Jan. 13, 2008
Everett Herald op-edSafety comes first
for state transportation system
By Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen
Tragedy
strikes far too often on Washington highways.
According to the Traffic Safety Commission, 302 people
were killed in motor vehicle accidents on Washington state
highways in 2006 — the most recent year for which data are
available.
While each of these accidents has an emotional story
behind it, my job as the Chair of the Senate Transportation
Committee is to set aside the grief we all feel and focus on
the pragmatic, real-world issue at hand: how to reduce the
odds of these kinds of accidents happening again.
Our state is challenged by an ever-increasing number of
vehicles on our highways, which has lead to an accompanying
increase in the number of accidents, as well as frustrating
congestion. Meanwhile, limited resources force us to
prioritize our decisions about which projects get taken care
of first.
As far as I’m concerned, safety must be the highest
priority of our state transportation system.
There’s no doubt that Highway 2 in Snohomish County has
seen more than its share of deadly accidents — from January
1999 to June 2007 there were 39 fatal collisions, with a
total of 47 fatalities.
Law enforcement identified a contributing circumstance
for 23 of the collisions, and found the most common factors
were alcohol or drugs (12 collisions), exceeding the
reasonable safe speed or stated speed limit (6 collisions),
and the driver being fatigued, asleep or ill (4 collisions).
On top of that, we cannot ignore the changing nature of
how the highway is used. Development of the once-rural area
has brought an increase in eager commuters and younger, less
experienced drivers on a two-lane highway that was never
designed for its current capacity.
The state has an obligation to make Highway 2 safer, and
has been working on doing so for quite some time. The WSDOT
“US 2 Route Development Plan” has identified 56 projects to
enhance safety and reduce congestion between Snohomish and
Skykomish.
The route development plan calls for 34 safety-related
projects that are projected to cost less than $5 million
each, 12 safety-related projects are expected to cost more
than $5 million each, and 10 projects aimed primarily at
congestion relief that would cost a total of $600 to $900
million.
Everyone, including me, is in favor of getting these
projects done.
The catch is that no one I have spoken to can provide me
with a realistic source for the $2 billion it would take to
fund all of these projects at once. Until someone does,
we’ll have to prioritize how we allocate our limited
transportation dollars between these projects, and similar
projects all over the state.
Unfortunately, some people are more than willing to
ignore this reality.
There are some people who complain about “studying this
to death” — forgetting that much of the congestion on
Highway 2 is a result of local and regional government not
bothering to study the inevitable impact of development, and
ignoring or cutting corners on their transportation
infrastructure responsibilities.
There are others who insist that “congestion relief”
should be our top priority. They are apparently more
concerned with saving minutes than saving lives.
Building, maintaining, and improving our transportation
infrastructure isn’t cheap. Ferries are expensive. Viaducts
and floating bridges are expensive. Keeping mountain passes
open and clear of snow in the winter is expensive. Law
enforcement by the Washington State Patrol is expensive. And
so are all of the projects needed to make Highway 2 safer.
I feel the frustration along with everyone else who gets
stuck in traffic. My commute from Camano Island to Olympia
during the legislative session takes me through some of the
most congested miles of highway in our state — in Everett,
Seattle and Tacoma.
I get stuck in traffic just like everyone else, and agree
that we need to work towards reducing congestion on our
highways — but not at the risk of sacrificing safety.
Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen, D-Camano Island, is the
chair of the Senate Transportation Committee and represents
all of Island County and parts of Snohomish and Skagit
counties.
Return to Sen. Haugen's home page
|