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KCDOT closes out 2005, looks ahead

Photo: Four divisions of KCDOTThe past 12 months brought many challenges and opportunities to the King County Department of Transportation (KCDOT), as fuel prices escalated and demand for services and capital projects increased.

Lessons learned from 2005 will shape how the department gears up for the coming year.

“In 2006, the department will continue to creatively and effectively address county transportation priorities within funding constraints,” said KCDOT Director Harold Taniguchi.

Providing essential transportation services will be the first priority for all four divisions within KCDOT. The goal for the Fleet Administration Division will be to provide quality services, parts, materials and supplies at competitive cost to its customers. The King County International Airport will work to maintain basic operations in the face of declining revenues. The Roads Division is emphasizing strategies to preserve and enhance existing road capacity. The Transit Division plans to expand bus service in South and East King County thanks in part to rebounding sales tax revenues, but will also have to absorb the costs of the unprecedented increases in fuel prices.

In addition to leading the department, the Director’s Office will concentrate on fine-tuning business practices and ensuring that KCDOT is fully prepared to respond to emergencies and natural disasters.

Here’s a look at some of the KCDOT milestones and achievements in 2005:

Fleet
Primary business – The Fleet Division manages the acquisition, maintenance, rental and replacement of King County vehicles and equipment, as well as the purchase and warehousing of parts, road materials, traffic signs, and supplies. It also accounts for countywide fixed assets and the disposal of all surplus property.

Auctions – In 2005, the semi-annual automobile and heavy equipment auctions hosted by Fleet were very popular with the public. Fleet also conducted more than 20 sales and auctions of county surplus property, including timber sales, computers and online auctions, resulting in additional county revenue.

Hybrids & savings – King County Fleet Administration has long been recognized for its progressive environmental programs. In recent years, Fleet became one of the first government agencies in the nation to purchase new hybrid electric passenger vehicles. It was another move that proved to be way ahead of its time.

Today, King County owns the largest fleet of hybrid electric cars of any government agency in Washington. By the end of 2005, King County employees were using more than 140 hybrid electric cars. The county estimates it saves more than $3,100 dollars in fuel costs for every hybrid car it puts on the road over the life of the car, compared to conventional cars, and is saving more than 14,000 gallons of fuel annually.

King County’s program has become so successful that Fleet Administration Director Win Mitchell is now leading a national consortium of government agencies in pooling their collective buying power to lower the costs of new hybrid electric vehicles.

Airport
Expanding passenger service – In July, Southwest Airlines submitted a proposal to King County to move their operations to Boeing Field and build a terminal and parking garage to accommodate up to 85 flights per day. A few months later, Alaska Airlines made a similar proposal. The county was obligated to evaluate the feasibility of both proposals together.

King County Executive Ron Sims asked KCDOT staff to do a preliminary review of the requests, and cautioned that he would not endorse any proposal from any airline to move commercial passenger service to Boeing Field if it led to significant negative traffic and noise impacts for King County residents.

In early October, Sims determined that either proposal alone might be possible to accommodate and mitigate at Boeing Field, but it was not possible to accommodate and mitigate both.

Runway rehabilitation – KCIA staff spent a good deal of 2005 working on plans to rehabilitate the main Boeing Field runway in 2006. The paved surfaces of KCIA’s primary runway and Taxiway Bravo are near the end of their useful lives, and also were damaged during the 2001 Nisqually Earthquake. While most of the earthquake damage was repaired immediately, the pavement continues to settle and deteriorate. If not addressed, these problems will require increasingly frequent repairs and could lead to increased runway and operational restrictions.

This past year, the Federal Aviation Administration provided design guidance concerning the pavement thickness and other mandated requirements. And, KCIA staff met with tenants to discuss how the project can be completed in phases to minimize operations disruptions.

Roads
Bridge safety – In 2005, the King County Road Services Division had five major projects underway to rebuild or rehab bridges, along with several smaller jobs to upgrade the seismic stability of the county’s bridges. The two biggest projects were the completion of a new Elliott Bridge over the Cedar River between Renton and Maple Valley, and the rehabilitation of the Meadowbrook Bridge near Snoqualmie.

In 2006, the bridge unit will concentrate on selecting a plan to preserve the crossing over the Duwamish River now served by the deteriorating South Park Bridge. There are also plans to start construction on a new Tolt Bridge near Carnation this year, with completion scheduled for 2007.

Preserving existing infrastructure – There were fewer new construction starts in 2005 than in previous years, due to dwindling funding for local road projects. The construction work done in the past 12 months focused more on preserving existing roadways and bridges. The one exception was the completion of the South 277th Street project. The busy stretch of roadway near State Route 167 was widened, and curbs, sidewalks and a bike lane were added.

In June and July, Roads crews raised Northeast 124th Street on either side of the Novelty Bridge southwest of Duvall. The project reduces the frequency and length of closures of the road due to flooding. During the summer and fall, Des Moines Memorial Drive between South 99th Street and South 128th Street was repaved, restriped, and sidewalks and bicycle lanes were added. Also, new markers were embedded in the sidewalk panels to remember those who lost their lives in World War I.

Protecting the environment – Throughout the year, Roads continued to replace aging under-road culverts with ones that were also fish passable. The innovative practices Roads employs when doing these kinds of transportation projects in environmentally sensitive areas was recognized more than once in 2005 by those outside the agency.

County staff has pioneered techniques to build and maintain roads that enhance the environment through the use of best management practices and the latest technology, and the Roads Division is frequently asked to share it with other agencies around the world.

Transit
Restructuring downtown bus service & beyond - For the first nine months of 2005, King County Metro Transit was intensely focused on preparing for the closure of the Downtown Seattle Transit Tunnel. The tunnel was closed in September for a two-year retrofit, so both buses and light rail can use it. Although only 21 bus routes moved to surface streets in September, more than 70 routes and 100,000 bus passengers were affected by the downtown changes.

In 2005, Metro staff did extensive public outreach to gather input on making transit service changes in south and east King County. Those changes will be finalized this spring and start going into effect in the fall of 2006.

Accommodating increased ridership – Gas prices soared starting in the spring and culminating in the fall, resulting in more people riding the bus or joining carpools and vanpools.

Beginning in May 2005, transit ridership increased every month when compared to the same time last year. The number of cars at Metro’s 123 park-and-ride lots climbed steadily since spring, and by the end of the year there were 723 Vanpools in operation. And during the month of November, there were more than 17,000 people in Metro’s Ridematch database – the highest it has ever been since RideshareOnline.com started service in 2001.

Adjusting waterfront streetcar service – Despite construction disruptions, the George Benson Waterfront Streetcar Line continued to serve commuters and downtown neighborhoods in 2005. In November, service was switched from streetcars on rail to buses on the street.

Replacing the streetcars with buses clears the way for construction of the Seattle Art Museum’s Sculpture Park where the streetcar maintenance facility was located. Metro is partnering with a local developer to create a mixed-use housing and retail complex that will include a new streetcar maintenance facility near Occidental Park between South Washington and South Main streets in Pioneer Square. Until that project is complete, Metro will use the buses to operate Route 99. Metro hopes the vintage streetcars will be back on their tracks by mid-2007.

New transit facilities – In 2005, Metro opened a new park-and-ride at Redondo Heights in Federal Way and significantly expanded the Kenmore Park-and-Ride. There will be more expansion in the coming year, as Metro opens the 1,000-stall garage at Issaquah Highlands in February and begins construction of a new Burien Transit Center later in the year.

Experimenting with technology – In September, Metro passengers on two routes began testing rolling WiFi service. Metro installed small mobile connection boxes on buses serving the two transit routes. The boxes were outfitted with a cellular air card that allows passengers to power-up their laptop computers or WiFi-enabled devices and access the Internet.

 

 

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Updated:  December 30, 2005

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