2 • The Southwest Portland Post EDITORIAL April 2018 How will congestion pricing on Interstate 5 affect traffic on Barbur Boulevard and our neighborhood streets? OPEN FORUM By Don Baack Will a Barbur Boulevard light rail alignment clog our Southwest arterials with traffic diverted from Interstate 5? I asked Metro’s Southwest Corridor team these questions recently. The answer I received was very unsettling. In effect, Metro says that the Draft Environmental Impact Statement rules spelled out by the Feds do not require them to study what is likely the largest strategic change to our use of the freeway system since it was built in the 1960s. Metro says they do not plan to study the impact on vehicle traffic of congestion pricing before they decide which route to locate the light rail line, along Barbur Boulevard or closer to Interstate 5. This is a bad decision! Even the most uninformed person in the Portland region will say that if it costs more to drive on Interstate 5 during peak periods, many people will choose to use alternative routes. The alternative routes are Barbur Boulevard and many of our local arterials and guided by GPS, even local streets. In recent years, the state of Wash- ington put a toll on one of the bridges across Lake Washington. The daily average traffic dropped from 103,000 cars per day to 68,000 cars per day, a 34 percent decrease. Now imagine Barbur Boulevard with 34 percent of the daily traffic of Interstate 5 added to the volume it already carries. The 2014 average number of ve- hicles counted by the Oregon Depart- ment of Transportation at Iowa Street (the new bridge site) was 142,000 per day. Thirty-four percent is 48,280 ve- hicles diverted onto Barbur Boulevard and our local streets. Now add in the additional conges- tion of having light rail down the middle of Barbur Boulevard from Terwilliger Boulevard to the West Portland Crossroads (Capitol High- way, south). Metro is not studying or even esti- mating any change in the travel time of their trains under these drastic traffic increase conditions. Their one track answer is that, given the trains will be on dedicated track, there will not be any changes in travel time if the Barbur alignment is chosen! Everything I read suggests that Metro is pushing to put the light rail alignment on Barbur Boulevard rather than a route near Interstate 5. Doing so will constrain the ability of the Oregon Department of Transpor- tation to make changes to Barbur Bou- levard to accommodate the increased traffic we all know will happen when congestion pricing is implemented. If Barbur Boulevard is not able to handle the additional traffic, guess where the spillover will happen? The traffic will crowd onto our two-lane arterials like Capitol Highway, Tay- lors Ferry Road, and even our local streets. If Metro chooses the Barbur Boule- vard alignment without studying the diversion impact of traffic, and then comes to the citizens of the region for a huge bond measure to fund the project, the fact that they did not even do an analysis of the impact of con- gestion pricing on Barbur Boulevard and other Southwest traffic will be a major issue. The Feds may not require the analysis, but voters will want to see a thorough unbiased analysis of the impact of the diverted traffic on the street and on light rail operations before we invest in a project that will be around for 100-plus years. Alternatively, Metro can choose the Interstate 5 route and dramatically reduce the risk of voters rejecting the bond measure. Don Baack is a Hillsdale neighborhood activist, SW Trails board member, and longtime advocate for active transporta- tion. The Post welcomes reader response. Please email guest columns (500 words) or letters (300 words) to editor@mult- nomahpost.com. We reserve the right to edit all submissions for brevity, clarity, punctuation, and libel concerns. Spring Garden Park (Continued from Page 1) cluding increases in accessibility, the lower meadow, added improvements to frontage parking on Dolph Court and a variety of contemplative areas. “I was pleased to see that the on-site staff worked with many neighbors as concerns came up,” said Sara Childers, who lives near the park. “We’re very excited about the devel- opments and the addition of hybrid nature play elements.” Park construction is on-going. Al- though there is still considerable work ahead, Yocum said the park bureau is on track for a grand opening event scheduled for June 16. The park bureau has a goal of open- ing the park to the public even earlier than that June date but exact timing is to be determined, due to weather and landscape establishment. 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