Seattle’s new City Council held its first Transportation Committee meeting Tuesday, and every member in attendance was a new Councilmember. The only returning Transportation Committee member is Dan Strauss (D6), but he was excused Tuesday because he was in Olympia on city business. Chair Rob Saka (D1), vice-chair Joy Hollingsworth (D3), and members Bob Kettle(D7) and Tanya Woo (interim citywide) were there to hear an introduction to SDOT’s work from SDOT Director Greg Spotts.
The meeting was an opportunity to get a sense of the committee’s early dynamics. Only Saka and Kettle spoke at any length from the dais about their transportation opinions. Councilmember Woo asked questions about community outreach and Sound Transit station siting, but did not pontificate. CM Kettle’s bike lane misinformation ended up being the most notable takeaway from the committee’s first meeting, unfortunately. More on that below.
Saka opened reiterating some things he told Seattle Bike Blog recently, namely that he has “a heavy focus” on bridges and streets. “Representing District 1, which includes West Seattle, one of my goals is to make sure no other community in Seattle experiences what we experienced with a protracted closure of a critical bridge,” he said. “I also want to focus on safety and comfort of pedestrians and making real tangible progress on our Vision Zero goals in part through a once-in-a-generation investment in new sidewalk infrastructure.”
Before turning the mic over to Director Spotts, Saka also acknowledged the $1.2–$1.7 billion elephant in the room. “I look forward to a spirited discussion about the size and direction of the upcoming transportation levy with you all and members of the public.”
You can watch the full meeting via Seattle Channel and download SDOT’s slides (PDF). The presentation starts at 13:30, and they paused at various points in the presentation to take questions from the Council around the 29:20, 50:15, and 1:106:00 marks.
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