After 11th-hour(s) drama, County Council OKs ‘save Metro’ fee

By a vote of 7 to 2, King County Councilmembers have just approved the $20-a-year-for-two-years car-tab fee that is supposed to save Metro from drastic bus-service cuts. “We have made a giant step toward saving our Metro,” declared council chair Larry Gossett, right after the vote.

If you’ve been offline for a few hours, you might say, “well, isn’t that what was expected to happen, after the big deal announced last week?” Yes – until some multi-hour, last-minute drama: Preceding the vote, the council convened in early afternoon as scheduled – and then went into more than four hours of closed-door caucusing, according to multiple updates from citywide news organizations (including Slog and PubliCola) that also reported rumors the two Republican (officially nonpartisan) councilmembers who supported the fee last week, Jane Hague and Kathy Lambert, might change their minds. But before tonight’s vote, both spoke publicly to reiterate their support for it. Six “yes” votes were required to finalize the fee. All five Democratic (officially nonpartisan) councilmembers, including West Seattle’s Joe McDermott, voted for it too; McDermott acknowledged it’s a “regressive” tax, but pointed out it’s the only option the State Legislature gave them for raising money to cover the budget gap.

P.S. Another, separate car-tab-fee vote is ahead tomorrow – this one **for the city only**. Seattle City Councilmembers, sitting as the Transportation Benefit District Board, will vote on whether to send to voters in November a car-tab fee to fund transportation projects. They’re expected to vote at 11 tomorrow morning, and then they’re planning a news conference on Delridge to talk about it. The fee could be up to $80/year.

ADDED 9:04 PM – MORE ON TONIGHT’S COUNTY COUNCIL VOTE: The council’s official news release, after the jump:

The Metropolitan King County Council today adopted a bipartisan, multi-pronged transit funding plan that maintains current transit service levels while providing transportation alternatives for commuters who may see a reduction in bus service in their communities. The funding plan includes adoption of the Congestion Reduction Charge (CRC), a temporary charge on vehicle licenses for each of the next two years.

“The people of King County cannot afford transit cuts and the devastating impacts they would have on our mobility, economy, environment, and vulnerable populations” said Councilmember Larry Phillips, lead sponsor of the Congestion Reduction Charge legislation. “Enacting this temporary $20 charge is the culmination of a three year effort to keep service on the street through significant reforms and efficiencies, wage concessions, fare increases, and tapping into reserves. I thank my Council colleagues and the Executive for their willingness to engage in a solution we could broadly support.”

“I am pleased we worked collaboratively to come up with a package to save bus service for the residents of King County,” said Council Chair Larry Gossett. “Thousands of people testified in front of us, wrote in, or called asking us to save buses, not only for themselves but for the transit dependent members of our community. Today’s vote tells them we listened.”

“The new CRC package that the Council adopted today will directly benefit my constituents on the Eastside,” said Council Vice Chair Jane Hague. “In this era of partisan bickering at the federal level, we at King County have bucked the trend. Thanks to efforts made on both sides of the aisle, this new legislation offers real reform for Metro. More importantly it creates jobs, and keeps businesses and people moving.”

“No one wants a new fee, but the alternative is far worse,” said Councilmember Kathy Lambert. “Without interim funding, cuts to bus service will be substantial, particularly in the lower-density neighborhoods on the Eastside. This will put more cars on the road, clogging our freeways and bridges and leaving all of us idling in standstill traffic. Without this compromise on funding for Metro, we all would pay more for gas, spend more time commuting, and lose some of our quality of life. Transit cuts of this magnitude will further undercut our fragile economy, and we can’t afford that risk. I am proud that this compromise agreement will return value to our citizens.”

Metro faced a $1.2 billion shortfall between revenues they’re collecting and what is needed to sustain our transit system between 2009 and 2013. Efficiencies, reforms, fare increases, layoffs, COLA givebacks, and tapping reserves have allowed Metro to close $900 million of that $1.2 billion problem.

Transit operators accepted COLA givebacks and other concessions that will save $17 million annually. Bus riders are paying 80 percent higher fares, which translates to an additional $500 annually per daily rider.

Due to the dramatic recession-driven drop in sales tax revenues, Metro Transit is facing a $60 million annual deficit between revenues and the cost of providing current levels of transit service. That shortfall will require Metro to shrink service by 600,000 hours of annual bus service over the next two years, or 17 percent of the entire system. The Congestion Reduction Charge was authorized by the State Legislature during its 2011 session as an option to assist King County in maintaining its transit service levels.

Engrossed Substitute Senate (ESSB) Bill 5457 provides a new local option for temporary transit funding of a Congestion Reduction Charge of up to $20 on each vehicle license renewal in King County. The charge can only be instituted for a period of two years.

The CRC is estimated to generate a two-year total of approximately $50 million for Metro Transit service. In combination with the use of reserves and other one-time measures, the CRC will provide for more stable transit revenue conditions for the Executive’s 2012-2013 Proposed Budget.

“The action taken by the Council today ensures that bus service will be maintained for hundreds of thousands of King County residents who rely on Metro transit to get around,” said King County Councilmember Julia Patterson, Chair of the Council’s Budget and Fiscal Management Committee. “With the Congestion Reduction Charge, Metro will be able to avoid large service reductions in the next two years that would have left bus riders, quite literally, standing out in the cold.”

“As a regular bus commuter on the #41, I understand the importance of bus service to our region and our economy,” said Councilmember Bob Ferguson. “I look forward to sharing the good news with my fellow bus commuters on my way home this evening.”

“The tireless efforts of King County residents highlighted the vital role transit plays in our region and led to today’s victory,” Councilmember Joe McDermott said. “Today’s vote will keep King County moving, save the taxpayers nearly $1 million in election costs, and provide needed time to identify long-term funding for Metro.”

The adopted ordinance includes a Transit Incentive Program to encourage drivers to use public transportation. Car owners will be eligible to receive eight bus tickets worth up to $24 in exchange for each car tab renewal. Individuals can use the tickets for bus rides to work, play or a special event. Or they can choose to donate the value of those tickets for distribution by select human service agencies.

The funding plan will also includes implementing different types of transit services for riders who depend on routes that serve lower-density areas. As part of the adopted Transit Strategic Plan, the Council directed Metro to move ahead with strategies for introducing more cost effective transit services on some lower ridership routes currently served by buses. But rather than eliminating transit service altogether in these communities, the adopted plan calls on Metro to explore alternatives that ensure that public transit will be available when needed—such as Dial-a-Ride Transit service (DART), community access transportation services, Vanpools and vanshares.

The coming of tolls on SR-520, the Alaskan Way Viaduct and potentially other corridors, is taken into consideration as part of the adopted plan. The plan includes language calling for routes which carry more riders due to the effect of highway tolling as candidates for added service to maintain the quality of existing service as directed by the Transit strategic plan.

The plan also calls for increasing revenues by eliminating the Ride Free Area (RFA) between Jackson and Battery Streets and in the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel starting in October 2012. The elimination of the Ride Free Area will generate an additional $2.2 million in revenue for Metro.
A service started in 1973 to encourage retail development in the downtown Seattle business core has become a money loser for King County. In 2009, a financial audit performed by the County Auditor recommended that Metro update its formula for collecting revenues in the RFA. Reimbursements from the city of Seattle have also failed to keep pace with ridership growth and fare increases.

To assist those who may be impacted by the loss of the Ride Free Area, the County will investigate either increasing the number of transit tickets allocated to human service and homeless programs, or reduce the cost these agencies pay when purchasing for transit tickets.

Councilmembers said public response—both those supporting the implementation of the Congestion Reduction Charge and a number of people who question the need for the charge—had a role in the adopted legislation.

The Congestion Reduction Charge will take effect in early 2012.

38 Replies to "After 11th-hour(s) drama, County Council OKs 'save Metro' fee "

  • G August 15, 2011 (7:43 pm)

    Don’t worry folks, $80 is only about 40 lattes at Starbucks, a cart of groceries at Safeway, or a dinner for two at Spring Hill…sheesh, don’t worry about it!

    (eyeballs rolling)

  • Diane August 15, 2011 (7:54 pm)

    that whole circus was ridiculous; wth? though Goldy’s reporting at slog kept me entertained
    ~
    was it really so they all could just write speeches to congratulate themselves about all their great work? sounded more like campaign pitches
    ~
    proof that politics is personal; I have no doubt that 90% of the population is completely out of the loop on this and will flip out when they get their car tab bill
    ~
    glad I haven’t voted yet; holding my ballot til after city council decision tomorrow; sure hope they don’t go into ‘caucus’ for 4 hrs

  • elliot August 15, 2011 (8:06 pm)

    Instead of me paying another $20 on my tabs u raise the price of the bus and make the people using the service pay for it!

  • CB August 15, 2011 (8:49 pm)

    Exactly… why not just raise bus fares?

  • Motorbike mike August 15, 2011 (9:14 pm)

    Once again they insist on punishing smart modes of transportation and this time without even asking us.

    They’re hitting a 300 lb motorcycle with the same license tab fees as a 6000lb SUV with studded tires. Hmm, I wonder which one causes wear and tear on a road? Vote no on tabs in November!!

    Why oh why can’t they just put a nickle on gas. The bigger the rig the more impact on the road maintenance and congestion. They should stop discouraging motorbikes, and hybrids.

  • MP August 15, 2011 (9:17 pm)

    Yes, agree raise bus fare, get rid of the free ride zone downtown and make bikers register their bikes and pay tabs too! There you go, problem solved and it only took me 2 min to come up with such a great solution.

    City council members who are up for re election, kiss your seats goodbye!

    • WSB August 15, 2011 (9:21 pm)

      MP, tonight’s action involved the COUNTY Council. Tomorrow, the p.s. I put at the end of the story, involves the City Council. – TR

  • MP August 15, 2011 (9:25 pm)

    Either way, any politician in this city should fear for their job. Heck, any in the whole state should worry! It is time for change!

  • Valerie August 15, 2011 (9:39 pm)

    Here’s another perspective on why car users should help support Metro: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/northwestvoices/2015670769_proposed100forcartabs.html – copied in full below:
    .
    Using road space
    .
    Why should a car user help to pay for someone who leaves his or her car at home during peak hours and takes the bus? [“Car-tab fee may soar $100,” NWWednesday, July 20]. Because the former consumes more than 25 times as much of a valuable public resource: road space (based on distance from rear bumper to rear bumper, divided by average occupancy).
    .
    It causes more than 25 times as much congestion. Road space is worth even more than parking space.
    .
    And lest you think bus riders are deadbeats, consider this: 95 percent of King County’s bus riders have a car available for their use, with an average of 1.8 cars per bus rider’s household. Under the looming draconian service cuts, thousands would indeed switch to driving and worsen congestion for all road users.
    .
    The $20 a year to avoid this fate is a pittance. The county council should enact it without wasting everyone’s time on a public vote.
    .
    — Anirudh Sahni, former member of the King County Transit Advisory Committee, Seattle

  • Nick August 15, 2011 (9:45 pm)

    Nice move, you can’t fund Metro so you punish the people who drive cars? What?

  • OP August 15, 2011 (10:09 pm)

    It’ll “just” be 2 years until that 2 years expires, then it will “just” be another 2 years until that 2 years expires, then it will “just” be another 2 years until that 2 years expires….

  • Gene August 15, 2011 (10:32 pm)

    Hey CB and all the car drivers who are complaining (and I’m a driver as well): the gas tax doesn’t come close to paying for the roads, so you’re right – lets talk fair, lets have drivers actually pay the true costs of driving. I’m pretty sick of having my tax dollars and my health subsidizing the roads, so let’s be fair and make drivers pay what they should.
    .
    Motorbike mike – I do agree with you, and in many states different types of vehicles do pay different fees. I’m all for that.

  • FB August 15, 2011 (10:47 pm)

    Another reason that it’s time to send Joe McDermott back to his job as Seattle’s Underground Tour Guide… Yes he understands it’s a regressive tax that adds another crushing weight onto the shoulders of low income and senior communities, but a) he’d rather go along than stand for what is right, and b) it doesn’t bother him, he makes $130K a year. How’d he get elected again???

  • MacJ August 15, 2011 (11:18 pm)

    Wow, we have a lot of people in these comments who aren’t bothering to even read details. Metro fares *are* going up whether this was going to get passed or not, and if you’re a daily rider a increasing fares a buck costs another couple of hundred dollars a year. Keep in mind also many people riding the bus DO also own a car, so they’re paying the increased fares plus the tabs. And, seriously? $20? You can save that much money year over year by keeping your tires inflated properly. Get over it.

  • elliot August 15, 2011 (11:48 pm)

    So raise the bus a few pennies more and get your hands out of my pockets, its only a few pennies!

  • metrognome August 16, 2011 (12:07 am)

    MP — if you actually read the article, you will see that the Ride Free Zone is going away as part of this ordinance. And how much will your simple little plan to license bicycles cost? If your 2-year-old has a bike, will he be arrested for having expired tabs?
    MotorbikeMike — state constitution prohibits state gas tax from being spent on anything but roads and highways; can’t spend it on transit.
    And for you Eymanites out there, voters in King County rejected both of Timmy’s $30 tab initiatives: by 53.3% in 1999 and by 59.6% in 2002.

  • beef August 16, 2011 (12:16 am)

    don’t feed the trolls.

  • visitor August 16, 2011 (1:18 am)

    OMG people are complaining about a friggin $20? a year? and that we should even have the conversation about “saving” metro transit when we have the most primitive transportation infrastructure, is pathetic.

  • RickM August 16, 2011 (6:55 am)

    I am a car commuter and I think the fee is worth it to keep the whole system functioning. More bus service means less cars, traffic, congestion, etc. It’s so simple. This does not “punish” car commuters, it helps us all.

  • austin August 16, 2011 (7:02 am)

    Addicts will always pay to keep their buzz going, even if they complain while doing it.

  • NotMe August 16, 2011 (7:23 am)

    If you think this $20 is going to “save” Metro, you are mistaken. This only bails them out. As for “it’s only $20” – I only have one thing to say: It’s $20 every time I turn around. The increases are all over the place. Didn’t you notice last year your latte went up a penny? That was to pay for Safeco Field! Uh, that bond is paid and the city still increased the sales tax.
    .
    The problem with Metro is the same as USPS – too much wasted money.

  • michael August 16, 2011 (7:56 am)

    By reading the posted comments, it’s obvious the majority don’t agree with the extra $20 tab fee. Time to have the politicians listen. Vote the Ba… out. This fee has laziness written all over it. Cut spending!!!!
    By the way, I’ll pay the extra $20 if someone would give me $20 for gas.
    Why are the car users being penalized? A user fee is the solution. You ‘use’ you pay.

  • Kayleigh August 16, 2011 (7:59 am)

    Welcome to the age of entitlement and whining and victim-ing—it’s the new American way. Permanent adolesence, if you will.
    .
    Driving a car is a privilege, not a right. If you can’t afford to pay for taxes, fees, insurance, gas, and upkeep, then don’t own a car. Just like if you can’t afford the mortage, taxes, and upkeep on your house, then rent instead of buying. Pretty simple.
    .
    Having said all that, I wonder about the impact of eliminating the Ride Free Zone. It will be interesting to see. Hopefully we’ll make it through the downtown corridor more quickly.

  • JoB August 16, 2011 (8:25 am)

    NotMe..

    you keep thinking that the problem is too much wasted money…
    until the day you need those services and realize they are no longer there because you thought funding them was wasteful.

  • The Hepcat August 16, 2011 (8:26 am)

    How nice of the city council to “save us the hassle of putting this on the ballot.” Obviously, by enacting a majority vote, the council does not have to bring that pesky issue of “letting the voters decide.” Baseball stadiums anyone?……..
    I have a car, and take the bus 2 or 3 times a week from WS to Downtown. I’m not upset about $20. It’s the City increase of approx. $50 in new registration fees ON TOP of the Metro increase. Mayor McSchwinn, how about eliminating a few cushy $100,000+/year “consultant/czar positions for your frien–Oops, I mean colleagues, and start looking at the Metro challenge for what it is, rather what you would like it to be, in your vision of a transportation sugarland utopia; free of those nasty cars.

  • Jiggers August 16, 2011 (8:52 am)

    People who oppose to it are the type that only think of themselves.

  • JoAnne August 16, 2011 (9:55 am)

    My co-worker who just retired was making over $100K and HE got a subsidized bus pass. And he doesn’t even live in King County! Metro gives away free and subsidized bus passes like candy to government workers at all levels, to students, to anyone who will take one. And that is just the beginning of the story on how much money they waste.

  • Lola August 16, 2011 (10:17 am)

    What ever happened to the money they already got from me when the Monarail was supposed to go in? I never got a refund from that? I also never heard where this money went to? Did it line someone’s pocket?

    I am so tired of those of us who own cars that we have to keep picking up the tab for everyone else. Bus riders, Bicycle riders. Are they going to start taxing our tabs when the Ferry finally runs out of money next?

  • Moose2 August 16, 2011 (10:22 am)

    Good news all around. For car drivers, this keeps bus riders on the bus rather than increasing congestion and competition for parking spaces. For bus riders, especially those who cannot drive (too young, elderly, blind, certain disabilities, etc) bus service is a critical lifeline.

    Very glad to see that the majority of the county council have the guts to do the right thing, even if it isn’t popular. That is what good government is all about – not “populism” looking just at their next election.

    -Moose

  • lucky chick August 16, 2011 (10:47 am)

    Jeez, people (like lola), read and TRY to comprehend: BUS RIDERS AND CYCLISTS OWN CARS AND PAY FEES, PLUS THE PROPERY TAXES THAT GO TO ROADS. We give these self centered drivers more room on the roads. “I’m so tired of us (sic) who own cars that we have to keep picking up the tab” [note – not my bad grammar]. Why is this so hard to understand? Alternative commuters reduce congestion in addition to subsidizing your driving! Really, it’s not that hard, try to use your brain. I’m tired of subsiding lazy, selfish drivers. You’ve been getting a free (or too cheap) ride for way too long. And I’m a driver, too.

  • lucky chick August 16, 2011 (11:07 am)

    I’m so pleased with the council. Far too often, our elected officials are afraid to represent us. In Seattle, there’s this feeling that every voice has to be heard regarding everything, and nothing ever gets done. You can speak with your vote.
    .
    Thanks for standing up and making the right decision.

  • Dano Beal August 16, 2011 (12:16 pm)

    … Gee, I wish it was that easy to fund teacher salaries. This will be the third year in a row that I make LESS than the year before, due to the SAME decrease in funding sources that Metro has had to deal with…. Yet raising car tabs fixed their issues…. I encourage EVERYONE to vote out each member of the city council that voted for this….. I certainly will.

  • visitor August 16, 2011 (1:46 pm)

    DanoBea;: you didn’t get yours, so nobody else should get theirs? NICE Very generous attitude! I hope all the children in Seattle can learn from your wisdom. NOT!! I hope you don’t teach my children.

  • en August 16, 2011 (3:49 pm)

    Look at that – the county just imposed a tax on you without your vote. Any chance one of the broader VLF initiatives had to pass is gone as this 20 dollar bail out of Metro’s incompetence will make any other tax seem too great.

    Only NOW is Metro talking about making real changes, and they won’t do enough. In 2 years they will be asking for more money again. Actually, they’ll just take it like they did this time. We just set the precedent that we will allow this sort of behavior.

    Enough of you who say this is about choice. This is not about choice. You don’t get to choose to support Metro, you are forced to if you own a car (regardless of MPG or use) or scooter/motorcycle (which is insane). I’d happily pay $200 a year for a real light rail system, but I’m pretty sure I won’t have that as a choice as we seem to be stuck on heavy and slow diesel burning hybrids to keep large groups of humans stuck with all the cars we keep complaining about.

  • Dano Beal August 16, 2011 (6:24 pm)

    Visitor (the person lacking the courage to use their REAL name) I hope I don’t teach your children either….. Clearly, if the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, they would be lacking a great deal… And they don’t pay me enough to care about what people like you think…

  • Kathy August 16, 2011 (10:33 pm)

    Congratulations to the King County Council for making the right decision. To those who wanted a chance to vote against it, I hope you cared enough to participate in one of the three hearings where testimony was overwhelmingly in favor of Council adopting this modest fee without dragging it through a lengthy and costly ballot process (or were you too busy home writing blog comments about it?) When you pay the fee you will get 8 free bus tickets valued at $24 which you can use or opt to donate their value to the homeless for use in the zone destined to no longer be “ride free”.

  • visitor August 16, 2011 (11:00 pm)

    to the school teacher: this is about the COUNTY council decision, not the CITY council. There’s a difference. You don’t get to vote on all the county council members (those ones you want to “vote out”). :) have a nice day.

  • redblack August 17, 2011 (7:43 am)

    the simple fact is that before tim eyman and his idiotic flat $30 car tabs initiative hamstrung state revenues, the state had more money to deal with all of the things that you good people complain about. especially transportation. and metro reduces congestion.
    .
    now the government has to fight for every nickel and is facing perennial budget shortfalls because people have forgotten what it costs to actually build and maintain infrastructure. it’s unsustainable, and we – all of us, collectively – have to start fixing what’s broken.
    .
    low, almost-free car tabs are unrealistic and whimsical anyway. most other states have MVETs that are a percentage of your vehicle’s value. 3% is pretty standard, i believe. so if your car is valued at $10,000, your tabs are $300.
    .
    and look at it this way: more money for transportation projects = more jobs = more money circulating in the economy = more tax revenues for government to fix what’s broken.

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