By Rep. Liz Pike, Guest columnist
Recently, I held a town hall meeting to discuss future transportation solutions. More than 150 citizens attended to hear about creative ideas presented by the private sector. From that outreach and dozens of meetings with business leaders and citizens, several important points have become apparent as we look to solve our local transportation crisis.
1. Strong leadership is required now to address traffic congestion hampering our region’s economy.
The solution is two-fold; create 50,000 new jobs in Clark County and identify new corridors to connect with Oregon. The former requires bold regulatory reform and a massive overhaul of Washington’s Growth Management Act. The latter requires a process whereby legislators from both sides of the river meet face-to-face to agree on a comprehensive plan that would address current and future transportation needs.
2. We need to put the failed Columbia River Crossing (CRC) behind us permanently!
Three years ago, the CRC project ripped our community apart. Wounds are finally healed. Sadly, it appears special interests who would gain financial benefit are trying to resurrect this failed project. Transportation policy makers in Olympia have two choices; one is visionary, the other reactionary.
3. We need a visionary, common-sense path forward — not a reactionary, rear-view mirror approach!
I introduced House Bill 1222 to address the woefully inadequate transportation system between our two states. The measure would have created a bi-state bridge legislative work group made up of eight Washington and eight Oregon legislators, with an equal number of Democrats and Republicans. The group would address the Interstate 5 (I-5) corridor, identify new corridors, develop a 10-year, 25-year and 50-year plan, and report recommendations to the Legislature. Unfortunately, the House Transportation Committee advanced a controversial, reactionary bill that could send us backward toward a CRC revival with a 14-10 vote along party lines.
4. Washington leaders must acknowledge stark political realities.
Alarming financial predicaments face both Washington and Oregon.
Oregon’s I-5 corridor is failing. Any new bridge built in the same corridor that dumps freight haulers and commuters into the existing Portland traffic morass would do nothing to fix congestion. It would waste precious tax dollars and result in a nicer parking lot leading south on I-5.