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520 Toll Rates to Rise in July, I-90 Could Be Next

The toll hike of 2.5 percent is the first of planned, small annual increases through 2016, outlined in the plan approved by the Legislature last year.

Are you accustomed to the tolls on State Route 520 yet?

Well, get ready for the first of planned toll increases through 2016, the Washington State Department of Transportation announced today.

That first rate jump will hit us this July, with a 2.5 percent increase over the current tolls. That means 9 cents during the peak toll of $3.50, and 3 cents on the lowest rate of $1.10, according to the state.

Rates will increase 2.5 percent annually through 2015. That will be followed by a planned increase of 15 percent in 2016 during the weekday, and a 2.5 percent increase on the weekend.

The staged increases were , when the toll rates were approved for the bridge. Voters that would have limited tolls for only paying for projects they are directly funding.

State House Transportation Committee chair Rep. Judy Clibborn (D-Mercer Island) has also said that tolls on I-90 may also be necessary to help pay for a funding gap for the replacement costs associated with a new 520 floating bridge.

The tolls have been in place since . The toll originally .

The tolls will raise $1 billion overall toward the $4.65 billion State Route 520 bridge replacement and HOV program, according to the state. The project includes 12.8 miles of safety and mobility improvements from Interstate 5 in Seattle to State Route 202 in Redmond, the state reported.

Here's the announcement from the state DOT:

Toll rates on the State Route 520 floating bridge will increase 2.5 percent in July – 9 cents on the peak rate of $3.50 and 3 cents on the lowest rate of $1.10 – as part of a planned, small annual increase through 2016 outlined in the program’s financial plan.

The Washington State Department of Transportation briefed the Washington State Transportation Commission today, March 21, that this is the first of four annual 2.5 percent rate increases planned through 2015. The rate increase is needed to ensure revenue will meet costs and make debt payments to the bondholders, as required by bond contracts and the project financial plan.

Craig Stone, WSDOT Toll Division director, also told the commission today that SR 520 traffic and revenues are meeting expectations. For February, traffic was 17 percent higher than the plan’s forecast and revenues are 7 percent higher than forecast, Stone said.

“Tolling began Dec. 29 and we’ve had just two months of operation so far,” Stone said. “We’re pleased with the initial toll operations, and we’ll continue on course with our financial plan, which includes the upcoming, small toll increase.”

The commission, which sets toll rates in the state, reviewed the toll-rate increase today and took no action. This, in effect, confirms that the increase will occur July 1. Rates will increase 2.5 percent annually through 2015, then followed by a planned increase of 15 percent in 2016. Any toll increases beyond 2016 would be determined by the transportation commission, which annually reviews traffic and revenue to determine toll rates.

The new SR 520 floating bridge is planned for completion in late 2014.

At the time of the initial rate-setting decision in January 2011, the commission chose to include the 15 percent step increase after project completion, rather than start with a higher initial toll rate, and maintain consistent annual increases of 2.5 percent for the first four years.

With the 2.5 percent change, toll rates will be charged to the penny rather than rounded to the closest nickel. With no toll booths and all-electronic tolling, tolls to the penny can easily be collected.

“Raising toll rates by 2.5 percent isn’t expected to cause a significant increase in diversion,” Stone said. “Trips across the SR 520 bridge have reached 60 to 70 percent of pre-toll levels, which is right about what we expected. And traffic volumes on I-90 have increased 5 to 10 percent – also what we expected.”

The July rate increase affects all rates, whether weekday, weekend, Pay By Plate, or Pay By Mail.

About tolling on the SR 520 bridge

Tolling on SR 520 is expected to raise $1 billion overall toward the $4.65 billion SR 520 bridge replacement and HOV program, which builds 12.8 miles of safety and mobility improvements from Interstate 5 in Seattle to State Route 202 in Redmond. The existing SR 520 floating bridge opened to traffic in 1963, and is vulnerable to sinking during a severe storm after weathering decades of wind and waves. The new bridge will better withstand storms and move more people across the lake with a new transit/HOV lane for buses and carpools in each direction. The target date to open the new bridge to traffic is December 2014.

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Jerry Gropp Architect AIA May 15, 2013 at 02:07 pm
The Jury is still out. I liked the "Old Patch". J
Linda Mammano April 12, 2013 at 10:43 am
That is the best commentary on the subject to date. This should be on the front page of every localRead More newspaper. Finally pressure to bear. Thank you!!!
Thomas Imrich April 10, 2013 at 10:10 pm
Excellent assessments today, both by Mr. Horn here, and by Mr. Cero in today's MI Reporter. The keyRead More is that we need new blood in both the legislature, and in our City Council, to actually better understand the problems at hand and potential real solutions we'll need. Many of our elected and appointed officials are poorly representing their constituency. For example, Ms. Clibborn could readily put the brakes on this I-90 tolling tax diversion to fund 520 fiasco, in a heartbeat, through her leadership position for state transportation. But despite that tolling is a terrible precedent, and could even undermine the entire national interstate highway system, Ms. Clibborn is CHOOSING NOT TO fight I-90 bridge tolling. Apparently she and some of our waffling weak kneed Council members have made their choices about this issue, and about other debacles, like our seriously flawed highly subsidized mass transit, and our pending loss of carpool lanes. Now it is approaching the time to make our decisions, in the next election.
Kevin Scheid April 9, 2013 at 01:59 pm
Great article Jim. So despite the bad decisions and bad policy by the legislature, we can gatherRead More that the way out of this mess is to raise gas tax appropriately to pay for the roads. Additionally I might add, we can scale down on the upgrades and delay constructing the approaches to the 520 bridge. Scaling back these upgrades should not affect the safety or construction schedule of the 520 bridge and may eliminate the funding shortage entirely.