Story Published:
Mar 23, 2002 at 6:33 AM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 30, 2006 at 11:54 PM PDT
OLYMPIA - Gov. Gary Locke has signed off on the compromise
that broke the long-running and contentious deadlock over building
a new Tacoma Narrows bridge, clearing the way for construction to
begin on the $800 million span this summer.
Lawmakers over the past two years have battled over a second
bridge to ease the bottleneck between Tacoma and the Kitsap and
Olympic peninsulas, first over how to finance its construction,
then over how much of its costs would be borne by toll payers.
"For over a year, this project has been fully permitted and
ready for construction. Now that the Legislature has finally agreed
to a financing structure, construction can begin," Locke said
Friday. "It was a tough fight, a lot of philosophical
differences."
Sen. Bob Oke, one of the bridge's biggest proponents, wore a
double-bridge lapel pin given to him by his wife, Judy, in 1996,
the year some optimists hoped construction would begin.
"If we had started that year, it would be completed," said
Oke, R-Port Orchard. "We'd be cutting the ribbon."
Instead Oke is looking forward to the groundbreaking, and
looking back at a twisted road of broken deals and political power
plays.
Although only a small percentage of Washington residents will
use the bridge on a regular basis, it became a pet project of House
Speaker Frank Chopp over the past two years.
For eight years, the state had a contract with United
Infrastructure of Washington calling for the private company to
finance, build and operate the new bridge. Traffic would be
reconfigured to run only one direction on each bridge, and the
company would repay its financing with tolls on the new bridge of
about $3 per vehicle, increasing to $5 in later years.
But Chopp, D-Seattle, opposed the deal, saying it would cost
toll payers hundreds of millions of dollars more than having the
state finance the bridge. It would also leave control of a public
road in private hands, he said.
So last year he blocked repeal of a 40-year-old law that banned
tolls on the existing bridge. Since toll traffic would essentially
have flowed over both bridges under the plan, that law had soured
the deal.
This year, with Chopp's public financing plan a done deal, the
bridge drama entered a second act, when he and Senate
Transportation Chairwoman Mary Margaret Haugen squared off over
whether the bridge's toll-paying users or the state's taxpayers
would pick up the tab for $39 million worth of improvements to the
existing bridge and roads on either end of the new bridge.
Chopp wanted the state to pay for the improvements from gas-tax
revenues, while Haugen, D-Camano Island, favored shifting the cost
to toll payers so gas tax money could go to projects elsewhere in
the state.
The Legislature's two chambers passed competing versions of the
bill, but eventually, the Senate backed down and accepted Chopp's
version.
Neither Chopp nor Haugen showed up at Friday's bill-signing
ceremony, a jovial affair where Locke passed out official pens to a
happy crowd that included U.S. Rep. Norm Dicks, state lawmakers,
lobbyists, businessmen and labor leaders.
"It's been a long time coming," said Dicks, who worked to push
the compromise through. "I've seen so many accidents out there,
and it's just getting worse. I just urged people to do the right
thing."
Larry O'Bryon, vice president of United Infrastructure, was
already huddling with Department of Transportation officials,
preparing to renegotiate the contract for the bridge. The company
will still design and build the bridge, but its financing and
operation will be the state's responsibility.
The state has agreed to pay United Infrastructure $30 million
for the work it has already done.
"We hope to be able to start construction sometime soon,
hopefully late summer," O'Bryon said.
Construction will take about 4 1/2 years. Motorists would pay a
round-trip toll of $3 for the first few years, eventually rising to
$5 a trip.
Tolls are expected to remain on the bridge until 2029. Over that
time, motorists would pay between $1.7 billion and $1.9 billion in
tolls.
For More Information:
Tacoma Narrows Bridge Web site -- tacomanarrowsbridge.com