.
Feedback

Local Mayors United in Support for Sounder North Commuter Rail Service

"Sound Transit’s practical ideas to build ridership include more parking options as well as efforts to reduce impacts from mudslides."

Edmonds, Mukilteo and Everett mayors stand united in their support for Sounder North commuter rail service.

Sounder service has made headlines following a report by the Sound Transit Citizens Oversight Panel (COP) that expresses concerns about lower-than-expected Sounder North ridership.

We share the desire to see Sounder better utilized. Our service along the shore of Puget Sound offers the nation’s most beautiful commute. More people need to climb aboard. Sound Transit’s practical ideas to build ridership include more parking options as well as efforts to reduce impacts from mudslides.

We applaud the Sound Transit Board’s clear Oct. 26 response to the COP that the agency will focus on building ridership while maintaining current service levels. We strongly disagree with COP’s suggestion of reducing Sounder service to pay for more buses on I-5. Our communities have made a tremendous long-term investment in Sounder. We will not stand for reducing service.

A number of vocal Sounder opponents, many of whom live nowhere near Snohomish County, have tried to skew the COP’s report to suggest the service might be subject to outright elimination. That will never happen. The COP group explicitly stated it is “not suggesting that Sound Transit dismantle the existing North Sounder service.”

Each weekday, hundreds of Snohomish County commuters take the Sounder train to Seattle. Riders have chosen Sounder over the time and cost – and headaches – of taking a car or bus on the freeway and getting stuck in some of the worst gridlock in the nation.

Instead, they hop on Sounder, open their laptops, and spend a peaceful commute getting a head start on their work. More than a few catch up on lost sleep. Many enjoy the breathtaking views.

We will do our part to help ensure that more riders enjoy Sounder, which is vital to individual commuters and to our long-term development goals for our cities.

We definitely need more parking at the Edmonds and Mukilteo stations. We will work with Sound Transit and other potential partners to explore options. We are hoping to achieve expanded parking in Edmonds soon, and Sound Transit is gearing up to look at options in Mukilteo, where station improvements including better pedestrian access are also on the horizon.

As we enter the rainy winter months, commuters should benefit from reduced impacts from mudslides. BNSF is loosening a past 48-hour moratorium on passenger mudslides, under which even the most minor slides stopped service for a full two days.

While erring on the side of caution and safety, there will be more local discretion to maintain service. We are also pleased the state of Washington received a $16 million federal grant to stabilize the shoreline in the most slide-prone areas.

Sound Transit also plans to look for opportunities to further improve connections between Sounder trains and Washington State Ferries runs.

Sounder is a long-term investment for Snohomish County. We had to pay more than we wanted to secure rights from BNSF to use its tracks, but the rights we secured are perpetual. They will increase in value dramatically with each passing generation. By the Year 2040 the region’s population will grow by more than a third, increasing our chronic road congestion.

Snohomish County worked long and hard for commuter rail service ... We prevailed. It took seven years before the stations at Everett and Edmonds opened, and another five before Sounder reached Mukilteo in 2008, just as the national recession hit and forced many people out of work and off the trains.

More riders are already coming. August 2012 Sounder North ridership increased 25 percent from August 2011.

Sound Transit is intensifying its promotional efforts. A marketing survey this year showed more than 80 percent of respondents within the train’s service area agreed it is important to have both bus and commuter rail; that bus and commuter rail benefit the entire community, not just transit users; and that Sounder will be even more important as the area’s population increases.

We applaud Sound Transit for resisting the urging by rail opponents from outside our area to revisit the major investments Snohomish County taxpayers have made. Sounder North provides a valuable option that our residents continue to strongly support.

Dave Earling, City of Edmonds Mayor and Sound Transit Board member
Joe Marine, City of Mukilteo Mayor
Ray Stephanson, City of Everett Mayor

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Edmonds Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Kim Carney May 21, 2013 at 03:57 pm
It is beautiful and cold, just like Edmonds ;)
mojomichelle May 18, 2013 at 09:03 am
That is true about Citypark being in a lot of shade. Where's the skateboard park? Possibly a spotRead More at Edmonds Marina Beach??
Jeanne Gustafson (Editor) May 17, 2013 at 02:00 pm
Cassy said on Facebook (sorry to those having trouble logging in today!): Would love to have aRead More splash pad and yes please move it so it is in the full sun. If you are going to have a splash pad we need to take advantage of the sunshine.
James Spangler May 17, 2013 at 01:46 pm
A splash pad would be great, but that space is so shady - maybe next to the skateboard park instead.Read More
CMR May 18, 2013 at 03:20 pm
Works well for me. I like the new format
Priya Sinha May 15, 2013 at 02:37 pm
It sucks! Its confusing to follow.
Terri Buysse March 29, 2013 at 09:35 pm
If you want to know what it's like to have your religion disrespected, try having school camps,Read More orchestra and band concerts and back-to-school nights on the holiest of your religious holidays (equivalent to Christmas and Easter). Everyone knows that an egg hunt is an Easter event whether it's called that or not. Everyone know that a holiday tree is really a Christmas tree. Trust me, the atheists and/or non-Christians are not trying to destroy Christianity. First, it would be impossible. Second, it would be too dangerous to us personally. Last, I personally respect other's traditions, but I'm not sure the same can always be said in reverse.
KGreen March 29, 2013 at 02:44 pm
Don't we have more important things to worry about? Easter Egg, Egg Hunt, who cares? It's a funRead More community event. And thank you to the sponsers that make this happen.
Sally Hyde March 28, 2013 at 10:24 pm
First of all, the government is not supposed to promote any religion. Secondly, the Easter bunnyRead More and egg hunt has no historical religious significance that I can think of, even though this is part of an American tradition. I am good with deleting the word Easter, and would like to see a departure from any emphasis on candy, which only compounds the diabetic epidemic in this country. Sometimes it is good to rethink the wisdom of something simply because it is a "tradition".