Document Actions
Document Actions

I-985: Giant Sucking Sound

How Washington State Initiative 985 Would Siphon Millions of Dollars from Central and Eastern Washington to Greater Seattle

Sightline analysis finds that Tim Eyman's so-called "reduce traffic initiative" would actually increase traffic, slow transit, and redirect hundreds of millions of dollars from the state general fund to highway expansion in greater Seattle.

I-985: Giant Sucking Sound

Media contact:

Clark Williams-Derry
clark@sightline.org
206-447-1880, ext. 106

A new Sightline analysis (download the pdf here ) analyzes the impact of Initiative 985, up for a vote on this fall’s Washington State ballot, on eastern and central Washington.

I-985 would draw tax dollars from vehicle sales taxes and transportation projects all over Washington State, and put that money into a dedicated account controlled by the state legislature. At least $582 million would be deposited into this account over the next 5 years, to be used to change carpool lane management, synchronize traffic lights, and other purposes. 

However, our analysis of I-985’s spending priorities suggests that roughly 90 percent of this fund—more than $518 million over 5 years—would ultimately be directed towards Greater Seattle (King, Snohomish, and Pierce counties). Together, these three counties have:

  • All of the carpool lanes that would be affected by I-985;
  • About 90 percent of aggregate traffic congestion delays in the state;
  • Just over half of the state’s total population—enough to sway crucial political decisions about how state congestion money would be spent.

All told, Sightline estimates that Initiative 985 would siphon about $180 million from the rest of the state into Greater Seattle—or $229 for the average four-person family living outside of greater Seattle—through 2013. This money would no longer be available to the state general fund, where it would otherwise pay for local schools, law enforcement, and other statewide priorities.

I-985 essentially requires Washington residents throughout the state to make substantial contributions to a transportation fund that will mostly be spent on Greater Seattle roads. This raises substantial tax fairness and equity issues for residents of eastern and central Washington, as well as residents of small towns and rural areas throughout the state.

 

 

 

Publication date: 10/05/2008 | Topic(s): Sprawl & Transportation | Publication type: Report
send feedback or bugs about sightline.org to ask_us@sightline.org
site credits | premium content icon = premium content; free registration required
Now On the Blog
Fair Funding for Stormwater Cleanup
Supporting a polluter-pays approach to cleaning up stormwater.
Lisa Stiffler 02/07/2010
Fewer Cars, Safer Mortgages
A low-car neighborhood reduces the risk of mortgage default.
Clark Williams-Derry 02/05/2010
The Bored Tunnel's $60 Million Cost Increase
A 3 percent overrun on an expensive project could be pricey.
Eric de Place 02/04/2010
Social Bookmarks
FlickrFacebookTwitter
Download the report
Free with registration (or log in if you're already a member)
I-985: Giant Sucking Sound (pdf of report)
Please read our Free Use Policy