points here.
  • (Note to readers: I am on vacation until July 6, so posts may be slower than usual.)

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    #SEAbikes #Seattle

    CM Morales’ transportation levy amendment would fund Council priorities without pitting them against each other

    Send letters of support via the easy and quick SNG action alert. The City Council’s latest deliberations over the Seattle Transportation Levy saw many members trying to find cuts in the propo…

    Seattle Bike Blog

    Council passes the Seattle Transportation Plan with few changes

    https://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2024/04/24/council-passes-the-seattle-transportation-plan-with-few-changes/

    #SEAbikes #Seattle

    Council passes the Seattle Transportation Plan with few changes

    The bicycle facilities map in the mayor’s proposed Seattle Transportation Plan. After making very few changes, the City Council passed the Seattle Transportation Plan (“STP”) this…

    Seattle Bike Blog

    How Mayor Harrell’s proposed transportation levy compares

    https://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2024/04/16/how-mayor-harrells-proposed-transportation-levy-compares/

    #SEAbikes #Seattle

    How Mayor Harrell’s proposed transportation levy compares

    The $930 million Move Seattle Levy was the most ambitious city transportation levy in the U.S. in 2015, but it also overpromised on what it could feasibly deliver for those dollars. The result is t…

    Seattle Bike Blog

    A transportation funding ballot measure that inspires

    https://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2024/03/14/a-transportation-funding-ballot-measure-that-inspires/

    #SEAbikes #Seattle

    A transportation funding ballot measure that inspires

    Over the next 8 years, Seattle will improve safety on every high-injury street in the city. That’s the kind statement I would love to see Seattle make when selling the transportation funding …

    Seattle Bike Blog

    Seattle’s mixed history building neighborhood greenways

    https://www.seattlebikeblog.com/2024/01/10/seattles-mixed-history-building-neighborhood-greenways/

    #SEAbikes #Seattle

    Seattle’s mixed history building neighborhood greenways

    Neighborhood greenways have a hit and miss history in Seattle. Sometimes they create fantastic all ages and abilities walking and biking connections, and sometimes they are so heavily compromised t…

    Seattle Bike Blog