The SR-520 Green Alternative Coalition is calling for the transit-optimized  four-lane alternative to be in the supplemental Environmental Impact Statement.  WSDOT and Sound Transit (joint leads on the EIS) are excluding the  transit-optimized four-lane alternative from the supplemental EIS, and Governor  Gregoire (who WSDOT works for) and Mayor Nickels (who chairs Sound Transit) are  going along with suppression of this alternative, which is the most  climate-friendly, and likely the only one the state can afford. 
Because  the transit-optimized four-lane alternative has wider lanes and shoulders and  better lane and ramp geometry than the current bridge, it would accommodate more  traffic, but not so much as causes the six-lane alternatives to seriously worsen  our region's contribution to global warming. And WSDOT estimates that the  six-lane alternatives all have costs that are beyond any reasonable financing  package.
This alternative is the only one that will not reduce transit  share. SR-520 has one of the best transit shares of any highway in the country,  but all six-lane alternatives would greatly worsen it, reducing the proportion  of those crossing the bridge who are in buses or van pools. 
The  mediation process has incorporated into the six-lane alternatives many  environmental and neighborhood enhancements that should be in the  transit-optimized four-lane alternative, making it far more effective than the  barebones, caricatured four-lane alternative that WSDOT posed and rejected in  the draft EIS. 
Climate issues have been raised about the proposed tunnel  for the Alaska Way Viaduct project, even though it actually reduces the number  of highway lanes from six to four. Climate issues are far more significant for  SR-520, where the only alternatives now in the supplemental EIS would increase  the number of highway lanes from four to six, and add shoulders that could be  converted for a total of eight lanes of traffic. 
EPA's estimate is that  27 percent of greenhouse gas emissions nationwide come from the transportation  sector. The percentage contribution of the transportation sector is higher in  the Northwest and especially the Puget Sound region because the contribution of  the electric power industry to greenhouse gas emissions is so much less here.  The proportion of this region's greenhouse gas emissions attributable to the  transportation sector is growing faster than for any other sector. Single  occupancy driving is easily the largest part of this huge and growing  contribution of our region to global warming. 
The Friends of the Earth  web site at http://www.foe.org/economic_
One cannot take the  governor's or the mayor's commitment on climate change issues seriously when the  agencies they lead are doing a supplemental EIS that examines only the SR-520  alternatives that would add two lanes to the currently four-lane SR-520 bridge,  while suppressing the most climate-friendly alternative, and likely the only one  that the state can afford. The transit-optimized four-lane alternative must be  fully and fairly considered in the supplemental EIS. 
Chris Leman,  cleman@oo.net
SR-520 Green Alternative Coalition
(206) 322-5463  
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
The movement to keep SR-520 from being overbuilt  will miss the coverage provided by the Seattle-P-I.  An article  in that grand newspaper's last issue today offers a chance to comment  on the need for WSDOT and Sound Transit, in their joint supplemental EIS,  to include the transit-optimized four-lane alternative, which so  far has been excluded.  Here is a link for you to file your own  comment, and below is mine.
 
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