TRU took it to the streets today for a mini-march with our ‘dead bus’. Remember, rally Thursday 6/26 4:00 PM at City Hall! Public hearing in City Council chambers begins at 5:30 PM. Can you help with publicity? Print a poster or some flyers to post at your bus stops or hand out to fellow riders on your routes.
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Rally for Public Transit!
Mobility is a human right. Public transit is basic infrastructure. Let’s rally to send a message to all our elected leaders that we can’t wait any longer for a fully-funded public mass transit system, affordable and accessible to all! Facebook Event Page.
Fund Metro Now!
Transit Riders Union Rally & Press Conference
Thursday, June 26: 4:00 – 5:00 PM
600 4th Avenue, outside Seattle City Hall
Following this rally there will be a Public Hearing at City Hall of the Seattle Transportation Benefit District, concerning a possible November 2014 ballot measure to raise funding to save Seattle’s bus service. TRU and allies will be there to testify in support of city action & specifically to support the amendment to the Mayor’s proposal put forward by Councilmembers Sawant and Licata. Come testify in support of progressive transit funding!
Public Hearing
Seattle Transportation Benefit District
Thursday, June 26: 5:30 – 8:00 PM
City Hall, Council Chambers
600 4th Avenue, Seattle
New TRU Mailing Address
The Transit Riders Union has a new mailing address:
Transit Riders Union
P.O. Box 20723
Seattle, WA 98102
Why Are We Even Talking About Cutting Public Transit?
With the failure of Proposition 1 on April 22, the future of our public transit system hangs in the balance. In September King County Metro will implement the first of four planned rounds of bus service cuts. If all of these cuts happen, 16% of our bus service, or 550,000 annual service hours, will simply disappear.
We all know that these cuts are unacceptable. They are unacceptable from an economic point of view, they are unacceptable from an environmental point of view, and most of all they are unacceptable from a human point of view. To gut our public transit system when buses are already overcrowded, when the polar ice sheets are melting, and when tens of thousands of King County residents have no other way to get around, is nothing short of insane.
The City of Seattle and other cities in King County now have a duty to act to save as much bus service as possible. Mayor Murray has proposed a sales tax increase of 0.1% and car tab fees of $60 to be put on the ballot in November: Prop 1 replayed in Seattle only. While this is preferable to service cuts, we believe the city should consider more progressive options first. We strongly support the amendment put forward by Councilmembers Kshama Sawant and Nick Licata, to replace the sales tax increase with a Commercial Parking Tax increase and an Employer Head Tax.
But in the end, we cannot forget that all these local options are last-ditch emergency measures, and we cannot let arguments over which is the least bad distract us from the real question: Why are we even talking about cutting public transit? Public transit is basic infrastructure, and we should not be forced to vote to preserve it. Affordable mass transit is an environmental, economic, and social necessity, and it needs to be treated as such by those who represent us in government.
IMPORTANT UPDATE: Signature-Gathering Suspended
We just learned that signature-gathering for Initiative 118 has been suspended, and the Mayor is expected to announce a ballot measure to save Metro service this Tuesday, May 13. Thank you to everyone who has been out collecting signatures. You can read more here: https://www.keepseattlemoving.com/
It’s Not Over Yet! TRU Endorses Initiative 118
Prop 1 went down hard, despite the heroic efforts of TRU members and volunteers and many other organizations and individuals. But we’re not giving up the fight! At our May Membership Meeting, TRU voted to endorse Initiative 118, which would at least save much of Seattle’s bus service by raising property taxes by $0.22 per $1,000 of assessed value. And while TRU members and volunteers will be on the front lines of this effort, we’ll also be working to plan our strategy for the November elections and next session in Olympia.
We have only until June 4 to gather over 20,000 valid signatures. Want to volunteer with us? Email contact@transitriders.org or leave a message at 206-651-4282. You can also stop by the Labor Temple, Hall 6 on Monday, May 12 between 6 and 8 pm to pick up petition sheets and other materials. You can also print petition sheets here. It is important that TRU can keep in contact with the riders we talk to, so please also print these TRU contact sheets and encourage petition signers to sign up for our email or phone lists.
Flyer in Spanish
For printing – or contact us if you’d like some printed.
What do 17% cuts mean?
This infographic from Sightline Institute’s blog helps to visualize it: