Steve Kinsey
on Congestion Management in Marin
An Interview by Wes Starratt, Senior Writer
Steve
Kinsey is a member of the Marin County Board of Supervisors; Chair,
Marin County Congestion Management Agency; and recently elected
Chair of the Metropolitan Transportation Agency.
BC: As chairperson of the Marin
County Congestion Management Agency (CMA), would you comment on a
recent letter from Water Transit Authority (WTA) to CMA that called
attention to the unmet funding for new ferries for Marin County,
since the county will not be eligible for funds from the proposed
toll increase on state-owned bridges, and since the Golden Gate
Bridge, Highway and Transportation District has no funding plans for
the long-term-expansion of ferry service.
"Marin County is strongly
supportive of ferry service. We are the shining light of what ferry
service can do on the Bay. As for what we can do as a county for the
expansion of ferry service, we have been very active in promoting
additional ferry terminal sites, both at San Quentin and Port
Sonoma.
"The role that I see for the
county’s local sales tax is to support ferry service from the land
side, not from the water side. By supporting the ferries from the
landside, I mean first and foremost creating strong access to our
ferry terminals. Over the long term, the other thing that we can
continue is to promote the development of our rail program, because
if we can create a rail program that extends to a ferry terminal,
then we will be providing a dramatic market for ferry expansion.
"The reality is that Marin
County voters have said to us in surveys that we have taken in 1998
and 2001 that, although they recognize transportation as a regional
problem, they are very protective of their local ‘self-help’
dollars, and want to see those dollars spent on services within
Marin County. That means that we can make our contribution by
getting people to the ferry."
BC: Would you comment on
the editorial in the March 8th issue of the Marin Independent
Journal which was critical of the Water Transit Authority for not
including funding for Marin County ferry service in the proposed
increase in tolls on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, which is, of
course, used extensively by Marin commuters.
"Senator Perata created the
Water Transit Authority (WTA) with an eye toward having it do the
front-end work, while he felt that it was his job to find the
funding. His Regional Measure 2 for adding a third dollar to the
tolls on state-owned bridges was his version of doing just that. All
of the counties and transit agencies have had an opportunity to
participate in developing the expenditures and recommendations. But,
we are only at the starting point, because once that list is
developed and publicly presented in the legislation, then it’s
good old-fashioned politicking to see what stays on and what is
added. The WTA wasn’t the only transit agency to ask for toll
money. Among others, the Sonoma Marin Area Rail Transit (SMART)
asked for money and is a potential recipient of $35 million from the
bridge toll increase.
"Marin County was not well
served by Regional Measure 1 that put the first dollar on bridge
tolls in 1988. So, I think that we are due more in Measure 2. A
large number of our residents use the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, as
well as people moving through Marin County on our highways. So, yes,
I think that we are due more dollars, and would like to see some
funding for ferries in Marin County. But , if I look at the system
as a whole, I think that water transit around the Bay is being given
a fare shake by Regional Bridge Toll Measure 2."
BC That same editorial in the
March 8th Marin IJ was also critical of the Water Transit Authority
for down-playing a potential ferry terminal to serve northern Marin,
Sonoma, and Napa counties from Port Sonoma at the mouth of the
Petaluma River. To quote the editorial, "Two years ago, when
the Water Transit Authority was just getting started, Marin
officials had to force the agency to include the possibility of a
Port Sonoma ferry service in its version for launching ferries Bay
Area-wide." What is your comment on the apparent lack of
enthusiasm for Port Sonoma?
"I respect the fact that
people in Novato, in particular, feel that Port Sonoma is an
especially important opportunity. But I have mixed feelings about it
myself. I think that the SMART (Sonoma Marin Area Rail Transit)
railroad does need to get to a ferry. The most expedient route would
be to the Larkspur ferry, but at this time the politics of Larkspur
do not support making the ferry terminal the terminus for the SMART
rail line. It would be outstanding to get the rail line to go to a
transit hub at San Quentin, and I am working as hard as I can to get
that to happen. But, even under the best scenarios, it’s a
question mark. So, I think that its not an unreasonable thought to
say let’s not let go of Port Sonoma as another point at which the
SMART railroad could come into contact with a ferry.
"My general attitude about
transit connector sites is that they are best suited for a
mixed-use, transit-oriented development in active urban areas rather
than in rural outposts. Given the land-use constraints of the Port
Sonoma site and the enormous opposition from the environmental
community, I think Port Sonoma is a long shot. But if you handicap
Larkspur and San Quentin, neither of which looks very promising for
rail service, then you could turn to ferry service connected to
buses, and I think Larkspur continues to be an outstanding ferry
site with improving bus access.
"In all fairness to the WTA,
we have been advised that the WTA "did succeed in getting funds
allocated for environmental and planning studies of the proposed
Port Sonoma ferry service."
BC: Let’s turn to the proposed
Marin sales tax measure and some of the priorities that are being
suggested by the Marin Congestion Management Agency (CMA) of which
you are the chairperson.
"Actually, we are not quite
there. At our March meeting, the CMA adopted ‘A Vision of the
Future,’ a sustainable transportation system that promotes
mobility and maintains quality of life. It is a 25-year vision that
is not fiscally constrained, since we cannot yet identify all of the
funding. Now that we have that ‘vision,’ we can establish
priorities for implementation, and determine the role of sales tax
money. Keep in mind that very few transportation projects are funded
from a single source; so, you have to think of all of the funding
sources working together.
"In Marin County, local
residents are saying that, while recognizing that solving local
transportation problems is a regional issue, they want to see local
sales-tax dollars spent for local projects. So, I think that our CMA
is first going to make a commitment that our future money from STIP
(the State Transportation Improvement Program, the largest source of
federal and state dollars, largely based on gasoline taxes) will be
used for HOV (high occupancy vehicle) lanes on Highway 101 for
express buses and car-pool vehicles, and for highway interchange
improvements.
"At a later stage, we are
going to turn to local sales tax dollars. "We have learned that
one way to get significant support for local sales tax measures is
to provide local flexibility in the use those dollars. We will
return of a portion of these funds to local communities to give them
a chance to decide how best to invest them. We are also going to see
a portion of the money go to our highly successful national model
program, ‘Safe Routes to School, ‘ which addresses the fact that
one of our biggest causes of congestion in the morning is the
significant number of vehicles that are taking children to school.
"We are also going to have to
commit ourselves to the redesign of our bus transit system, because
we are on the verge of a complete collapse of the bus transit system
in Marin County, due to the Golden Gate Bridge District’s
financial problems. I think that we should use this crisis as an
opportunity to come up with a more cost- effective, more
environmentally friendly, and more community-scale bus transit
system so that we don’t have 45-foot-long diesel buses, largely
empty, rolling through our neighborhoods.
"In addition, there are
certain arterial collector roads in the county where congestion is
clearly a problem. We could target some of our investments to the
most congested of those streets.
"CMA will begin discussing
these options at its March meeting, and working over the next
several months to refine them. Then, we will be sending a draft out
to the broader community for review and comments.
"Things that we know that we
will not have in this sales tax measure include
anything about rail, since SMART has its own funding capabilities,
and anything about land use. You couldn’t buy enough land to have
a true impact on congestion. And I am pleased that the Marin
Conservation League, at my request, has reversed its previous stand
on the use of transportation funding for land us acquisition."
BC: What about sales tax timing
and changes in voting requirements?
"Since CMA has yet to agree
on the sales tax measure, and since we are compounding the problem
with a war and a very weak economy, I think that you conclude that
it is a real long shot for the November ballot, but I would be
surprised if we hadn’t gone to the voters by 2004, either in March
or November.
"The other thing is that,
with the collapse of the state budget, there may be a possibility to
get a constitutional amendment to reduce voting requirements for
transportation sales taxes from a super two- thirds majority down to
a simple majority or a 55% majority as covered by Senate
Constitutional Amendment 2 and Assembly Amendment 4 currently in the
state legislature. We absolutely need to create a situation where a
significant majority of the people can get something done. The
two-thirds requirement is virtually unachievable. Right now there
are no Republicans that have signed on to the idea, and I think that
it going to take a long, hot summer, and a lot of pressure before
any of them will."
BC: What about being elected
Chairperson of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission?
"I am looking forward to the
opportunity to serve MTC. It is a challenging time with the
reauthorization of TEA-21 by the Congress (Transportation Equity
Act, the Federal program for transportation), as well as a number of
opportunities that we face to create a more connected Bay Area
transit system. That’s really my goal.
"I just came back from
Washington, where I was advocating an expansion of the Ferry
Discretional Program, which currently provides just under $40
million per year for ferry programs in Alaska, the State of
Washington, and New York City. San Francisco has always come in the
‘runner-up’ status. If we could grow the pie to $75 million, I
feel confident that San Francisco would get its fair share.
"MTC has the authority to
increase the regional gasoline tax up to ten cents per gallon, and
we could put that on the ballot anytime between now and the year
2007. But, all of our polling a couple of years ago suggests that
the public is very protective of the gasoline price. At that time,
the break point of what we thought we could get was only a couple of
pennies. As the economy revives, however, I think that people might
be in a better frame of mind for solutions, and may be willing to
fund a better break. Over the course of the next year, we will be
having some dialogue with folks about this question.
"Money is just the vehicle;
what people want is a better connected transportation system. When I
talk about connectivity, I think about things like MTC’s TransLink
Program where we have a universal card for use on many transit
systems, and MTC’s voice-activated Dial-511 transportation
information system.
"We are also doing some
connectivity studies to look at how the different transit agencies
come together and what we can do to create a seamless transfer for
travelers. We also have transitinfo.org, which is an online transit
planner. So, those are the kind of things that we are working on to
make our existing transit agencies more effective in serving the
public."