Friday Roundtable: Link Reductions July-August

Link will have a few maintenance reductions in late July and early August.

On Sunday July 26 all day, the Crosslake part of the 2 Line will be replaced by shuttle buses between South Bellevue and International District. The shuttle will run approximately every 10-15 minutes. The 1 Line will run every 8 minutes from Lynnwood to Federal Way to mitigate the loss of westside 2 Line service. (It normally runs every 10 minutes on Sundays.) This is for “planned maintenance”.

From Tuesday July 28 to Thursday July 30 in the late evenings only, the Crosslake part of the 2 Line will be replaced by shuttle buses between South Bellevue and International District. The 1 Line will run as normal. This is for “monthly maintenance”.

From Tuesday August 4 to Thursday August 6 in the late evenings only, the 2 Line will be replaced by shuttle buses between BelRed and Downtown Redmond, to replace line surge arrestors. The 2 Line will run as normal between Lynnwood and BelRed. The 1 Line will run as normal.

See ST service alerts for any updates.

This is an open thread.

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Seattle Transit Amendments Results

A Seattle city committee voted on a slate of amendments to the Seattle Transit Measure (STM) levy renewal Mayor Wilson proposed. The meeting video has the proceedings. It’s three and a half hours long, and parts of it were confusing to me. I watched the debates and votes on 6 of the 22 amendments. This alone took an hour and fifty minutes (from 0:45:36 to 2:36:41 in the video). I got exhausted at that point and didn’t watch the rest, so I’ll leave it to the comment section to report on how the other amendments fared. The entire measure with some amendments passed the committee, and will go to the full city council on Tuesday. Nine councilmembers participated: Rivera, Kettle, Hollingsworth, Juarez, Lin, Strauss, Foster, Rinck, and Saka.

Many readers are most interested in Amendment 13, which would reduce the sales tax rate from Mayor Wilson’s proposal. That amendment failed 2-7. That debate is just before the 2:46:00 mark.

Three amendments (1, 4, 28) were “withdrawn” for refinement, but then they were voted on anyway before the other individual amendments, so I don’t understand that procedure. Amendment 1 (passed) had a long debate; it wasn’t about transit service per se but about committing to certain safety strategies to deter passenger misbehavior. Amendment 4 (passed) requests an annual report from Metro on fare compliance, farebox recovery, reliability, and on-time performance of STM-purchased service, with comparisons to peer agencies and past statistics. Amendment 25 (failed) would have requested a report on expanding the Transit Access Program.

The other amendments I watched were 3 (passed) on how to spend money Metro can’t accept (e.g., if it doesn’t have enough drivers to implement requested runs), and 5 (failed) to extend the levy term three months (the failure means it will expire at the end of 2032).

What else do you see in the results?

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Midweek Roundup: avoid the squeeze, take the bus

PubliCola interviewed Seattle’s “Urbanist” Mayor Katie Wilson: Part 1 and Part 2. Cascade PBS sat down with Tacoma’s Mayor Anders Ibsen, also at 6 months into his first term.

Transit & Streets:

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Mapping King County Metro Ridership

By OLIVER CHEN

Living in Seattle, I’ve come to appreciate the humble bus. I find riding the bus much more pleasant than driving through the city (and certainly much better than circling for parking!). Sitting alongside my fellow Seattleites makes me feel like a participant in the ebb and flow of the city rather than sealed off from it.

Over time, I’ve gotten a sense for the rhythms of the routes that pass by my home: where people get on, where people get off, and when the bus fills up or empties out. Seeing that, I wondered if I could get that same view more broadly, across the entire city or even the entire region, rather than just the tiny slice visible from my front door.

King County Metro publishes a ridership dashboard as well as an annual system evaluation covering route-level performance. Those resources are great for tracking specific routes or for comparing ridership over time, but they don’t tell me where ridership is actually concentrated: where people are already riding transit, and where additional service might be most useful. In a city growing as fast as Seattle, getting transit right is a practical necessity; city streets simply cannot absorb the trips that Seattleites need to make.

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Action Alert: Stand Up for Seattle Transit

The Seattle Transit Measure could help fund service pilots like the Golden Garden Shuttle year-round in addition to bringing more frequent service to the whole city, but it needs your support to avoid being watered down by Council amendments before going to voters (Han ZhengCC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

This Monday, July 13, Seattle City Council is holding public hearings on the Seattle Transit Measure, Mayor Katie Wilson’s proposed renewal of funding for more frequent, reliable bus service across Seattle. Councilmembers are considering a long list of potential amendments to the proposed measure. Some proposed amendments would cut funding, shorten the measure, and slow down new service. Others would make it stronger for riders.

There will be two public hearing sessions on Monday: Session I will be remote-only starting at 9:30am, and Session II will be hybrid in-person and remote starting at 5:00pm. The Fix the L8, the Transit Riders Union, and Transportation Choices Coalition are calling on all Seattle transit supporters to show up and stand and/or speak in support of the measure during the hearings. RSVP here: https://bit.ly/savebuses13.

The detailed agenda for the sessions is available here. Comments are usually limited to 1-2 minutes. If too many people sign up to comment at the 9:30am meeting, they will be asked to return to comment at the 5pm meeting.

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Friday Roundtable: Sound Transit’s 2027 Service Plan Proposal

Sound Transit has unveiled their initial proposal for the 2027 service plan. These changes are relatively minor compared to the Fall 2026 service changes that will take effect in August. This proposal includes changes for routes 510, 512, 532, 535, 545, 560, and Link.

Routes 510 and 512

In Everett, early-morning Route 510 trips and late-night Route 512 trips would be truncated at Everett Station. This removes the four stops in downtown Everett north of the station.

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Link disrupted due to power issues near UW Station

At 6:47 this morning, Sound Transit issued an ominous alert stating “1 Line and 2 Line trains are experiencing delays until further notice due to power issue near University of Washington Station”. Less than 10 minutes later, Link service between Northgate, Stadium, and Judkins Park Station was suspended due to the power issue, with shuttle buses ordered to provide replacement service as Sound Transit investigated the issue. Later in the morning, some 1 and 2 Line trains began operating through Westlake Station.

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Seattle won the World Cup, what did we learn?

Over the past four weeks, Seattle hosted six World Cup matches featuring teams from eight different countries. Fans from around the world traveled to Seattle to cheer on their team and enjoy the Pacific Northwest. Seattle stepped up to the challenge of hosting 750,000 visitors by implementing temporary changes to make their experiences as wonderful as possible. Before the first kickoff, several outlets ranked Seattle as one of the best World Cup host cities in 2026. Thanks to the Pioneer Square Pedestrian Zone, countless watch parties, and a disregard for parking availability, Seattle showed that it deserved those high rankings. Now that the last match in Seattle is over, it is time to use the experiences from the past four weeks to create lasting changes that all Seattleites can enjoy.

Highlights

While the whole city was abuzz on match days, a few amenities stole the spotlight.

Waterfront Park

Seattle’s newest flagship destination was a hit. The park saw over 400,000 unique visitors between June 11 – 21 and likely more than a million people over the past month. The boardwalk and bike lanes were busy, especially on match days, with people shopping/dining, enjoying the views, and checking out the various pop-up events. Alaskan Way was not as busy and was even closed to car traffic temporarily on Monday.

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Midweek Roundup: multimodal adventure

Transit & Streets

Land Use & Housing

This is an Open Thread.

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