Commuter
group wants Kingston-Seattle foot ferry, may start its own
By
Susan Gilmore - June 19, 2007
Seattle
Times
Commuters
who used to take the passenger ferry from Kingston to downtown Seattle have
banded together and may make a pitch to begin a new ferry service.
"I
think we have a viable plan, but we need money," said Nels Sultan, who
heads Kingston Express, a nonprofit corporation that is trying to put together
a plan to provide foot-ferry service between Kingston and Seattle.
Aqua
Express, a business consortium, holds the permit for the service — and has
applied for an extension — but it shut down 18 months ago because of lower
ridership and high fuel costs.
Meanwhile,
Kitsap Transit has been pushing to finance passenger ferries, but voters have
twice turned down ballot measures to raise taxes to operate foot ferries. Dick Hayes, director of Kitsap Transit, said
the county may float yet another ballot measure for the ferries through an
increase in the motor-vehicle excise tax. "It's really uphill to pass this
on a full-county basis," he said.
But
no one has any money right now to do anything.
The
Port of Kingston just applied for a $3.5 million federal grant it hopes could
be used to contribute to passenger-ferry service.
"It's
a long shot," said port director Mike Bookey.
"A lot of people are competing for it and some better politically connected
than Kingston. But if you don't try, you don't have a chance."
If
Kingston could get the money, which could be used to buy passenger ferries,
it's not clear the money would go to Sultan's group. It could go to Aqua
Express, or another company or government entity. Sultan said Kingston Express does not support
extension of the Aqua Express permit, which would be its fourth extension.
Dan
Kermode, with the state Utilities and Transportation Commission,
said the permit expired June 4, and Aqua Express has asked for a two-year
extension. By law, the permit can be extended for just one year, and Kermode said
the UTC will look at the request very carefully. A hearing is set for July 18. "For
each prior extension there were concrete tangible possibilities for resumption
of service. This one has slipped into the intangible, looking into the
future," Kermode said.
Sultan
envisions a small ferry that will begin with 80 passengers a day, growing by
one passenger a week. The service could break even with 500 passengers, he
said. He compares his group to a
cooperative preschool, where everyone works together. He thinks he could get by
with a crew of one or two, a captain and maybe someone to take tickets.
He
said tickets would be about $10 round-trip, which is still cheaper than taking
the car ferry to Edmonds and catching the Sounder commuter train to Seattle. Sultan
said his ferry plan would probably cost between $2 million and $3 million and
said it's conceivable, but unlikely, that the ferry could be operating this
year.
He
said the $3.5 million requested by the Port of Kingston "should be plenty,
in theory, to buy a very basic ferry and offer a bare-bones level of service
until we break even in five years."
"Aqua
Express was a great service," said Sultan, who commutes daily to his
engineering job in downtown Seattle. "We'd love to have it back."