cars

A Tale of Two Streets

A Tale of Two Streets

In the US our streets started out slow and safe before cars existed, and have become increasingly dangerous.  We’re lucky in Seattle in that much of our roads were built before modern road standards.  These standards have pushed roads to be wider for visibility and to fit large fat fire engines, remove stop signs in [...]

The State of car love.

Our state created a great (if unoriginal) web site where you can suggest ways of fixing our state budget.  A while back I proposed tapping into the gas tax as a temporary measure, until we get back on our budgetary feet.  This idea did not do well (currently at -18 votes).  Looking through the list of [...]

The MPG of a PEH

Chevy just announced that it can no longer claim 230 MPG for its plug in electric hybrid the Volt, since the EPA has been having trouble coming up with an appropriate formula.  It’s easy to come up with a MPG equivalent for regular hybrids, since in the end all of their energy comes from gasoline.  And [...]

Stopping the Ferries

I recently began studying the ridership and appropriations of the Washington State ferries, and that was a little bit interesting. However, I soon realized that the big picture simply crushes the nuanced analysis.

One part of the big picture is that there will always be strong lobbying for more and larger car ferries. These people don’t need any help from me and they probably don’t need any help from you.

Another part of the big picture is that, for reasons I may elaborate in a future post, passenger ferries in Puget Sound will always be big money-losers. If you’re a casino and can make up the loss in some other way, or if you’re wealthy and can join other wealthy commuters in hiring a private boat, fine and dandy. Public authorities, however, will always struggle and frequently fail in dealing with the financial bleeding.

For the reader, it’s a happy ending- there’s not much you can do, and not much you should do, about the ferries. It’s an island of calm in a busy world.

More on Passenger Ferries

Thirty years ago I considered buying an old passenger ferry that, in her day, was notorious for speed in carrying workers from West Seattle to Bremerton. She was 80 feet long, 12 feet wide, and, when I saw her, powered by one flathead Chrysler straight-eight, the same motor Chrysler used in their automobiles in the late forties and early fifties.

Moving passengers by water quickly will never be as efficient as rail, but water has a few advantages, first, that it is flat, and secondly, that it is free. Except for the terminals, you don’t condemn and buy property to set up a route on water, and each terminal can serve many routes.

Bruce Agnew has offered an excellent precis view here and I have critiqued Brewster’s response in a comment to Frank’s post, below. What I offer here is a tale of two cities.

In Bremerton, Cary Brozeman has led efforts to revitalize downtown Bremerton by replacing ferry parking with condominiums and commercial development, along with a stunning esplanade well worth a day trip from Seattle to admire, and a subway tunnel for cars and trucks exiting the ferry to pass under the city center before emerging on the surface. When the ferry arrives in the afternoon, a dozen buses swallow the foot passengers and carry them away. The Naval Shipyard, with less success in ameliorating traffic, also subsidizes bus service for their workers.

Bainbridge, while equally successful in developing dense foot-and-transit friendly housing, and picking up foot passengers with buses, has suffered from the WSDOT policy of dumping car and truck traffic from the ferry on local roads. In a car exiting the ferry in the afternoon, it takes as long to get from Bainbridge to Poulsbo as it did to cross the Sound, not too impressive when we consider that the distances are the same. Bainbridge and Kingston are suffering, and know they are suffering, from the cars and trucks dumped on them by WSDOT.

Yes, in the past our regional governances have been divided and conquered by savvy power brokers and their tools at WSDOT. It’s time to change all of that.