While Portland and its surrounding communities have been besieged with Pro Trimet expansionist propaganda the 'anti Trimet' forces continue marching on.
While Trimet officials 'ignore' every single negative thing that occurs (such as the demise of CRC which was due to Trimet involvement, election of anti Trimet officials in Clackamas, The Tigard and Tualatin votes) the movement to curtail Trimet hegemony continues.
The man who brought about sweeping changes in the way the city of
Tigard handles light rail is at it again, this time hoping to change the
way the entire county thinks about the issue.
Tim Esau said
plans to build a high-capacity transit line from Portland to Tigard and
Tualatin affect all of Washington County, and county residents need to
decide for themselves whether or not the project should continue.
Esau
submitted an initiative petition to Washington County on Dec. 3,
requiring a countywide vote on any new rail or transit project.
Under
Esau’s petition, the county’s Board of Commissioners wouldn’t be able
to finance new public transit projects — chiefly a new MAX line or a
Eugene-style rapid bus service currently being considered as part of the
Southwest Corridor Plan — without voter approval.
“I really want
to make sure that we all agree to this, and not just 100 guys with a
vision that can get their pockets lined and live some dream,” Esau said.
“We will still be stuck with a traffic solution that doesn’t solve our
needs in Washington County.”
The petition requires county
commissioners to spell out exactly how much the projects would cost and
forbids the county from diverting funds marked for road maintenance and
construction for public rail transit projects without a public vote.
Although
no funding options have yet been sought for the Tigard transit plan,
Esau said he expects it to be paid for through already existing street
fees and other services.
The petition also forbids Washington
County from lobbying or influencing public officials to change how they
fund road maintenance and construction projects.
County needs a say
The
petition is similar to a ballot measure Esau put before Tigard voters
in March, which calls for a public vote before the city can approve
plans for either a MAX light-rail line or rapid bus line.
Since
Esau’s ballot measure was passed earlier this year, Tualatin voters
approved a similar measure, and Metro has had to rethink its plans for
the line.
“We’ve got a serious need for transportation
improvements, both in infrastructure and operationally,” Esau said.
“Those won’t be served with a $6 billion rail project when you have real
people trying to get from one part of the county to the other.”
Esau’s
fight in Tigard earlier this year was largely centered on local
residents taking a stand in local affairs. Proponents of Esau’s measure
cried foul at outside influences, such as the city of Portland, deciding
how to run a rail system through Tigard.
But Esau’s current
petition would require all Washington County voters to weigh in on
transit projects, no matter where they are being built across the
county.
“When county funds are involved, it affects all of us,”
Esau said. “When the county can’t pay for road maintenance, that impacts
my tax statement every year.”
Two years to gather signatures
Many
have claimed the ballot measures in Tigard, Tualatin and King City were
thinly veiled attempts to kill the Southwest Corridor Plan outright,
but Esau said it’s all about voter choice.
“I want to make sure voters get a say,” Esau said. “This will set guidelines at the county level.”
Esau
and other opponents of the Southwest Corridor Plan have called it a
boondoggle, saying the project is too expensive and the corridor would
be better served by additional bus service and infrastructure.
Esau said a high-capacity transit system isn’t a bad idea for the area, as long as it’s well thought out.
“If
it’s compelling, I’ll vote for it,” he said. “Make the case for me.
Don’t just saddle me with a huge burden. People in the city of Tigard
won’t be very happy to spend money here in the near future with all that
we’ll have to pay for. I’m a cheapskate, but we have infrastructure
obligations that we need to live up to.”
Esau will have two years to collect the 12,000 signatures he needs to get on the countywide ballot.
“I
know of about 10,000 already who are willing to sign it from the ones
who signed before in King City, Tigard and Tualatin,” he said. “I don’t
see this as a super-huge challenge. If anything, our collection methods
will be easier. I am very confident we can get the signatures we need
for the measure.”
Planners for the Southwest Corridor Plan
steering committee plan to make a decision next spring about which mode —
light rail or rapid bus service — it wants to move forward with. Esau
said he’d like his initiative to be voted on before that happens.
Washington
County is expected to issue a title for the initiative petition by the
end of this week, then Esau can begin collecting signatures. Anti-transit measure could head to county vote
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