The Swift Blue and Swift Green Lines will intersect, the first step in creating a Swift BRT network throughout Snohomish County.
Community Transit’s Draft 2017-2022 Transit Development Plan (TDP)
calls for hiring about 250 new employees by 2022 to help provide 38 percent more
transit service for Snohomish County residents.
The employment forecast is one aspect of the new Draft TDP. Each
year, the transit agency looks ahead six years to forecast sales tax revenue,
and to match proposed future service expansions with the labor and fleet needed
to provide that service.
The expansion of the Swift network, as well as creation of
other new routes, added trips and a south county network restructure to connect
with light rail, will provide 55 percent more transit service than the agency
provided in 2015, when county residents voted for more
service.
“The best thing we can do for Snohomish County residents who
supported transit expansion is provide more service and improve access to that
transit service as fast as we can, and that’s what we are doing,” said Community
Transit CEO Emmett Heath.
The Draft TDP was presented to the Community Transit Board of
Directors yesterday and is available for public comment through July 7. The
report can be found online at www.communitytransit.org/tdp.
Local Non-Profit Groups Can Apply for Vehicles Through Van GO Program
Community Transit will be awarding 10 surplus vehicles to Snohomish
County non-profit organizations to help meet local transportation needs.
The Van GO program was established in 2000 after Community Transit
was forced to cut service when the state eliminated motor vehicle tax funding
for transit. Since then, the agency has awarded 126 vans and wheelchair
lift-equipped paratransit vehicles to qualified 501(c)3 organizations in
Snohomish County.
This year, Community Transit will award eight 7-passenger vans and
two 16-passenger, wheelchair lift-equipped paratransit vehicles. Organizations
have until July 31 to apply; the vehicles will be awarded at the Sept. 7
Community Transit Board of Directors meeting.
Applications are available at communitytransit.org/VanGo.
Pictured above: Young Life Capernaum Snohomish County was
awarded a van in 2016 through the Van GO Program.
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Swift Construction
Construction on the Swift Green Line is underway!
Work on the Seaway Transit Center across from the Boeing Everett
plant began last month. The transit center will be the northern terminal for the Swift Green Line and a hub for Paine Field area bus service. This project
will be completed in mid-to-late 2018.
Starting in mid-June, work will begin on a project to add new lanes
on 128th Street in south Everett, one lane on either side of I-5. The lanes will
allow buses to get through the narrow overpass more easily and will have a
benefit to general purpose traffic in the area (see
Herald article). Work on this project will continue into the fall, with lane
closures limited to nights and weekends.
Later this summer, construction is expected to begin on the 31
stations along the Swift Green Line corridor, as well as several road
improvements on Highway 527. This route will provide fast, frequent service
between Canyon Park/Bothell and Boeing/Paine Field beginning in early 2019.
Subscribe
to Swift Network News to receive alerts about Swift Green Line
construction. Or view and download all current issues of Swift Network
News here.
Pictured above: An aerial view of the Seaview Transit Center
construction site taken on May 25. Pictured below:Illustrations of the
improvements resulting from the 128th Street Widening Project.
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Lynnwood Commuter Carpools to Pay Off Mortgage 20 Years Early
For more than 11 years, Lynnwood commuter Lindsay Ward (pictured
right) has used carpooling and riding the bus to get to work. That dedication
has paid off in large dividends as she is working on paying her mortgage off by
the end of 2017, nearly 20 years early.
Keeping track of her trips in the Choice
Connections program has helped motivate her to continue toward her goal.
She’s helping the environment, too, by not releasing over 10,500 pounds of
carbon dioxide into our air last year.
Ward was named the Smart Commuter of the 1st Quarter 2017. Learn more
about the Choice Connections program at www.communitytransit.org/choiceconnections.
Watch Lindsay Ward tell her story in this short video.
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Community Transit Achieves AAA Bond Rating
Community Transit has received an AAA rating from S&P
Global, the highest bond rating issued. The rating will allow the agency to sell
its municipal bond at very favorable rates when it sells its bonds on June 6,
2017. The proceeds from the bonds will help pay for the purchase of 26 new
buses.
Community Transit’s last bond sale for bus purchases was in
2004, and those bonds were paid off during the third quarter of 2016. The
agency maintains some level of debt in order to also maintain a favorable credit
rating, so the agency has decided to issue debt once again to support its bus
fleet during a major service expansion.
Community Transit’s last bond sale for bus purchases was in
2004, and those bonds were paid off during the third quarter of 2016. The
agency maintains some level of debt in order to also maintain a favorable credit
rating, so the agency has decided to issue debt once again to support its bus
fleet during a major service expansion.
Reasons cited by S&P for the AAA rating were:
- The
agency’s sales tax base is solid and stable.
- The
community has shown support for our services by voting for a sales tax measure
in 2015.
- The
regional economy is very strong and Pacific NW agencies like
Community Transit represent good investments for investors.
- The
rating agency – S&P Global – felt very positive about Community Transit’s
operational abilities and its ability to sustain growth and add new service.
- Community
Transit has planned well for the future by building reserves and creating a
sustainable plan for future service growth (see
TDP story).
Photo Credit: Getty Images/mmbirdy
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If you have any questions, please email TheRouteAhead@commtrans.org.
Emmett Heath, CEO Community Transit
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