Harger: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has never owned a car. Now she's taking a Denny Way lane from 30,000

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Harger: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has never owned a car. Now she's taking a Denny Way lane from 30,000
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Harger: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has never owned a car. Now she’s taking a Denny Way lane from 30,000 drivers to fix a bus route Katie Wilson looks out of a window while riding public transit.

Denny Way already crawls. Everybody who drives it knows that. If you commute into Seattle from the suburbs, you know it in your bones. Recent estimates say 30,000 vehicles a day squeeze through one of the busiest arterials in the city.

I used to drive it regularly, and my escape route was always Mercer Street because Denny Way was that bad. Route 8 has been Seattle’s worst bus for over a decade. Something should change Route 8 carries about 7,000 riders a day along Denny Way through South Lake Union. During peak hours last summer, eastbound buses arrived on time just 31% of the time.

The worst performance ever recorded for the route. Riders have called it “the L8” for so long that a local band wrote a song about it. At Wednesday’s press conference,Something should change. The question is who’s making the decisions, what they believe, and whether they’ve ever once considered your commute.

Wilson called Wednesday’s announcement “probably one of my favorite moments so far as Mayor. ” Then she volunteered something worth noting.

“I am one of the 20% and growing proportion of Seattle households that do not own a car,” she said. “I’ve never owned a car. ” The mayor of Seattle, making transportation policy for a corridor carrying 30,000 vehicles a day, has never once sat behind the wheel as the person responsible for getting somewhere on time in traffic. She lives on Capitol Hill.

She rides the 8 to Seattle Center with her daughter. That’s a lovely life. It is nothing like the commute from Auburn, Lynnwood, or Kent.

“Back in 2018, we teamed up with other transportation and climate groups,” she told the crowd. “One of our big focuses was pushing for more dedicated bus lanes and more transit priority around the city. ” Harger: WA Supreme Court could rewrite bail rules in 8 days. The 84-footnote proposal never mentions victims once.

Harger: With harm reduction v. sobriety, King County picked a side. The science says the debate isn't over Seattle Councilmember Alexis Mercedes Rinck proudly called herself “your only car-free councilmember. ” She told the crowd Seattle has “added 80,000 people in recent years, but only 3,000 additional cars. People are choosing to live here in our city and choosing not to drive.

” If this policy were purely about serving Seattle residents who chose a car-free lifestyle, you could squint and see the logic. You could even argue it’s an incentive to move here. But Denny Way doesn’t just carry Capitol Hill residents hopping on the 8. It carries people driving in from Northgate.

From West Seattle. From Ballard. People who live inside Seattle city limits, pay Seattle taxes, and still need their cars because their lives don’t fit neatly on a bus map. And that stat doesn’t count the thousands who drive into Seattle every day from Shoreline, Renton, Federal Way, and everywhere in between.

Those commuters don’t vote on Seattle transportation policy. They just live with the consequences. Eighty percent of Seattle households still own a car. The policy is being designed by the 20% who don’t, and imposed on everyone else.

The city will install eastbound red Business Access and Transit lanes on Denny Way in two phases. Phase 1 starts in May, covering Queen Anne Avenue North to 2nd Avenue. Phase 2 kicks off in August after the FIFA World Cup construction moratorium, extending from 5th Avenue to Stewart Street. BAT lanes still allow local business access, so this isn’t a full bus-only lockout.

Right now, if you’re heading east on Denny and need southbound I-5, you hang a right on Yale and you’re on the freeway. Simple. After Phase 2, that straight shot from Denny to Yale is gone. Instead, you’ll turn right on Boren a couple of blocks early, left on Howell, then right onto the freeway at the same onramp you used to reach directly from Yale.

The onramp itself stays open. You just can’t get to it the easy way anymore. More turns, more lights, more time sitting in your car wondering who designed this. And where do the rest of those 30,000 vehicles go when Denny loses a lane?

Mercer? Have you driven Mercer lately? There is no relief valve. You’re just squeezing traffic harder and hoping people give up.reportedMaybe it’s time to stop pretending there’s no war on cars in Seattle For years, Seattle leaders have assured us there’s no war on cars.

The city just doesn’t have the capacity for so many single-occupant vehicles. We need to be realistic about space. We need alternatives. Fair enough.

Most of us accepted that. But at what point do we stop taking that at face value? The mayor has never owned a car. She built her career advocating for Seattle bus lanes.

Her first executive order targeted drivers on one of the city’s busiest corridors. Rinck is celebrating that new residents aren’t buying cars. Li told the press conference crowd that the RapidRide G project on Madison Street “convinced drivers to leave their cars at home. ” We saw the same philosophy on Eastlake Avenue with the RapidRide J Line.

Take road space. Remove options. Squeeze cars into fewer lanes.

Then point at the bus. Is it fair to wonder if maybe, just maybe, the war on cars is real? And the people waging it are now running the city? Nobody at that podium spoke for the driver.

Not one person represented the commuter sitting on Denny at 5:30 p.m. trying to get home. The entire event was transit advocates talking to transit advocates, celebrating a policy that makes their commute better by making yours worse. And every time Seattle makes it harder for workers to drive into the city, it makes it easier for companies to leave. Bellevue doesn’t eliminate lanes.

Bellevue doesn’t close freeway ramps. Bellevue rolls out the welcome mat while Seattle rolls out the red paint. Businesses have noticed. A lot of them have already made the move.

You can improve Route 8 without punishing everyone who drives Denny Way. Signal priority. Stop consolidation. Better scheduling with Metro.

There are ways to make the bus faster without permanently rerouting 30,000 drivers and yanking their straight shot to the freeway. When the only way to make transit irresistible is to make driving unbearable, you’re not offering people a better option. Harger: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has never owned a car.

Now she’s taking a Denny Way lane from 30,000 drivers to fix a bus route Katie Wilson, making transportation policy for a corridor carrying 30,000 vehicles a day, has never once sat behind the wheel as the person responsible for getting somewhere on time in traffic. Starbucks is moving even more of its headquarters out of Seattle. What strikes me isn’t the move itself — it’s the surprise people seem to feel about it.

Harger: WA Supreme Court could rewrite bail rules in 8 days. The 84-footnote proposal never mentions victims once. Twenty dollars. That's what a misdemeanor defendant would post to walk out of jail under a proposed rule change now pending before the Washington Supreme Court.

The ferry service says they plan to have 20 of its 21 vessels ready to be put into service for the World Cup. WTH, WSF? Why can't this be the norm? Harger: Washington doubled school spending.

Scores collapsed. Now OSPI wants more money. Redmond HVAC contractor earns triple recognition in 60 days, reflecting a shift in how homeowners vet contractors Three independent organizations that evaluate home service contractors each reached the same conclusion: Home Comfort Alliance is among the most reliable in its market. WSECU Community Champion: Chrystal Ortega’s mission to feed Spokane Chrystal Ortega's tireless dedication recently earned her the WSECU Community Champions Award and a $1,000 grant to further the mission.

When Shawn Tibbitts opened Tibbitts FernHill, he was just trying to survive. The small Tacoma restaurant has since earned culinary awards and praise. Wilcox Family Farms is continuing its cherished holiday tradition of giving back by donating nearly one million eggs to food banks across the South Sound region this season. Matthew Ballantyne has transformed that early awareness into action, embodying the organization's mission:"No Kid Sleeps On The Floor In Our Town.

"Harger: Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson has never owned a car. Now she’s taking a Denny Way lane from 30,000 drivers to fix a bus route

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