Seattle Transit Measure Renewal 2026

Last week, Mayor Wilson has unveiled her proposal for the next Seattle Transit Measure (STM) that will replace the current measure when it expires in 2027. The STM is an additional tax in Seattle that is used to fund more bus service and various transit programs. Wilson is proposing a 0.3% sales tax for the next 10 years that is expected to generate $138M every year.

What Does the STM Fund?

The vast majority of this funding, $96.1 million each year, will be used to support better bus service in Seattle. The current STM funds 5% of all bus trips in Seattle. This includes extra trips and improved frequencies on Metro routes 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 11, 13, 14, 21, 24, 33, 28, 36, 40, 44, 48, 50, 60, 70, 106, 107, 124, 125, C Line, D Line, E Line, G Line, and H Line. Wilson’s proposal increases funding for addition bus service by nearly 60%, so more routes will be supported to help Seattle meet its Frequent Transit Measure goal.

Another $23.4M will cover the operational costs of Seattle’s two streetcar lines. These two lines are operated by King County Metro, but are funded by Seattle via the STM. Ridership on both the South Lake Union Line and the First Hill Line has increased over the past few years.

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Sunday Movie: Oldest Trains

Riding the oldest subway cars in the world. They’re 1950s cars in the Buenos Aires Metro on Line B. (Trains are Awesome)

Honorable mention to the Muni Metro F Line with a variety of vintage streetcars from the 1950s and earlier. I rode a few early 20th century international ones and found them bumpy, but the 1950s San Francisco cars felt as smooth and quiet as a modern streetcar.

The video recomments RielesDePlata (Silver Rails), a channel about Argentina rail transit by Marcos Villena. The original is in Spanish but the text and audio defaulted to an English translation for me. The English voice has a Spanish accent and is slightly halting, so he may dub it himself.

The T Line in Tacoma. (Classy Whale)

King County transit and growth planning in 1975. (KOMO News) We had a comment thread on it a week ago.

This is an open thread.

27 comments

Link Ridership Soars 46% After Crosslake Connection Opening

Sound Transit’s Link light rail system continues to break its own ridership records. After the highly-anticipated Crosslake Connection opening at the end of March, system-wide ridership jumped 46% to 4,675,216 passengers in April 2026. This equates to an average 155,840 boardings across the 1 Line, 2 Line, and T Line every day. Since the pandemic, Link ridership has increased significantly. Seattle’s growing population and growing light rail network have boosted Link’s ridership above pre-pandemic levels. The following Link extension projects have opened in the past five years.

  • October 2021: Northgate extension (1 Line)
  • September 2023: Hilltop Extension (T Line)
  • April 2024: East Link Starter Line (2 Line)
  • August 2024: Lynnwood City Center extension (1 Line)
  • May 2025: Downtown Redmond extension (2 Line)
  • December 2025: Federal Way Downtown extension (1 Line)
  • March 2026: Crosslake Connection (2 Line)
Average daily Link ridership since August 2003.
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Driver Blocks Trains On Elevated Tracks at Mount Baker Station

Today at the Mt. Baker light rail station, a car went North, up the tracks towards the Beacon Hill tunnel. According to a police escort, there were no injuries. #Seattle #BeaconHill #BreakingNews

Alex Garland (@alexgarland.bsky.social) 2026-06-03T02:24:41.930Z

On Tuesday evening, a driver managed to drive their car on the light rail tracks from MLK Way & Walden St to Mount Baker station. The 70-year-old driver was not injured but was taken to the hospital as a precaution. 1 Line trains were replaced with shuttle buses between SODO and Othello station while Sound Transit crews removed the vehicle from the tracks.

What Happened?

The official investigation is still underway, but I spoke with a few witnesses about what they saw. Each person had a similar story: the driver entered the southbound track at the at-grade intersection of MLK Way and Walden St. Once on the track, she accelerated quickly while traveling north. The first 270 feet of track north of the intersection are embedded in concrete, so the car can drive on the tracks without issue. After those 270ft, the track switches to be mounted on plinths. This leaves a deep gap between the tracks that should stop vehicles from continuing up the ramp to the elevated station. One witness mentioned a loud screeching sound when the car was on this section of the track, so the part of car was likely dragging on the tracks. Despite this, the driver navigated an additional 1,200ft of track before stopping at the southbound platform. Video from the platform at Mount Baker show the car driving surprisingly well on the tracks.

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Midweek Roundup: Tap into Seattle Summer

A special-edition ORCA card is available celebrating the 2026 FIFA World Cup this month (King County Metro).

Local News:

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Sound Transit Rolls Out New Sounder Trains

On Monday, the newest Sounder cars made their debut on an S Line trip from Seattle to Lakewood. These new trains, three passenger cab cars and eight coach cars, were built by Alstom and delivered to Sound Transit in 2022. The new trains feature a new bike rack design, more power outlets and USB ports, and improved wayfinding with a screen displaying the next stops.

The new Alstom trains feature two safety improvements over the current fleet. Crash Energy Management is a new design feature that improves how the train absorbs the impact of a crash. Additionally, the cab cars have a full-width windshield so the operator can see more from their seat.

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Sunday Movies: With and Without a Car

How big an apartment can you rent in a city’s most walkable neighborhood without a car, for the same cost as a 1000 square-foot rental in its most typical suburb with a car? Ray Delahanty answers that for the 26 largest metro areas in the US. Seattle is at 6:23. (CityNerd)

Q&A about the tradeoffs of car-free living in Montreal. There are challenges “but they don’t exactly line up with what people think”. (Oh the Urbanity!)

This is an open thread.

84 comments

Friday Roundtable: Crosslake Connection’s Impact on ST Express Ridership

When Sound Transit opened the Crosslake Connection in March 2026, over 200,000 people went for a ride on the first day. Since then, the 2 Line has carried thousands of passengers between Seattle and the Eastside everyday. Many of these passengers are new transit riders who used to drive across Lake Washington, while others switched to the train from an ST Express bus. Sound Transit’s decision to wait until August to restructure its bus network gives us an opportunity to examine the Crosslake Connection’s impact on ST Express ridership.

The agency has not yet published Link ridership data for March and April, but it has shared ridership data for its ST Express bus routes. Unless otherwise stated, the analysis below is looking at the average weekday ridership in April 2026 (percentages are compared to March 2026).

Crosslake Routes

Route 542’s ridership has remained stable, just a 1% increase to 1,517 passengers. This route is significantly faster than the 2 Line (26 vs 53 minutes) between Redmond and UW, so it is unlikely that many passengers would have switched to the train. Last year, Route 542 had a nearly 18% increase in ridership between March and April.

Sound Transit’s other all-day route on SR-520, Route 545, was impacted by the Crosslake Connection opening. Ridership was down 13.5% in April. Despite this, the route’s 4,281 daily passengers still make it the busiest ST Express route. Route 545 saw a slight increase in ridership between March and April 2025.

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ST Board Meets to Postpone ST3 Projects

Update: The resolution passed with some of the amendments. Analysis at end of article.

The Sound Transit board meets today at 1:30-5:00 to revise the ST3 system plan to reduce costs. The meeting page has links to the agenda, resolution, amendments, reports, and information on how to view the meeting and give public testimony in person or remotely. A video of the meeting will be posted to ST’s YouTube channel within 48 hours after the meeting.

The proposed resolution postpones some ST3 projects to get costs down to the available debt limit. 13 amendments reverse or soften some of the changes. As reported, Dan Strauss proposed focusing on Ballard while deferring the second downtown tunnel. Vice Chair Claudia Balducci proposes studying automation and other cost reduction measures and other details. Another resolution would increase the car rental tax. Each resolution requires a supermajority vote to pass.

This article is to collect comments from the meeting and its outcome.

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Wilson, Zahilay, and Mosqueda Propose Plan to Save Graham St Station

On Wednesday, Seattle Mayor Katie Wilson unveiled an amendment to the Sound Transit 3 realignment plan that would keep the Graham St infill station on track to open in 2031. The ST3 realignment plan was proposed by Board Chair Dave Somers in early May as a means of aligning the agency’s future Link extensions with the available funding. In the plan, Link extensions to West Seattle, Everett, Tacoma, Issaquah, Kirkland, and the new downtown tunnel would be built first. The extension from Seattle Center to Ballard and the infill stations (Graham St and Boeing Access Rd) would be designed with current funding but construction would be deferred until additional funds are available in the future.

Mayor Wilson teamed up with King County Executive Girmay Zahilay and King County Councilmember Teresa Mosqueda to propose an amendment to Somers’ resolution. The amendment directs Sound Transit to “incorporate $25M in secured federal grant funds for project construction, apply identified cost savings opportunities, and pursue additional local and federal grant opportunities”. In addition, any cost savings from Pinehurst station should be allocated for the Graham St station. As Seattle owns the right-of-way on MLK Way, Wilson is committing that the City will “expedite permitting, resolve ROW-related risks, and support cost reduction efforts”.

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