Stride 3 BRT Part 2: Kenmore, Bothell, and I-405

Stride 3 BRT will be the new avenue-running BRT on SR 522 (Bothell Way) from Seattle/Shoreline via Lake Forest Park and Kenmore to Bothell. The bus will run every 10 to 15 minutes and stop at 14 stations.

This article will continue the Stride 3 BRT discussion with the eastern half of the route with Kenmore and Bothell.

The previous article (Stride 3 BRT Part 1: Seattle, Lake Forest Park and Kenmore) discussed the western half of the route with Seattle, Shoreline and Lake Forest Park.

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Midweek Roundup: gas prices surge

Reminders & Updates:

  • Simulated Service of the 2 Line west of Lake Washington has resumed. Northerners rejoice. The Crosslake Connection of the 2 Line opens on March 28.
  • Downtown Transit Tunnel Closure Mar. 21-22: Link service between Capitol Hill to Stadium will be replaced by shuttle buses next weekend for scheduled maintenance.

Local News:

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Stride 3 BRT Part 1: Seattle, Lake Forest Park, and Kenmore

On February 26, Sound Transit announced the ground-breaking of Stride 3 BRT construction. Stride 3 BRT will be a new avenue running BRT on SR 522 (Bothell Way) from Seattle/Shoreline via Lake Forest Park and Kenmore to Bothell. The Stride 3 will connect the north Lake Washington corridor to the regional rail spine. The bus will run every 10 to 15 minutes and stop at 14 stations. This article will go over the choices for the Seattle to Kenmore segment and review the design plots released by Sound Transit.

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Seattle Transit Ridership Dashboard

Over two series of articles in 2011 and 2024-2026, Seattle Transit Blog has shared detailed breakdowns of the ridership patterns for dozens of routes across King County Metro, Sound Transit, and Community Transit. Puget Sound is fortunate to have an extensive transit network but Seattle Transit Blog cannot cover every route. Instead, we have built a dashboard to share the ridership data for every route.

Initially, the Seattle Transit Ridership dashboard only includes data for King County Metro routes and Sound Transit Express routes operated by King County Metro. All routes have data from 2024. Data from 2025 will be added after the March 28 service change. Over the next few months, we will add data for routes from other Puget Sound transit agencies.

The dashboard is available below and at seattletransitridership.com. Use the dropdown menus to pick the agency, route, and time period for the data you would like to view. By default, the static plots will be displayed. We are also working on interactive plots, which you can see by checking the checkbox. The interactive plots are formatted better on larger displays.

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Friday Roundtable: Wilson Transition Committee Recommendations

Over the past few months, the Wilson Transition Committee has met with thousands of Seattlities to better understand what the residents of Seattle want to see from the Wilson administration. The full report outlines recommendations in eight areas: Housing Affordability & Community Needs, Economic Development & Workers’ Rights, Transportation & Environment, Arts, Culture, & Creative Economy, Civic Narrative & Major Initiatives, Standing Up for Our Values, Public Safety, Parks, & Community Wellbeing, and Student & Youth Advisors.

While these different areas are intertwined, it’s worth highlighting the transit, mobility, and public access recommendations:

  • Expand citywide bus priority lanes.
  • Create integrated mobility hubs with user amenities & safe waiting areas, especially near light rail & bus transfer points. 
  • Align transit investments with equity goals, ensuring access across neighborhoods, regardless of car ownership or income. 
  • Increase 24-hour bus service
  • Expand North-South & East-West connections, including Rainier Valley to Tukwila/Georgetown & Golden Gardens to UW. 

The report also mentions a few early wins for each category. For transit, these include: 

  • Paint bus lanes on Denny
  • Extend Seattle Housing Authority ORCA passes & increase Orca pass programs for nonprofits.
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Seattle Transit Measure: Renewal and a Course for More Frequent Transit

This is part three of a three-part series investigating city-funded bus service in Seattle. Part 1 covered the Seattle Transportation Benefit District (STBD) from 2014 to early 2020. Part 2 covered its successor, the Seattle Transit Measure (STM) from 2020 to present. This article looks to the future of the STM and its 2026 renewal.

In April 2027, the Seattle Transit Measure (STM), Seattle’s 0.15% sales tax that funds extra bus service and other transportation priorities, will expire. Seattle (or King County) will need to place a measure on the ballot this fall for voters to approve to maintain or expand existing transit service.

County or City Measure?

Despite putting the breaks on its electrification plans, King County Metro is still facing a structural budget deficit starting in the early 2030s. Without additional funding, maintaining service will not be possible.

To avert that cliff and expand bus service countywide, transit advocates have urged King County Executive Girmay Zahilay to propose a funding measure to voters (sounds a lot like 2014 and 2020). Zahilay was supportive of this on the campaign trail. However, he said funds generated should also go to maintain and upgrade county roads similar to the failed 2007 ‘Roads and Transit’ measure activists campaigned against and a very similar countywide measure that failed in 2014 that directly led to the creation of Seattle’s Transportation Benefit District (now the STM). We reached out to Executive Zahilay and his office declined to comment.

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Midweek Roundup: from farms to ferries

Road work and utility upgrades on Yesler Way at the end of the Roaring Twenties. Photograph looking east from First Avenue on April 10, 1929 (#3365, Seattle Municipal Archives Series 2613-07). Google Street View shows a similar view as of August 2025.

Reminder: late-night Link service reductions in North Seattle are ongoing for construction of Pinehurst Station and Sound Transit’s Monthly Maintenance program.

Transportation:

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Metro Operator Shortage to End Next Year

For most transit agencies in the United States the largest constraint to providing more service is funding. In Seattle, that luckily has not been a constraint in recent years. Instead, our transit agencies have struggled to operate the amount of service voters have funded.

Before the pandemic, King County Metro could not deliver the amount of service Seattle wanted to purchase via the STBD. Labor shortages and limited bus base capacity meant money dedicated for service had to be diverted to capital projects and other programs.

In 2020, hundreds of millions of dollars of lost sales tax and fare revenue forced Metro to significantly downsize to stay above water by cutting service and reducing its workforce. Additionally, the City of Seattle reduced funding for night, evening, and weekend bus service and the fall 2020 service change was done under the assumption that Seattle’s Transportation Benefit District funding would lapse (which it did for four months). Coupled with very high turnover, mechanics, parts, and operators were all in short supply for years.

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Lynnwood Link Metro Bus Restructure Analysis

It has been over a year since Metro restructured the buses because of the Lynnwood Link Extension. We now know not only the monthly ridership of the routes but also more advanced data like the ridership per service hour from 2024 and 2025 . This is an analysis of those changes as well as a proposal based on that analysis. We will report on Community Transit routes as that data becomes available.

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