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City Council Regular Meeting

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

7:00 PM · Council Chambers, 135 E. Sunset Way
Topics tracked across meetings:
Constitution Day Proclamation 7 ID 1256 - Hispanic Heritage Month b) Proclamation 9 ID 1266 - Eastside Welcoming Week c) Proclamation ID 1153 1/2
Amendments to Title 16: Stormwater Manual & Floodplain Code ID 1144 3/5
Recovery Month Proclamation ID 0527 1/2
Amending Development Services Department Permit Fees AB 7050 1/2
Silverado Development Agreement AB 7196 2/3
Automated Traffic Safety Camera Revenue AB 7248 1/2
Amendment and Renewal of XO Communications Franchise Agreement AB 7220 1/2
Amendments to IMC 10.36, Truck Routes AB 7238 1/2
Consideration to Support Sound Transit 3 (ST3) Plan, November 8, 2016 Ballot Item AB 7222 2/3
Amendments to IMC 13.70.040, Sewer Rates AB 7226 1/2
East Sunset Way: Selection of Project Concept AB 7234 1/2
AT&T Lease Agreement Fourth Amendment; Verizon Wireless Lease Agreement AB 7163 2/2
Amendments to the Land Use Code and Central Issaquah Development & Design Standards Allowing a Regional Light Rail System AB 7239 2/2
City Council Regular Meeting · Mar 24, 2016 City Council Regular Meeting · Sep 6, 2016
Amendments to IMC 16.35 Construction Hours and IMC 3.64.010 Fees Imposed AB 7197 2/2
Section
Topic
3. SPECIAL BUSINESS
3a
Consideration to Support Sound Transit 3 (ST3) Plan, November 8, 2016 Ballot Item AB 7222
Carried 7-0
Direct Administration; Set Public Hearing · packet pp.5–61
Topics: TransportationElections
Staff report:
NEW CITY COUNCIL AB 7222 - AGENDA BILL Special City Council Regular Meeting - 06 Sep 2016 Business
Roll call:
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by WINTERSTEIN
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
3b
Eastside Month of Concern for the Hungry Proclamation Hear Presentation AB 7240
packet pp.63–64
Staff report:
Administration / Executive Department:
3c
Recovery Month Proclamation Hear Presentation AB 7251
packet pp.65–66
Staff report:
Administration / Executive Department:
7. CONSENT CALENDAR
7a
Accounts: Payables and Payroll, August 15
Approve · packet pp.2016
Topics: Budget
7b
Accounts: Payables and Payroll, September 6, 2016
Approve
Topics: Budget
7c
Minutes: City Council Regular Meeting, August 1, 2016
Approve · packet pp.67–70
Staff report:
CONSENT CALENDAR c) 08-01-16 City Council Regular Meeting Minutes Page 7797
7d
Minutes: City Council Committee Work Session, August 8, 2016
Approve · packet pp.71
Staff report:
CONSENT CALENDAR d) 08-08-16 Council Committee Work Session Minutes Page 7801
7e
Minutes: City Council Special Meeting, August 10, 2016
Approve · packet pp.73
Staff report:
CONSENT CALENDAR e) 08-10-16 City Council Special Meeting Minutes Page 7802
7f
Amending Development Services Department Permit Fees AB 7050
Carried 7-0
Refer to Council Land & Shore Committee · packet pp.75–157
Topics: Land UseBudget
Staff report:
Administration / Development Services Department:
Roll call:
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by PAULY
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
7g
Amendments to Stormwater Management Regulations within Municipal Code and Central Issaquah Development and Design Standards AB 7122
Refer to Council Land & Shore Committee · packet pp.159–237
Topics: Land UseWater
Staff report:
The Western Washington Phase II Municipal Stormwater Permit (Permit) issued by the Department of Ecology (Ecology) regulates many aspects of development permitting for both private and public projects to mitigate impacts of stormwater runoff on Waters of the State. Previously these regulations were largely limited to development standards as specified in the adopted Stormwater Design Manual.
7h
Wildwood Reservoir Rehabilitation Project AB 7127
Award Bid · packet pp.239–242
Staff report:
POLICY & BUDGET INFO Expenditure Required Comp Plan Policy Nos. U-2.9; U-2.10; U-2.13 $ 515,000
7i
AT&T Lease Agreement Fourth Amendment; Verizon Wireless Lease Agreement AB 7163
Authorize · packet pp.243–265
Topics: Housing
Staff report:
Administration / Public Works Engineering Department:
7j
Silverado Development Agreement AB 7196
Refer to Council Land & Shore Committee · packet pp.267–304
Staff report:
NEW CITY COUNCIL AB 7196 - AGENDA BILL Consent City Council Regular Meeting - 06 Sep 2016 Calendar
7k
Amendment and Renewal of XO Communications Franchise Agreement AB 7220
Refer to Council Infrastructure Committee · packet pp.305–315
Staff report:
Administration / Public Works Engineering Department:
7l
River & Streams Board Midyear Appointments AB 7224
Confirm · packet pp.317–347
Topics: Boards & Commissions
Staff report:
Administration / City Clerk's Office:
7m
Amendments to IMC 13.70.040, Sewer Rates AB 7226
Adopt Ordinance · packet pp.349–359
Topics: Land UseWater
Staff report:
Administration / Public Works Engineering Department:
7n
East Sunset Way: Selection of Project Concept AB 7234
Carried 7-0
Refer to Council Infrastructure Committee · packet pp.361–378
Staff report:
On July 18, 2016, the City Council adopted Ordinance No. 2774, placing a transportation improvement bond on the November 8, 2016 General Election ballot. Council identified four projects to be funded by the bond, including enhancements to East Sunset Way.
Roll call:
Moved by RAMOS · seconded by PAULY
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
7o
Amendments to IMC 10.36, Truck Routes AB 7238
Refer to Council Infrastructure Committee · packet pp.379–386
Topics: Land Use
Staff report:
Administration / Public Works Engineering Department:
7p
Amendments to the Land Use Code and Central Issaquah Development & Design Standards Allowing a Regional Light Rail System AB 7239
Refer to Council Land & Shore Committee · packet pp.387–412
Topics: Land Use
Staff report:
Administration / Development Services Department:
7q
Automated Traffic Safety Camera Revenue AB 7248
Refer to Council Services & Safety · packet pp.413–414
Topics: TransportationPublic Safety
Staff report:
Administration / Finance Department:
8. REGULAR BUSINESS
8a
Amendments to IMC 16.35 Construction Hours and IMC 3.64.010 Fees Imposed AB 7197
Carried 7-0
Adopt Ordinance · packet pp.415–423
Topics: Land UseBudget
Staff report:
Administration / Development Services Department:
Roll call:
Moved by PAULY · seconded by WINTERSTEIN
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
1:10 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:16 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:22 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:28 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:33 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:39 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:26 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:31 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:37 leadership
2:48 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:53 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:59 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
3:04 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
3:09 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
3:15 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
3:18 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
3:24 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
3:28 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
3:33 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
3:39 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
3:44 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
3:49 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
3:55 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
4:00 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
4:06 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
4:11 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
4:15 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
4:21 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
4:26 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
4:31 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
4:36 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
4:41 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
4:46 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
4:52 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
4:57 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
5:03 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
5:08 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
5:13 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
5:19 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
5:24 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
5:27 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
5:37 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
5:43 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
5:49 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
5:54 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
6:00 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
6:04 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
6:09 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
6:13 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
6:19 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
6:24 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
6:28 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
6:33 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
6:38 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
6:44 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
6:49 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
6:54 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
7:00 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
7:05 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
7:11 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
7:16 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
7:22 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
7:28 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
7:34 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
7:39 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
7:45 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
7:50 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
7:56 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
8:01 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
8:06 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
8:12 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
8:17 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
8:23 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
8:28 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
8:32 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
8:37 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
8:42 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
8:46 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
8:52 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
8:58 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
9:02 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
9:08 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
9:14 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
9:19 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
9:24 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
9:28 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
9:34 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
9:40 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
9:45 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
9:51 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
9:54 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
9:59 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
10:03 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
10:08 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
10:12 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
10:17 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
10:21 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
10:25 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
10:30 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
10:35 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
10:39 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
10:44 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
10:49 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
10:54 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
11:00 Are, is there any discussion?
11:06 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
11:12 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
11:16 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
11:21 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
11:31 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
11:36 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
11:42 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
11:48 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
11:54 getting the slides up.
13:30 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
13:36 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
13:42 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
13:48 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
13:53 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
13:59 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
14:46 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
14:51 in contact with him have been impressed with his
14:57 leadership
15:07 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
15:13 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
15:19 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
15:23 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
15:29 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
15:34 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
15:37 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
15:43 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
15:48 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
15:53 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
15:58 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
16:04 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
16:09 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
16:14 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
16:20 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
16:25 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
16:31 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
16:35 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
16:41 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
16:46 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
16:51 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
16:56 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
17:01 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
17:06 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
17:11 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
17:17 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
17:23 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
17:27 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
17:33 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
17:39 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
17:43 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
17:47 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
17:57 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
18:03 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
18:08 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
18:14 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
18:20 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
18:24 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
18:29 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
18:33 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
18:38 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
18:43 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
18:47 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
18:53 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
18:58 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
19:03 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
19:08 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
19:14 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
19:20 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
19:25 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
19:31 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
19:36 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
19:42 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
19:48 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
19:54 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
19:59 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
20:04 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
20:10 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
20:15 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
20:20 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
20:26 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
20:32 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
20:37 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
20:42 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
20:48 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
20:51 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
20:57 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
21:02 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
21:06 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
21:12 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
21:18 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
21:22 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
21:28 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
21:34 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
21:39 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
21:44 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
21:48 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
21:54 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
21:59 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
22:05 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
22:10 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
22:14 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
22:18 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
22:23 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
22:27 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
22:32 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
22:37 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
22:41 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
22:45 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
22:50 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
22:54 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
22:59 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
23:04 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
23:08 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
23:13 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
23:20 Are, is there any discussion?
23:25 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
23:31 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
23:36 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
23:41 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
23:51 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
23:56 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
24:02 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
24:08 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
24:14 getting the slides up.
24:39 And I, I believe, I see someone
24:45 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
24:56 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
25:01 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
25:06 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
25:12 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
25:18 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
25:24 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
25:29 parent should have to send a child.
26:42 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
26:48 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
26:54 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
27:00 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
27:05 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
27:11 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
27:58 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
28:03 in contact with him have been impressed with his
28:09 leadership
28:19 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
28:25 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
28:31 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
28:35 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
28:41 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
28:46 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
28:49 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
28:55 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
29:00 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
29:05 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
29:10 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
29:16 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
29:21 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
29:26 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
29:32 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
29:37 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
29:43 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
29:47 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
29:53 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
29:58 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
30:03 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
30:08 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
30:13 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
30:18 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
30:23 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
30:29 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
30:35 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
30:39 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
30:45 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
30:51 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
30:55 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
30:59 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
31:09 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
31:15 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
31:20 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
31:26 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
31:32 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
31:36 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
31:41 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle, and on the east side from South
31:45 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
31:50 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
31:55 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
31:59 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
32:05 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
32:10 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
32:15 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
32:20 The plan includes an elevated station in Central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
32:26 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
32:32 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
32:37 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
32:43 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
32:48 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
32:54 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
33:00 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in Southeast Redmond and Downtown Redmond. When
33:06 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to Downtown Redmond
33:11 in 17 minutes and from Downtown Bellevue to Downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
33:16 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
33:22 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
33:27 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
33:32 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
33:38 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
33:44 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
33:49 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
33:54 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
34:00 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
34:03 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
34:09 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
34:14 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
34:18 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
34:24 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
34:30 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
34:34 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
34:40 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
34:46 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
34:51 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
34:56 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
35:00 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
35:06 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
35:11 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
35:17 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
35:22 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
35:26 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
35:30 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
35:35 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
35:39 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
35:44 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
35:49 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
35:53 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
35:57 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
36:02 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
36:06 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
36:11 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
36:16 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
36:20 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
36:25 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
36:32 Are, is there any discussion?
36:37 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
36:43 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
36:48 meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
36:53 of the ballot measure.
37:02 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
37:08 council meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare
37:14 a resolution in support of the ballot measure signify by saying aye.
37:20 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Luke, thank you for
37:26 getting the slides up.
37:51 And I, I believe, I see someone
37:57 who is ready to receive this, if she would come forward.
38:08 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
38:13 a proclamation here, and as all proclamations there are a whole bunch of
38:18 whereas's in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
38:24 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
38:30 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
38:36 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
38:41 parent should have to send a child.
39:54 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
40:00 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
40:06 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
40:12 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
40:17 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
40:23 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
41:10 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
41:15 in contact with him have been impressed with his
41:21 leadership
41:31 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
41:37 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
41:43 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
41:47 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
41:53 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
41:58 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
42:01 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
42:07 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
42:12 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
42:17 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
42:22 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
42:28 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
42:33 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
42:38 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
42:44 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
42:49 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
42:55 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
42:59 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
43:05 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
43:10 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
43:15 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
43:20 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
43:25 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
43:30 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
43:35 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
43:41 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
43:47 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
43:51 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
43:57 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
44:03 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
44:07 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
44:11 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
44:21 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
44:27 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
44:32 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
44:38 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
44:44 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
44:48 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
44:53 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle, and on the east side from South
44:57 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
45:02 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
45:07 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
45:11 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
45:17 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
45:22 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
45:27 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
45:32 The plan includes an elevated station in Central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
45:38 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
45:44 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
45:49 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
45:55 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
46:00 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
46:06 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
46:12 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in Southeast Redmond and Downtown Redmond. When
46:18 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to Downtown Redmond
46:23 in 17 minutes and from Downtown Bellevue to Downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
46:28 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
46:34 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
46:39 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
46:44 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
46:50 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
46:56 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
47:01 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
47:06 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
47:12 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
47:15 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
47:21 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
47:26 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
47:30 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
47:36 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
47:42 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
47:46 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
47:52 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
47:58 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
48:03 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
48:08 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
48:12 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
48:18 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
48:23 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
48:29 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
48:34 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
48:38 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
48:42 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
48:47 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
48:51 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
48:56 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
49:01 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
49:05 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
49:09 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
49:14 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
49:18 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
49:23 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
49:28 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
49:32 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
49:37 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
49:44 Are, is there any discussion?
49:49 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
49:55 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
50:00 meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
50:05 of the ballot measure.
50:14 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
50:20 council meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare
50:26 a resolution in support of the ballot measure signify by saying aye.
50:32 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Luke, thank you for
50:38 getting the slides up.
51:03 And I, I believe, I see someone
51:09 who is ready to receive this, if she would come forward.
51:20 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
51:25 a proclamation here, and as all proclamations there are a whole bunch of
51:30 whereas's in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
51:36 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
51:42 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
51:48 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
51:53 parent should have to send a child.
53:06 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
53:12 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
53:18 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
53:24 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
53:29 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
53:35 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
54:22 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
54:27 in contact with him have been impressed with his
54:33 leadership
54:43 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
54:49 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
54:55 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
54:59 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
55:05 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
55:10 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
55:13 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
55:19 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
55:24 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
55:29 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
55:34 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
55:40 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
55:45 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
55:50 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
55:56 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
56:01 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
56:07 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
56:11 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
56:17 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
56:22 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
56:27 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
56:32 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
56:37 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
56:42 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
56:47 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
56:53 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
56:59 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
57:03 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
57:09 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
57:15 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
57:19 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
57:23 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
57:33 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
57:39 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
57:44 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
57:50 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
57:56 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
58:00 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
58:05 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
58:09 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
58:14 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
58:19 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
58:23 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
58:29 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
58:34 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
58:39 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
58:44 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
58:50 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
58:56 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
59:01 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
59:07 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
59:12 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
59:18 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
59:24 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
59:30 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
59:35 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
59:40 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
59:46 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
59:51 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
59:56 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
1:00:02 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
1:00:08 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
1:00:13 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
1:00:18 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
1:00:24 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
1:00:27 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
1:00:33 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
1:00:38 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
1:00:42 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
1:00:48 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
1:00:54 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
1:00:58 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
1:01:04 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
1:01:10 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
1:01:15 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
1:01:20 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
1:01:24 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
1:01:30 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
1:01:35 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
1:01:41 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
1:01:46 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
1:01:50 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
1:01:54 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
1:01:59 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
1:02:03 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
1:02:08 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
1:02:13 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
1:02:17 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
1:02:21 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
1:02:26 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
1:02:30 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
1:02:35 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
1:02:40 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
1:02:44 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
1:02:49 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
1:02:56 Are, is there any discussion?
1:03:01 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
1:03:07 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
1:03:12 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
1:03:17 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
1:03:27 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
1:03:32 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
1:03:38 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
1:03:44 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
1:03:50 getting the slides up.
1:04:15 And I, I believe, I see someone
1:04:21 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
1:04:32 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
1:04:37 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
1:04:42 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
1:04:48 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
1:04:54 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
1:05:00 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
1:05:05 parent should have to send a child.
1:06:18 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:06:24 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:06:30 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:06:36 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:06:41 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:06:47 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
1:07:34 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
1:07:39 in contact with him have been impressed with his
1:07:45 leadership
1:07:55 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
1:08:01 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
1:08:07 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
1:08:11 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
1:08:17 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
1:08:22 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
1:08:25 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
1:08:31 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
1:08:36 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
1:08:41 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
1:08:46 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
1:08:52 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
1:08:57 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
1:09:02 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
1:09:08 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
1:09:13 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
1:09:19 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
1:09:23 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
1:09:29 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
1:09:34 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
1:09:39 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
1:09:44 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
1:09:49 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
1:09:54 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
1:09:59 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
1:10:05 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
1:10:11 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
1:10:15 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
1:10:21 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
1:10:27 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
1:10:31 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
1:10:35 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
1:10:45 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
1:10:51 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
1:10:56 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
1:11:02 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
1:11:08 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
1:11:12 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
1:11:17 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle, and on the east side from South
1:11:21 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
1:11:26 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
1:11:31 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
1:11:35 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
1:11:41 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
1:11:46 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
1:11:51 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
1:11:56 The plan includes an elevated station in Central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
1:12:02 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
1:12:08 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
1:12:13 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
1:12:19 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
1:12:24 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
1:12:30 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
1:12:36 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in Southeast Redmond and Downtown Redmond. When
1:12:42 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to Downtown Redmond
1:12:47 in 17 minutes and from Downtown Bellevue to Downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
1:12:52 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
1:12:58 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
1:13:03 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
1:13:08 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
1:13:14 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
1:13:20 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
1:13:25 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
1:13:30 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
1:13:36 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
1:13:39 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
1:13:45 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
1:13:50 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
1:13:54 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
1:14:00 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
1:14:06 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
1:14:10 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
1:14:16 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
1:14:22 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
1:14:27 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
1:14:32 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
1:14:36 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
1:14:42 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
1:14:47 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
1:14:53 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
1:14:58 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
1:15:02 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
1:15:06 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
1:15:11 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
1:15:15 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
1:15:20 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
1:15:25 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
1:15:29 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
1:15:33 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
1:15:38 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
1:15:42 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
1:15:47 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
1:15:52 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
1:15:56 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
1:16:01 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
1:16:08 Are, is there any discussion?
1:16:13 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
1:16:19 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
1:16:24 meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
1:16:29 of the ballot measure.
1:16:38 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
1:16:44 council meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare
1:16:50 a resolution in support of the ballot measure signify by saying aye.
1:16:56 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Luke, thank you for
1:17:02 getting the slides up.
1:17:27 And I, I believe, I see someone
1:17:33 who is ready to receive this, if she would come forward.
1:17:44 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
1:17:49 a proclamation here, and as all proclamations there are a whole bunch of
1:17:54 whereas's in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
1:18:00 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
1:18:06 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
1:18:12 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
1:18:17 parent should have to send a child.
1:19:30 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:19:36 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:19:42 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:19:48 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:19:53 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:19:59 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
1:20:46 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
1:20:51 in contact with him have been impressed with his
1:20:57 leadership
1:21:07 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
1:21:13 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
1:21:19 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
1:21:23 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
1:21:29 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
1:21:34 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
1:21:37 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
1:21:43 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
1:21:48 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
1:21:53 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
1:21:58 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
1:22:04 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
1:22:09 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
1:22:14 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
1:22:20 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
1:22:25 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
1:22:31 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
1:22:35 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
1:22:41 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
1:22:46 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
1:22:51 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
1:22:56 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
1:23:01 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
1:23:06 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
1:23:11 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
1:23:17 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
1:23:23 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
1:23:27 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
1:23:33 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
1:23:39 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
1:23:43 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
1:23:47 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
1:23:57 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
1:24:03 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
1:24:08 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
1:24:14 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
1:24:20 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
1:24:24 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
1:24:29 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
1:24:33 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
1:24:38 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
1:24:43 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
1:24:47 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
1:24:53 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
1:24:58 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
1:25:03 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
1:25:08 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
1:25:14 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
1:25:20 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
1:25:25 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
1:25:31 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
1:25:36 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
1:25:42 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
1:25:48 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
1:25:54 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
1:25:59 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
1:26:04 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
1:26:10 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
1:26:15 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
1:26:20 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
1:26:26 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
1:26:32 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
1:26:37 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
1:26:42 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
1:26:48 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
1:26:51 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
1:26:57 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
1:27:02 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
1:27:06 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
1:27:12 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
1:27:18 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
1:27:22 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
1:27:28 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
1:27:34 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
1:27:39 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
1:27:44 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
1:27:48 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
1:27:54 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
1:27:59 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
1:28:05 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
1:28:10 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
1:28:14 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
1:28:18 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
1:28:23 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
1:28:27 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
1:28:32 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
1:28:37 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
1:28:41 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
1:28:45 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
1:28:50 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
1:28:54 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
1:28:59 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
1:29:04 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
1:29:08 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
1:29:13 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
1:29:20 Are, is there any discussion?
1:29:25 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
1:29:31 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
1:29:36 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
1:29:41 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
1:29:51 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
1:29:56 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
1:30:02 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
1:30:08 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
1:30:14 getting the slides up.
1:30:39 And I, I believe, I see someone
1:30:45 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
1:30:56 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
1:31:01 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
1:31:06 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
1:31:12 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
1:31:18 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
1:31:24 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
1:31:29 parent should have to send a child.
1:32:42 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:32:48 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:32:54 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:33:00 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:33:05 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:33:11 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
1:33:58 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
1:34:03 in contact with him have been impressed with his
1:34:09 leadership
1:34:19 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
1:34:25 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
1:34:31 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
1:34:35 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
1:34:41 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
1:34:46 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
1:34:49 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
1:34:55 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
1:35:00 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
1:35:05 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
1:35:10 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
1:35:16 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
1:35:21 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
1:35:26 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
1:35:32 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
1:35:37 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
1:35:43 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
1:35:47 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
1:35:53 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
1:35:58 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
1:36:03 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
1:36:08 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
1:36:13 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
1:36:18 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
1:36:23 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
1:36:29 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
1:36:35 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
1:36:39 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
1:36:45 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
1:36:51 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
1:36:55 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
1:36:59 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
1:37:09 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
1:37:15 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
1:37:20 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
1:37:26 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
1:37:32 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
1:37:36 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
1:37:41 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
1:37:45 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
1:37:50 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
1:37:55 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
1:37:59 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
1:38:05 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
1:38:10 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
1:38:15 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
1:38:20 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
1:38:26 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
1:38:32 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
1:38:37 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
1:38:43 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
1:38:48 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
1:38:54 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
1:39:00 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
1:39:06 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
1:39:11 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
1:39:16 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
1:39:22 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
1:39:27 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
1:39:32 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
1:39:38 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
1:39:44 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
1:39:49 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
1:39:54 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
1:40:00 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
1:40:03 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
1:40:09 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
1:40:14 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
1:40:18 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
1:40:24 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
1:40:30 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
1:40:34 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
1:40:40 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
1:40:46 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
1:40:51 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
1:40:56 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
1:41:00 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
1:41:06 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
1:41:11 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
1:41:17 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
1:41:22 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
1:41:26 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
1:41:30 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
1:41:35 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
1:41:39 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
1:41:44 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
1:41:49 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
1:41:53 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
1:41:57 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
1:42:02 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
1:42:06 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
1:42:11 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
1:42:16 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
1:42:20 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
1:42:25 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
1:42:32 Are, is there any discussion?
1:42:37 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
1:42:43 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
1:42:48 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
1:42:53 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
1:43:03 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
1:43:08 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
1:43:14 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
1:43:20 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
1:43:26 getting the slides up.
1:43:51 And I, I believe, I see someone
1:43:57 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
1:44:08 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
1:44:13 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
1:44:18 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
1:44:24 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
1:44:30 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
1:44:36 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
1:44:41 parent should have to send a child.
1:45:54 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:46:00 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:46:06 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:46:12 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:46:17 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:46:23 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
1:47:10 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
1:47:15 in contact with him have been impressed with his
1:47:21 leadership
1:47:31 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
1:47:37 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
1:47:43 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
1:47:47 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
1:47:53 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
1:47:58 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
1:48:01 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
1:48:07 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
1:48:12 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
1:48:17 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
1:48:22 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
1:48:28 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
1:48:33 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
1:48:38 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
1:48:44 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
1:48:49 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
1:48:55 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
1:48:59 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
1:49:05 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
1:49:10 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
1:49:15 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
1:49:20 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
1:49:25 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
1:49:30 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
1:49:35 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
1:49:41 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
1:49:47 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
1:49:51 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
1:49:57 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
1:50:03 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
1:50:07 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
1:50:11 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
1:50:21 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
1:50:27 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
1:50:32 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
1:50:38 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
1:50:44 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
1:50:48 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
1:50:53 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
1:50:57 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
1:51:02 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
1:51:07 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
1:51:11 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
1:51:17 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
1:51:22 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
1:51:27 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
1:51:32 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
1:51:38 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
1:51:44 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
1:51:49 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
1:51:55 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
1:52:00 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
1:52:06 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
1:52:12 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
1:52:18 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
1:52:23 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
1:52:28 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
1:52:34 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
1:52:39 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
1:52:44 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
1:52:50 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
1:52:56 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
1:53:01 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
1:53:06 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
1:53:12 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
1:53:15 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
1:53:21 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
1:53:26 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
1:53:30 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
1:53:36 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
1:53:42 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
1:53:46 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
1:53:52 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
1:53:58 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
1:54:03 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
1:54:08 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
1:54:12 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
1:54:18 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
1:54:23 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
1:54:29 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
1:54:34 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
1:54:38 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
1:54:42 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
1:54:47 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
1:54:51 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
1:54:56 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
1:55:01 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
1:55:05 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
1:55:09 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
1:55:14 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
1:55:18 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
1:55:23 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
1:55:28 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
1:55:32 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
1:55:37 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
1:55:44 Are, is there any discussion?
1:55:49 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
1:55:55 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
1:56:00 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
1:56:05 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
1:56:15 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
1:56:20 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
1:56:26 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
1:56:32 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
1:56:38 getting the slides up.
1:57:03 And I, I believe, I see someone
1:57:09 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
1:57:20 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
1:57:25 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
1:57:30 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
1:57:36 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
1:57:42 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
1:57:48 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
1:57:53 parent should have to send a child.
1:59:06 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
1:59:12 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
1:59:18 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
1:59:24 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
1:59:29 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
1:59:35 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:00:22 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:00:27 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:00:33 leadership
2:00:43 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:00:49 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:00:55 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
2:00:59 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
2:01:05 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
2:01:10 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
2:01:13 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
2:01:19 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
2:01:24 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
2:01:29 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
2:01:34 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
2:01:40 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
2:01:45 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
2:01:50 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
2:01:56 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
2:02:01 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
2:02:07 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
2:02:11 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
2:02:17 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
2:02:22 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
2:02:27 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
2:02:32 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
2:02:37 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
2:02:42 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
2:02:47 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
2:02:53 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
2:02:59 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
2:03:03 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
2:03:09 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
2:03:15 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
2:03:19 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
2:03:23 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
2:03:33 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
2:03:39 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
2:03:44 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
2:03:50 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
2:03:56 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
2:04:00 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
2:04:05 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
2:04:09 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
2:04:14 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
2:04:19 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
2:04:23 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
2:04:29 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
2:04:34 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
2:04:39 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
2:04:44 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
2:04:50 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
2:04:56 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
2:05:01 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
2:05:07 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
2:05:12 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
2:05:18 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
2:05:24 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
2:05:30 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
2:05:35 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
2:05:40 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
2:05:46 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
2:05:51 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
2:05:56 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
2:06:02 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
2:06:08 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
2:06:13 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
2:06:18 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
2:06:24 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
2:06:27 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
2:06:33 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
2:06:38 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
2:06:42 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
2:06:48 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
2:06:54 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
2:06:58 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
2:07:04 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
2:07:10 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
2:07:15 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
2:07:20 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
2:07:24 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
2:07:30 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
2:07:35 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
2:07:41 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
2:07:46 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
2:07:50 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
2:07:54 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
2:07:59 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
2:08:03 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
2:08:08 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
2:08:13 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
2:08:17 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
2:08:21 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
2:08:26 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
2:08:30 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
2:08:35 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
2:08:40 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
2:08:44 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
2:08:49 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
2:08:56 Are, is there any discussion?
2:09:01 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
2:09:07 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
2:09:12 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
2:09:17 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
2:09:27 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
2:09:32 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
2:09:38 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
2:09:44 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
2:09:50 getting the slides up.
2:10:15 And I, I believe, I see someone
2:10:21 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
2:10:32 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
2:10:37 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
2:10:42 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
2:10:48 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
2:10:54 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
2:11:00 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
2:11:05 parent should have to send a child.
2:12:18 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
2:12:24 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
2:12:30 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
2:12:36 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
2:12:41 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
2:12:47 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:13:34 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:13:39 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:13:45 leadership
2:13:55 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:14:01 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:14:07 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
2:14:11 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
2:14:17 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
2:14:22 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
2:14:25 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
2:14:31 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
2:14:36 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
2:14:41 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
2:14:46 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
2:14:52 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
2:14:57 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
2:15:02 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
2:15:08 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
2:15:13 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
2:15:19 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
2:15:23 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
2:15:29 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
2:15:34 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
2:15:39 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
2:15:44 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
2:15:49 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
2:15:54 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
2:15:59 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
2:16:05 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
2:16:11 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
2:16:15 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
2:16:21 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
2:16:27 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
2:16:31 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
2:16:35 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
2:16:45 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
2:16:51 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
2:16:56 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
2:17:02 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
2:17:08 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
2:17:12 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
2:17:17 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
2:17:21 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
2:17:26 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
2:17:31 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
2:17:35 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
2:17:41 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
2:17:46 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
2:17:51 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
2:17:56 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
2:18:02 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
2:18:08 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
2:18:13 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
2:18:19 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
2:18:24 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
2:18:30 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
2:18:36 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
2:18:42 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
2:18:47 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
2:18:52 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
2:18:58 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
2:19:03 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
2:19:08 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
2:19:14 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
2:19:20 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
2:19:25 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
2:19:30 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
2:19:36 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
2:19:39 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
2:19:45 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
2:19:50 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
2:19:54 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
2:20:00 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
2:20:06 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
2:20:10 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
2:20:16 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
2:20:22 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
2:20:27 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
2:20:32 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
2:20:36 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
2:20:42 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
2:20:47 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
2:20:53 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
2:20:58 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
2:21:02 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
2:21:06 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
2:21:11 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
2:21:15 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
2:21:20 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
2:21:25 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
2:21:29 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
2:21:33 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
2:21:38 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
2:21:42 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
2:21:47 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
2:21:52 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
2:21:56 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
2:22:01 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
2:22:08 Are, is there any discussion?
2:22:13 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
2:22:19 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
2:22:24 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
2:22:29 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
2:22:39 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
2:22:44 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
2:22:50 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
2:22:56 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
2:23:02 getting the slides up.
2:23:27 And I, I believe, I see someone
2:23:33 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
2:23:44 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
2:23:49 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
2:23:54 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
2:24:00 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
2:24:06 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
2:24:12 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
2:24:17 parent should have to send a child.
2:25:30 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
2:25:36 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
2:25:42 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
2:25:48 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
2:25:53 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
2:25:59 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:26:46 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:26:51 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:26:57 leadership
2:27:07 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:27:13 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:27:19 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
2:27:23 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
2:27:29 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
2:27:34 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
2:27:37 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
2:27:43 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
2:27:48 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
2:27:53 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
2:27:58 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
2:28:04 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
2:28:09 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
2:28:14 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
2:28:20 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
2:28:25 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
2:28:31 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
2:28:35 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
2:28:41 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
2:28:46 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
2:28:51 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
2:28:56 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
2:29:01 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
2:29:06 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
2:29:11 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
2:29:17 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
2:29:23 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
2:29:27 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
2:29:33 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
2:29:39 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
2:29:43 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
2:29:47 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
2:29:57 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
2:30:03 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
2:30:08 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
2:30:14 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
2:30:20 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
2:30:24 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
2:30:29 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle, and on the east side from South
2:30:33 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
2:30:38 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
2:30:43 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
2:30:47 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
2:30:53 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
2:30:58 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
2:31:03 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
2:31:08 The plan includes an elevated station in Central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
2:31:14 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
2:31:20 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
2:31:25 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
2:31:31 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
2:31:36 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
2:31:42 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
2:31:48 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in Southeast Redmond and Downtown Redmond. When
2:31:54 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to Downtown Redmond
2:31:59 in 17 minutes and from Downtown Bellevue to Downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
2:32:04 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
2:32:10 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
2:32:15 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
2:32:20 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
2:32:26 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
2:32:32 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
2:32:37 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
2:32:42 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
2:32:48 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
2:32:51 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
2:32:57 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
2:33:02 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
2:33:06 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
2:33:12 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
2:33:18 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
2:33:22 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
2:33:28 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
2:33:34 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
2:33:39 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
2:33:44 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
2:33:48 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
2:33:54 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
2:33:59 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
2:34:05 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
2:34:10 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
2:34:14 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
2:34:18 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
2:34:23 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
2:34:27 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
2:34:32 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
2:34:37 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
2:34:41 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
2:34:45 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
2:34:50 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
2:34:54 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
2:34:59 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
2:35:04 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
2:35:08 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
2:35:13 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
2:35:20 Are, is there any discussion?
2:35:25 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
2:35:31 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
2:35:36 meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
2:35:41 of the ballot measure.
2:35:50 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
2:35:56 council meeting of September 19th 2016 and direct the administration to prepare
2:36:02 a resolution in support of the ballot measure signify by saying aye.
2:36:08 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Luke, thank you for
2:36:14 getting the slides up.
2:36:39 And I, I believe, I see someone
2:36:45 who is ready to receive this, if she would come forward.
2:36:56 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
2:37:01 a proclamation here, and as all proclamations there are a whole bunch of
2:37:06 whereas's in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
2:37:12 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
2:37:18 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
2:37:24 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
2:37:29 parent should have to send a child.
2:38:42 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
2:38:48 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
2:38:54 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
2:39:00 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
2:39:05 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
2:39:11 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:39:58 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:40:03 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:40:09 leadership
2:40:19 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:40:25 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:40:31 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
2:40:35 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
2:40:41 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
2:40:46 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
2:40:49 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
2:40:55 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
2:41:00 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
2:41:05 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
2:41:10 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
2:41:16 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
2:41:21 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
2:41:26 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
2:41:32 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
2:41:37 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
2:41:43 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
2:41:47 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
2:41:53 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
2:41:58 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
2:42:03 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
2:42:08 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
2:42:13 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
2:42:18 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
2:42:23 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
2:42:29 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
2:42:35 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
2:42:39 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
2:42:45 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
2:42:51 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
2:42:55 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
2:42:59 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
2:43:09 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
2:43:15 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
2:43:20 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
2:43:26 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
2:43:32 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
2:43:36 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
2:43:41 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
2:43:45 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
2:43:50 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
2:43:55 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
2:43:59 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
2:44:05 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
2:44:10 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
2:44:15 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
2:44:20 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
2:44:26 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
2:44:32 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
2:44:37 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
2:44:43 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
2:44:48 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
2:44:54 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
2:45:00 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
2:45:06 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
2:45:11 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
2:45:16 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
2:45:22 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
2:45:27 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
2:45:32 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
2:45:38 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
2:45:44 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
2:45:49 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
2:45:54 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
2:46:00 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
2:46:03 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
2:46:09 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
2:46:14 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
2:46:18 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
2:46:24 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
2:46:30 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
2:46:34 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
2:46:40 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
2:46:46 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
2:46:51 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
2:46:56 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
2:47:00 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
2:47:06 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
2:47:11 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
2:47:17 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
2:47:22 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
2:47:26 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
2:47:30 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
2:47:35 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
2:47:39 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
2:47:44 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
2:47:49 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
2:47:53 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
2:47:57 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
2:48:02 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
2:48:06 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
2:48:11 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
2:48:16 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
2:48:20 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
2:48:25 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
2:48:32 Are, is there any discussion?
2:48:37 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
2:48:43 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
2:48:48 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
2:48:53 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
2:49:03 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
2:49:08 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
2:49:14 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
2:49:20 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
2:49:26 getting the slides up.
2:49:51 And I, I believe, I see someone
2:49:57 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
2:50:08 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
2:50:13 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
2:50:18 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
2:50:24 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
2:50:30 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
2:50:36 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
2:50:41 parent should have to send a child.
2:51:54 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
2:52:00 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
2:52:06 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
2:52:12 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
2:52:17 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
2:52:23 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
2:53:10 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
2:53:15 in contact with him have been impressed with his
2:53:21 leadership
2:53:31 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
2:53:37 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
2:53:43 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
2:53:47 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
2:53:53 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
2:53:58 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
2:54:01 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
2:54:07 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
2:54:12 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
2:54:17 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
2:54:22 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
2:54:28 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
2:54:33 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
2:54:38 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
2:54:44 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
2:54:49 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
2:54:55 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
2:54:59 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
2:55:05 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
2:55:10 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
2:55:15 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
2:55:20 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
2:55:25 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
2:55:30 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
2:55:35 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
2:55:41 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
2:55:47 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
2:55:51 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
2:55:57 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
2:56:03 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
2:56:07 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
2:56:11 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
2:56:21 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
2:56:27 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
2:56:32 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
2:56:38 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
2:56:44 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
2:56:48 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
2:56:53 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
2:56:57 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
2:57:02 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
2:57:07 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
2:57:11 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
2:57:17 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
2:57:22 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
2:57:27 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
2:57:32 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
2:57:38 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
2:57:44 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
2:57:49 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
2:57:55 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
2:58:00 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
2:58:06 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
2:58:12 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
2:58:18 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
2:58:23 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
2:58:28 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
2:58:34 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
2:58:39 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
2:58:44 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
2:58:50 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
2:58:56 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
2:59:01 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
2:59:06 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
2:59:12 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
2:59:15 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
2:59:21 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
2:59:26 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
2:59:30 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
2:59:36 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
2:59:42 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
2:59:46 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
2:59:52 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
2:59:58 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
3:00:03 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
3:00:08 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
3:00:12 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
3:00:18 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
3:00:23 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
3:00:29 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
3:00:34 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
3:00:38 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
3:00:42 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
3:00:47 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
3:00:51 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
3:00:56 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
3:01:01 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
3:01:05 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
3:01:09 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
3:01:14 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
3:01:18 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
3:01:23 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
3:01:28 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
3:01:32 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
3:01:37 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
3:01:44 Are, is there any discussion?
3:01:49 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
3:01:55 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
3:02:00 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
3:02:05 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
3:02:15 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
3:02:20 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
3:02:26 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
3:02:32 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
3:02:38 getting the slides up.
3:03:03 And I, I believe, I see someone
3:03:09 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
3:03:20 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
3:03:25 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
3:03:30 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
3:03:36 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
3:03:42 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
3:03:48 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
3:03:53 parent should have to send a child.
3:05:06 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
3:05:12 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
3:05:18 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
3:05:24 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
3:05:29 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
3:05:35 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
3:06:22 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
3:06:27 in contact with him have been impressed with his
3:06:33 leadership
3:06:43 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
3:06:49 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
3:06:55 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
3:06:59 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
3:07:05 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
3:07:10 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
3:07:13 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
3:07:19 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
3:07:24 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
3:07:29 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
3:07:34 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
3:07:40 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
3:07:45 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
3:07:50 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
3:07:56 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
3:08:01 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
3:08:07 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
3:08:11 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
3:08:17 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
3:08:22 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
3:08:27 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
3:08:32 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
3:08:37 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
3:08:42 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
3:08:47 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
3:08:53 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
3:08:59 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
3:09:03 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
3:09:09 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
3:09:15 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
3:09:19 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
3:09:23 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
3:09:33 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
3:09:39 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
3:09:44 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
3:09:50 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
3:09:56 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
3:10:00 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
3:10:05 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
3:10:09 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
3:10:14 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
3:10:19 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
3:10:23 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
3:10:29 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
3:10:34 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
3:10:39 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
3:10:44 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
3:10:50 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
3:10:56 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
3:11:01 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
3:11:07 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
3:11:12 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
3:11:18 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
3:11:24 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
3:11:30 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
3:11:35 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
3:11:40 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
3:11:46 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
3:11:51 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
3:11:56 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
3:12:02 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
3:12:08 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
3:12:13 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
3:12:18 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
3:12:24 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
3:12:27 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
3:12:33 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
3:12:38 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
3:12:42 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
3:12:48 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
3:12:54 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
3:12:58 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
3:13:04 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
3:13:10 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
3:13:15 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
3:13:20 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
3:13:24 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
3:13:30 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
3:13:35 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
3:13:41 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
3:13:46 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
3:13:50 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
3:13:54 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
3:13:59 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
3:14:03 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
3:14:08 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
3:14:13 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
3:14:17 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
3:14:21 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
3:14:26 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
3:14:30 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
3:14:35 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
3:14:40 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
3:14:44 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
3:14:49 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
3:14:56 Are, is there any discussion?
3:15:01 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
3:15:07 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
3:15:12 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
3:15:17 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
3:15:27 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
3:15:32 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
3:15:38 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
3:15:44 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
3:15:50 getting the slides up.
3:16:15 And I, I believe, I see someone
3:16:21 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
3:16:32 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
3:16:37 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
3:16:42 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
3:16:48 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
3:16:54 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
3:17:00 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
3:17:05 parent should have to send a child.
3:18:18 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
3:18:24 the 6th, 2016, and ask those who would like to join the Council and myself
3:18:30 in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
3:18:36 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
3:18:41 and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
3:18:47 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
3:19:34 But I can tell you that the entire board and many that he has come
3:19:39 in contact with him have been impressed with his
3:19:45 leadership
3:19:55 I want to express a very heartfelt thanks on behalf of all of Sound Transit
3:20:01 to this council and to the people of Issaquah for the lend of your mayor.
3:20:07 Butler has served on the sound transit board for a great number of years. He
3:20:11 is easily and without question our most diligent and thorough board member
3:20:17 who, as chairman of our capital committee, carefully reviews each and every one of our
3:20:22 projects. And he is a real treasurer on our board and I want to just
3:20:25 thank the people of Issaquah for his services. I'm going
3:20:31 to quickly go through sort of the basics of the ST3 plan. A few years
3:20:36 ago, the Puget Sound Regional Council announced a staggering statistic and that is that the
3:20:41 Puget Sound region is likely to grow by 800 ,000 new residents by
3:20:46 2040. And let's just talk a little bit about what 800 ,000 additional residents mean.
3:20:52 It is the basically adding on top of the density and congestion that we already
3:20:57 have in this region, adding again the entire population of Seattle and almost all of
3:21:02 the entire population of Tacoma on top of what we already have. And I can
3:21:08 tell you in my prior life, I served as both the Federal
3:21:13 Transit Administrator, where I also had the opportunity to work with Bill Ramos, but also
3:21:19 I served as the Under Secretary of Transportation. And this trend in the Puget Sound
3:21:23 region is very similar to what's happening in 10 other mega regions around the
3:21:29 country, where we're going to have 70 million additional folks coming,
3:21:34 basically new citizens by 2040 in the United States, but they're not going to be
3:21:39 widely dispersed. They're all going to be very heavily concentrated in one of 11 mega
3:21:44 regions and the Puget Sound region is one of them. And when you're faced with
3:21:49 that kind of growth, you really have two choices. You can plan and
3:21:54 build for it or you can be completely overwhelmed by it. The Sound Transit 3
3:21:59 plan as developed by the Sound Transit Board is really an effort for this region
3:22:05 to plan and build for it rather than be completely overwhelmed by it. is a
3:22:11 big plan and it's an ambitious plan. It's a $54 billion plan spread out over
3:22:15 25 years. And I'm going to give you some of the details if I can.
3:22:21 I am going to try and work this. Maybe
3:22:27 this is working, maybe it's not. Well, I'm going to dispense with the slides and
3:22:31 just verbalize it if I can. Or if Luke can get the screen to work,
3:22:35 that'd be great. Oh, try the arrows.
3:22:45 The importantly what the centerpiece of the plan is to build a 116
3:22:51 mile regional light rail network to basically expand upon
3:22:56 the successes that we've had with light rail to date and the overwhelming popularity that
3:23:02 we've seen with our expansion to the University of Washington.
3:23:08 And really build out a regional network where light rail passengers have a way to
3:23:12 connect to all corners of the region all the way to Tacoma, all the way
3:23:17 up to Everett, to Ballard, to West Seattle and on the east side from South
3:23:21 Kirkland all the way to Issaquah. Importantly, one of the things we heard
3:23:26 from the mayors on the east side as this plan was being developed was the
3:23:31 desire to not just view this as a system to get in and out of
3:23:35 Seattle, but rather as an opportunity to connect the cities of the east side.
3:23:41 And the plan includes efforts to do just that. It includes a light rail line
3:23:46 running nearly 12 miles from Issaquah to South Kirkland via Bellevue with stations in
3:23:51 Issaquah, Eastgate near Bellevue College, the Richards Road area, Bellevue and Kirkland.
3:23:56 The plan includes an elevated station in central Issaquah located south of I -90 along
3:24:02 with 500 parking stalls and a pedestrian bridge crossing over I -90. When service of
3:24:08 the new line begins in 2041, riders boarding in Issaquah would arrive in Bellevue in
3:24:13 23 minutes where they could transfer to Eastlink and to Seattle or Redmond or to
3:24:19 a new Interstate 405 bus rapid transit system. This is our first major foray as
3:24:24 an agency into bus rapid transit. ST3 would also extend
3:24:30 Eastlink light rail, which is scheduled to open in 2023, another 3 .7 miles from
3:24:36 the Redmond Technology Center to new stations in southeast Redmond and downtown Redmond. When
3:24:42 that segment of Eastlink opens in 2024, riders could travel from Bellevue to downtown Redmond
3:24:47 in 17 minutes and from downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in 24 minutes.
3:24:52 With ST3, residents in Issaquah would also have the access to a new bus rapid
3:24:58 transit or BRT in 405 that will run all the way from Lynnwood
3:25:03 to Kirkland, Bellevue, Renton, Tukwila and then on to Burien on bus only lanes on
3:25:08 State Route 518. BRT buses would begin running in 2024 and arrive every 10
3:25:14 minutes during peak commuting hours and 15 minutes in the off peak. Bus rapid transit
3:25:20 would also be added on Northeast 145th Street and State Route 522 to connect riders
3:25:25 from Woodinville, Bothell, Kenmore and Lake Forest Park with a future link light rail station
3:25:30 and shoreline on I -5. ST3 would include five light rail and 13 BRT stations
3:25:36 just on the east side and that's what we were talking about in terms of
3:25:39 connecting cities on the east side. There's also other connections throughout the
3:25:45 Puget Sound region. We built 62 more miles of light rail connecting major urban areas
3:25:50 from the east side to Seattle, north to Everett, south to Tacoma as I explained
3:25:54 earlier. And if voters approve the ST3 plan it will cost the typical adult in
3:26:00 the sound transit district about $169 per year or about $14 per month. What
3:26:06 this really is about is giving people the opportunity to get
3:26:10 control of their quality of life. It's been really notable that in just
3:26:16 the last two years the PSRC has now documented what a lot of us
3:26:22 as drivers in the region have already experienced. And that is congestion has worsened more
3:26:27 than 20 % in just two years. And this pattern here again follows a pattern
3:26:32 that you see in other cities all across the country and other regions across the
3:26:36 country. Population grows 15%, traffic worsens 15%. Population may grow
3:26:42 another 20%, maybe population worsens 25%. But at a certain point the
3:26:47 region reaches a saturation point. And another 10 or 20 % increase in population
3:26:53 causes congestion to worsen dramatically more so. And that is what we're now starting to
3:26:58 see in this region. And the ST3 plan is an effort to try and get
3:27:02 on top of it. So people would actually have a fighting chance to get home
3:27:06 and see the last few innings of their kids' little league game. Have a fighting
3:27:11 chance to actually have dinner with their family. And would not have to leave so
3:27:15 punishingly early in the morning just to guarantee that they'll get to work on time.
3:27:20 That is really what is fundamentally what the Sound Transit 3 plan is about. So
3:27:25 again let me thank the council. Let me thank the people of Issaquah for Fred's
3:27:29 leadership on the board. Let me also just parenthetically thank the council. I believe one
3:27:33 of the things you're taking up today is an effort of starting the process to
3:27:38 consider light rail as a permitted use in part of Issaquah. That is a best
3:27:42 practice that we are trying to encourage in cities all across the Sound Transit District.
3:27:47 To help facilitate the communities both city staff and Sound
3:27:52 Transit staff working together to be able to get projects in the ground sooner. So
3:27:56 with that I conclude my remarks and would happily take any questions you have. Are
3:28:01 there questions of Peter Rogoff?
3:28:08 Are, is there any discussion?
3:28:13 Council President Goodman. I'd like to make a motion if I may. I would move,
3:28:19 I would move to schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular council
3:28:24 meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare a resolution in support
3:28:29 of the ballot measure. Moved and seconded discussion.
3:28:39 All those in favor of scheduling a public hearing to be held at the regular
3:28:44 council meeting of September 19th 2016. and direct the administration to prepare
3:28:50 a resolution in support of the ballot measure. Signify by saying aye.
3:28:56 That carries unanimously. Peter, thank you very, very much. Thank you for
3:29:02 getting the slides up.
3:29:27 And I, I believe, I see someone
3:29:33 who is ready to receive this. If she would come forward.
3:29:44 How you doing this evening? Good, how are you? I'm doing great. So I have
3:29:49 a proclamation here. And as all proclamations, there are a whole bunch of
3:29:54 whereases in them. So I would ask that after the whereas you think a little
3:30:00 bit about what the proclamation is saying because there's a real
3:30:06 need behind this. So whereas our King County cities recognize adequate
3:30:12 nutrition as a basic goal for each citizen. Whereas no
3:30:17 parent should have to send a child.
3:31:30 A call to order the City Council regular meeting this Tuesday, September
3:31:36 the 6th, 2016. And I ask those who would like to join the Council and
3:31:41 myself in the Pledge of Allegiance to please stand.
3:31:48 I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America
3:31:53 and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation, under God,
3:31:59 indivisible, with leadership and justice for all.
3:32:08 With that, we will now move to special business. We
3:32:13 have three items under special business this evening. The first is Agenda Bill
3:32:19 7222, Consideration to Support Sound
3:32:24 Transit 3 Plan, November the 8th, 2016,
3:32:30 Ballot Item. And with that, I would like to introduce
3:32:35 Sound Transit CEO, Peter Rogoff.

Attendance

Council / Members (7)
Eileen Barber
Mariah Bettise
Stacy Goodman
Tola Marts
Mary Lou Pauly
Bill Ramos
Paul Winterstein

Motions and votes (7)

Schedule a public hearing to be held at the regular Council meeting of September 19, 2016; and Direct Administration to prepare a resolution in support of the ballot measure. . b)
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by WINTERSTEIN
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Adopt Ordinance No. 2777, amending Chapter 16.35 of the Issaquah Municipal Code relating to Construction Hours; amending Section 3.64.010 of the Issaquah Municipal Code relating to fees imposed.
Moved by PAULY · seconded by WINTERSTEIN
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Amend Section 16.35.010, Hours of Construction, by striking the provision to extend construction hours during the dry season as follows: “16.35.010 Hours of construction. A. Except as permitted in subsection B of this section, or through a separate franchise agreement with the City, any non-emergenc…
Moved by MARTS · seconded by PAULY
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Refer AB 7234 to the September 15, 2016 Council Infrastructure Committee for review and recommendation, returning to the full Council on September 19, 2016. . 09-06-16 City Council Regular Meeting Minutes Page 7813
Moved by RAMOS · seconded by PAULY
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Adopt Ordinance No. 2778, pursuant to RCW 35A.63.220 and RCW 36.70A.390; imposing a temporary six month moratorium upon the receipt and processing of project permit applications for certain development; setting forth findings of fact in support of said moratorium; imposing the moratorium; providing …
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by PAULY
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Amend Section 3 of the ordinance as follows: ―…Nothing in this ordinance shall be construed to extinguish, limit or otherwise infringe upon any permit applicant’s vested development rights — as defined by state law and City of Issaquah regulations — with respect to any complete permit application su…
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by PAULY
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein
Enter into the Conditional Settlement Agreement. .
Moved by GOODMAN · seconded by PAULY
Carried 7-0
In favor: Eileen Barber, Mariah Bettise, Stacy Goodman, Tola Marts, Mary Lou Pauly, Bill Ramos, Paul Winterstein