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Sound Transit Set to Pick Site for South Light Rail Maintenance Facility

Stephen Fesler - December 09, 2021
An inside view of the Seattle operations and maintenance facility. (Sound Transit)

The Sound Transit board of directors have a big decision to make on siting a new operations and maintenance facility. Today, the board’s System Expansion Committee is set to recommend a preferred location, as part of a state- and federally-mandated environment review process, to the agency’s board. Three locations in South King County have been shortlisted. Whichever one is chosen as the preferred location is likely to be the ultimate development site for an 60-acre-or-more light rail storage, maintenance, and operations facility employing about 470 people.

The three shortlisted Operations and Maintenance Facility South (OMFS) locations present unusually complicated competing factors that are likely to challenge boardmembers’ political instincts. On the one hand, the board could choose the site in Kent, which sits upon a former active landfill site and presents a multitude of challenges to development and timing and financial risks. On the other hand, the board could choose one of two sites in Federal Way, which would require displacing civic institutions and residents and introduce permitting obstacles.

A closer look at the sites

Conceptual cost estimates of the varying site options and assumed long-term financial plan cost. (Credit: Sound Transit)
Map showing light rail extensions and potential OMFS locations. (Credit: Sound Transit)

So to understand why the choice to pick a location is challenging, it’s worth digging into how each of the shortlisted locations compare in broad strokes:

Both Federal Way options would require that Sound Transit obtain street vacations to proceed with site development and code deviations. That would put additional power in the hands of Federal Way, but the agency assumes that it would be able to obtain these approvals. Additionally, Sound Transit has conducted a federally-required equity analysis on all of the site option and did not identify any disparate impacts on communities of color because of a project.

Tough choices ahead for decision-makers

A final decision on a preferred location won’t be made until the Sound Transit board’s December 16th meeting, but today’s recommendation will be an important statement and could weigh heavily on decision-making by the full board next week. The board will ultimately need to pick a preferred alternative to be studied as part of Final Environmental Impact Statement next year, which could be issued toward the middle or end of 2022. That would allow the board to then proceed to selecting a project to be built, paving the way for project design and construction in the years ahead (2023 to 2029). The facility could ultimately open in 2029 prior to the planned Tacoma Dome and West Seattle light rail extensions in 2032.

Nevertheless, each site presents issues that could make favoring one over the others an unpopular choice. Yet, there are critical considerations that boardmembers will need to keep in mind in advancing a preferred alternative: security of the overall Sound Transit 3 program by keeping the project on schedule and within an affordable cost window. In that vein, it’s abundantly clear that the Kent site should be eliminated since it would risk delaying the entire Tacoma Dome and West Seattle Link Extensions and may force cutting back on the project’s quality. It would also betray promises to voters. That leaves the Federal Way locations as the best remaining choices. Weighing those is still no easy task given that residents, businesses, and institutions would be displaced in the process, but the S 336th Street location would displace the fewest.

Tough choices are part of a decision-maker’s jobs. But whether or not boardmembers make a prudent one will be tested today.

You can contact the board to share you opinions in advance of the meeting.

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