Friends of the Monorail 9/7/10
Monorail News

Monorail agency officially dissolves; cost taxpayers $125 million

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer -- 1/18/2008: The authority's last meeting was a final financial accounting. All 33 properties the authority bought had been sold, all lawsuits settled. The authority closed up shop with $425,963.07 in the bank, which the board voted Thursday to give to Metro for bus service in the communities that would have been served by the line.

Dec. 15, 2007

The Stranger, blog entry by Josh Feit -- 12/17/2007: For those of you that live in Ballard or West Seattle and work downtown, how long did it take you to get to work today?

Mourning the monorail; looking ahead

West Seattle Blog -- 12/15/2007: So on this Opening Day That Wasn't, you might wonder, what's next for mass transit in West Seattle, considering that Sound Transit light rail isn't pointing our way? Some interesting ideas can be read on the Sustainable West Seattle Transportation Action Group blog; regarding more concrete plans, two public meetings are set in West Seattle next month for the "RapidRide" bus plan (both dates are on the WSB Events page).

I want my monorail ride

Andy MacDonald, Blogger at Sound Politics -- 12/15/2007: For five years I've kept that magnet on my fridge, waiting for our glorious transportation future. Now that the day has finally arrived, where is my monorail ride?

The monorail's opening day

The Big Blog, The Seattle Post-Intelligencer -- 12/7/2007: Not many pieces of history are stuck to refrigerators.

New request for monorail documents is likely

Puget Sound Business Journal -- 11/30/2007: The Washington Coalition for Open Government is considering submitting a new request for records the agency had refused to release, citing attorney-client privilege.

Suit delays shutdown of monorail agency
Authority accused of violating public records laws

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer -- 8/17/2007: In the lawsuit filed in King County Superior Court, the coalition argues the monorail authority violated state public records laws when it refused to release "the vast majority" of 1,007 documents requested by the coalition citing attorney-client privilege.

Monorail is in 'repose'

West Seattle Herald -- 5/29/2007: For private businesses, the law provides a roadmap for shutting down the monorail and creates finality and certainty to Seattle taxpayers that the Seattle Monorail Project no longer exists. It also protects taxpayers from any liabilities and obligations that may arise once the agency is dissolved, and for this reason, the current board of directors remains in place, eliminating the need for and cost of elections for board seats.

Shit’s in the P-I: Who Is Queen of the Viaduct Haters?

The Stranger, blog entry by Dan Savage -- 2/13/2007: And getting back to the monorail: All reasonable people everywhere agree that the failure/assassination of the monorail was for the best. Because now that we’re faced with tearing down the viaduct and living without it out for years—at least five, maybe seven, could be longer, regardless of what we build in its place—the last thing Seattle needs is an efficient mass-transit system carrying people from West Seattle to Downtown and back. I mean, really! What were we monorail supporters smoking?

Failed Monorail project's legacy may be a denser Seattle

The Puget Sound Business Journal -- 2/9/2007: Spurring interest, the sales coincided with a time of unprecedented institutional investment in commercial real estate. Then, too, the public agency's exercise of its power of eminent domain enabled Seattle Monorail Project to assemble certain parcels into larger sites, which has made redevelopment more feasible in some instances, under new owners.

Local News Highlights: The Last Weeks of the Seattle Monorail Project

KUOW -- Local News Highlights -- 1/17/2007: After almost five years, the Seattle Monorail Project is nearing its end. State lawmakers are expected to pass legislation that will allow the agency to legally close it’s doors. Then the S.M.P. board will meet one final time to end operations. KUOW’s Derek Wang has this look at the transit project’s final weeks.

WHERE ARE THE MONORAILS?[video]

AutoChannel.com -- 12/16/2006: In 1997, Dick Falkenbury authored an initiative to 'build, operate and maintain' a forty mile monorail system hat ould span the city of Seattle in a huge "X". With a handful of volunteers and no support, the initiative gathered 18,500 signatures while spending only $2,000--and it won the first election. He served as a volunteer as a member of the Board of Directors without missing a single meeting for six years. In these six years, there were two more successful elections for the monorail in Seattle, and a fourth election approved a tax on vehicles to pay for the project. Inexplicably, the staff padded the contract to the point where 14 miles of monorail, with interest, would cost $11 billion and the Seattle voters rejected the project. Had it come to fruition, it would have been the only transportation system drafted, planned and implemented by the citizens of a city.

Seattle Center's future begins in nod to past
Retro-named panel to make plans for World's Fair site

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer -- 12/1/2006: Jan Levy, executive director of Leadership Tomorrow, and co-chairwoman of the committee, said the new group will continue the work of its predecessor, the Mayor's Task Force for Seattle Center Sustainability.

A running Monorail puts holiday shopping on track

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer -- 11/25/2006: "When the Monorail doesn't empty people into our escalators, we have fewer pedestrians," said Roger Fredericksen, the owner of Millstream.

In Seattle, a Dream From the Past Has a Hazy Future

The New York Times -- 9/25/2006: And during the four decades after the fair, the Seattle Center Monorail, elevated and alluring along its one-mile course to the fairgrounds from downtown, became something more than just a mighty cool mode of getting humans about: it was an aerodynamic dream from the past that symbolized this city's romance with the future.

Seattle Monorail: Transit bargain?

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer Editorial Board -- 9/5/2006: A contributor to the Seattle P-I's online "Soundoffs" weighed in with this: "There is zero possibility that we could replace this transit corridor with any different transit system (or road construction) that would move as many people for $4.5 million. ... Let's also compare the Monorail with the South Lake Union Streetcar that the mayor so proudly supports: SLU Streetcar -- $50 million, 1.3 miles, expected to carry 350,000 passengers in the first year; Seattle Center Monorail -- $4.5 million, one mile, regularly carries 2.5 million passengers annually (when running)."

A Case of Voter Overkill
The death of Seattle's monorail plan is a telling tale

Governing -- April 2006: I suspect the Seattle monorail would have been a great asset to its city and region if city leaders had allowed it to live. But that's not the only reason I believe Mayor Greg Nickels and his allies in the business community made a mistake when they helped kill the populist transportation project last November. In working to shut down this grassroots movement, Nickels and allied business leaders were also shutting down democracy and civic engagement. And in the long run, that's more important to a healthy city than any specific transportation project.

 
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11/24/06 :: ( 2 comments )




          RE: Seoul
by chadman_98126 on 11/24/06
Reply
not against this. in fact, it's likely the way it will play out. the question/issue I would put forth is the time frames involved and how much money goes into fixing the Viaduct (if any) and... oh yah, leadership getting going on building out the west/greenline corridor.


To: friendsofthemonorail@yahoogroups.comFrom: jpsher@worldnet.att.netDate: Sat, 25 Nov 2006 03:40:34 +0000Subject: Re: [FoM] Seoul




It would have taken about 10 years from vote for money to greenline completion Ballard would also need service - I'm not suggesting bringing V up to 2500 year standards - patch it up keep it running - give time for businesses and people to get ready.Why not do it in a planned way - jus askin :D--- In friendsofthemonorail@yahoogroups.com, Chad Maglaque wrote:>> > it seems that folks agree that surface + transit will work.> > if that's the case, why not go to directly to point B (i.e. surface + transit) rather than via point A (fix Viaduct, build transit, tear down Viaduct).> > with the correct level of focus, a rail extension to West Seattle could be built in 5 years or less.> > just askin'> > > > > ________________________________> > To: friendsofthemonorail@yahoogroups.com> > From: jpsher@...> > Date: Fri, 24 Nov 2006 00:39:36 +0000> > Subject: [FoM] Seoul> > > > Seoul situation is not one that can be used to show that removal of viaduct will work. If> > anything, it seems to show that we need to prepare for it. Repair the current structure to> > make it safe, not permanent, and put the bulk of the money into real transit.> > "The best way to travel in Seoul if you want to be on time, by subway of course. Seoul> > Metropolitan Subway Cooperation provides all the information."> > The daily average number of vehicles passing through downtown amounted to 1.13> > million, down 9.1 percent from last year's 1.25 million, and that of vehicles using main> > roads in the city decreased 6.3 percent with 2.71 million from 2.89 million in 2003.> > The daily traffic volume in areas adopting the bus-exclusive main line system, launched as> > part of July's new mass transit system, dropped considerably. Only buses can use the> > center lane under the new system.> > Gangnamdaero, or the Gangnam Road in southern Seoul, witnessed a traffic volume> > decrease of 26.3 percent in October from September last year. Songsanno in Susaek,> > northwestern Seoul, recorded a 23.3-percent decrease, and Miaro in northern Seoul> > recorded a 27.2 percent drop.> > "Several factors, such as the implementation of the bus-exclusive median lane system, the> > oil price surge and encouraging drivers to not drive one day a week, pulled down traffic> > volume in Seoul and increased the number of mass transit users instead," a city official> > said.> > The average number of mass transit users per day rose 12 percent from last year's 9> > million to 10.1 million in Seoul.> > The number of Seoulites using the subway amounted to 4.71 million per day, up 10.6> > percent from 4.26 million a year ago and that of bus users came to 5.44 million, up 13.3> > percent from 4.8 million last year.> >>



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          Re: Seoul
by raia1us on 11/25/06
Money to fix: I would not accept the engineers' reports. I would set a maximum budget of
around $500 and have companies bid on how they would spend it. I've been told only 3 of
the 21 sections are a problem. If that is true it's hard to believe it would cost more than
$300 to rebuild completely those 3.

It's as hard to find an honest unretired engineer as a honest unretired general.

In addition to the above work, I would include sound abatement, visual enhancements,
streetscape upgrades on both sides of the street, better lighting, reconfiguring the area
under the viaduct to include a sidewalk that would connect Pioneer Square to the Pike
Place hill climb.

For argument's sake this work along with sea wall fixes would cost $1B. That would leave
about $2B from the state funding. The money that comes from non-gas tax would be
immediately available for transit use - of course, street improvements could use the gas
tax. I think allowing the local gas tax or making it a sales tax could be a viable way to get
money for transit. Tolling would not have to go for roads, in fact, knocking the poorest
off the roads without putting much into transit would be wrong.

We here have a long way to go. We need a regional transit authority that distributes the
money without owning the mode. Some should be elected. The restrictions on gas tax
should be challeged, at least for local increases.

If you want to have cities you need to build transit.
put forth is the time frames involved and how much money goes into fixing the Viaduct (if
any) and... oh yah, leadership getting going on building out the west/greenline corridor. http://groups.yahoo.com/group/friendsofthemonorail/ <*> Your email settings:
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