Couple
floats idea of Gig Harbor-to-Seattle ferry run
Seattle
Times - October 19, 2007
By
Susan Gilmore
Would
commuters spend $800 a month to take a small passenger ferry from Gig Harbor to
Seattle to avoid traffic jams on Interstate 5?
That's
what a Gig Harbor couple are proposing in their attempt to begin jet-boat
service from the Kitsap Peninsula aboard their 38-foot, 12-passenger Gig.
In
comparison, the passenger ferry Chinook, which serves Vashon Island, is 143
feet long and can carry 350 passengers.
Patrick
Bender, the Gig's captain, said 12 people need to commit to the service before
it will begin, and so far there's been interest but no customers.
The
idea is the brainchild of Bender and David and Marcy Joseph, who own Pacific
Northwest Marine Services in Tacoma, and Gig Harbor Rent-A-Boat, which rents
kayaks and power boats.
"We
were just baseballing it around and David and I came up with the idea and went
for it," Bender said. "It's an hour drive and a lot of people don't
like the drive."
Dividing
$800 by 20 workdays a month comes out to $40 a day. He said with the price of
gas, the tolls on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge and parking in downtown Seattle,
the ferry wouldn't be much more expensive than driving — and a lot less
stressful.
Bender
said the trip by ferry is about 40 miles and would take about an hour.
Passenger-ferry
service in the Sound has not been without controversy.
In
Kitsap County, for example, measures to pay for passenger-ferry service to
Seattle have been put on the ballot twice and both times failed.
A
private company, Aqua Express, offered passenger-ferry service from Kingston to
downtown Seattle until October 2005, when low ridership and high fuel costs
prompted it to abandon the route.
And
Kingston Express, a nonprofit corporation, is trying to put together a plan to
provide foot-ferry service between Kingston and Seattle.
The
Kingston Express plan calls for a small ferry that will begin with 80
passengers a day, growing by one passenger a week. The service could break even
with 500 daily passengers, said Nels Sultan, who heads Kingston Express.
He
said round-trip tickets would be about $10, which is cheaper than taking the
car ferry to Edmonds and catching the Sounder commuter train.
Add
to the mix King County, which is putting together a plan to take over the
Vashon Island passenger-ferry route from the state. It also could consider
extending service to the Kitsap Peninsula.