Kingston
to seek passenger-ferry service
Seattle
Times – October 30, 2007
Susan
Gilmore
Buoyed
by a $3.5 million federal grant, the Port of Kingston is expected to submit a
plan to Gov. Christine Gregoire this week to begin passenger-ferry service
between Kingston and downtown Seattle.
A
private company, Aqua Express, offered passenger-ferry service from Kingston,
in Kitsap County, to downtown Seattle until October 2005, when low ridership
and high fuel costs prompted it to abandon the route. It still holds the state
permit on the route, but other companies can apply for it.
The
Port of Kingston has not said what it plans to do, but Kingston has long been
considered a valuable route for foot ferries, and commuters who used to ride
Aqua Express have formed a nonprofit, Kingston Express, to encourage
passenger-ferry service between Kingston and Seattle.
The
group envisions a small ferry that would begin with 80 passengers, growing by
one passenger a week, up to 500 passengers.
John
Blackman, one of the partners of Aqua Express, said he didn't know the Port was
preparing a business plan to send to the governor, but he said his company is
prepared to bid on the service.
"We
are interested in working with them to restart business," Blackman said.
"We're certainly set to compete to do the route."
Winning
the federal grant was a coup for the Port of Kingston. Port director Mike
Bookey called it a "longshot," when it submitted its application last
summer. "A lot of people are competing for it, and some better politically
connected than Kingston," he said at the time. "But if you don't try,
you don't have a chance."
Under
terms of the federal grant, the money can be used for the purchase of a ferry
or for dock construction, but not for operations.
Kitsap
Transit also has been pushing to finance passenger ferries, but voters twice
have turned down ballot measures to raise taxes to operate foot ferries.