BREAKING NEWS:

  • letter
  • print
  • follow
Kitsap Transit rider Helen Wilson disembarks the No. 32 shuttle Wednesday morning. She relies on the transit system for much of her county travel. - Brad Camp/staff photo
Kitsap Transit rider Helen Wilson disembarks the No. 32 shuttle Wednesday morning. She relies on the transit system for much of her county travel.

Residents speak to Kitsap Transit’s proposed service cuts

By KELLY JOINES
Central Kitsap Reporter Contributor

Nov 29 2008

In her 70s, Helen Wilson relies on Kitsap Transit bus route No. 43 to get to medical centers, doctors and shopping.

Everyone has their own story as to why they ride the bus. Whether it’s a student attending courses at Olympic College, a 30-year-old businessman commuting daily to work in Seattle or the 70-year-old grandmother heading to a doctor’s appointment, each rely on Kitsap Transit’s bus routes daily.

With Kitsap Transit facing a $4.5 million deficit, proposed budget cuts place all Sunday service routes on a potential chopping block. In addition, there are some Saturday routes slated for discontinuation.

“They really need to keep it seven days a week,” Wilson said.

With her route discontinued Saturday and Sunday, she’d have to catch a taxi for medical attention and appointments on the weekends. Although Access bus service is available, Kitsap Transit requires a 24-hour notice and in the proposed budget cuts Access service could potentially be cut Sundays as well, according to Kitsap Transit’s second copy of proposed budget cuts released at a Nov. 18 transit board meeting.

“We are talking with the (transit) board relatively constantly; there will be changes (to the proposed budget cuts) but I don’t know which changes,” said Dick Hayes, executive director of Kitsap Transit. “We have a long way to get to reach what I would call a sustainable budget.”

Hayes said he hopes to have last-minute changes made and adopt the 2009 budget during the next board meeting scheduled for Dec. 16 at the Norm Dicks Government Center in Bremerton. The meeting begins at 9:45 a.m.

“There will be no special meetings, just the meeting we’ve promised,” he said in regard to a rumor that the 2009 budget was initially due Dec. 15. “I’ve asked people to look into the Dec. 15 deadline and I don’t think it exists.”

Local resident Clair Bourgeois, 44, also is concerned about the budget cuts. She is legally blind, has lupus, rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia. Her diagnosis gives her severe arthritis pains in her feet, hands and back, she said.

“I don’t have the option in my life to drive,” she said. “I need (Kitsap Transit) to remain the same until they can come up with a feasible route that will work with everyone.”

Bourgeois, a mother of two children, said her husband and her chose their current home because it’s right on the bus line.

“In these economic times we can’t just pick up and sell every time they cut another route,” she said. “The routed bus gives me my independence. It’s really important that I have my independence and have my bus service on Sundays and seven days a week.”

According to the proposed budget plan cuts, some efforts continue to gain ground. Feasibility studies for a passenger-only ferry boat from Bremerton to Seattle is listed in the proposed budget for 2009. However, the ferry failed the past two elections.

According to the budget plan, Kitsap Transit is no longer required to pay $200,000 toward dock equipment. Toll credits, ferry boat discretionary funding and other equity covers test trials, wake research and purchase of vessels.

Darrin Smith, 43, commutes daily on the No. 90 bus to the Bainbridge Island Ferry that goes to Seattle. He works for the federal government in the Columbia Tower.

“I’m upset that no one knows how much the foot ferry costs,” Smith said. “Once the funding is gone how are they going to operate that ferry? If buses aren’t making money how is another ferry going to make money when we already have a ferry system that’s losing money?”

Smith said the foot ferry doesn’t make sense to him because Kitsap voters have defeated the idea.

“I think that’s a money losing venture and the bus riders are having to pay,” Smith said. “We’re being sacrificed to pay for a ferry when we know the ferries don’t make money.”

Hayes said no local money will be used for the ferries.

“Two-thirds to three-fourths has been granted,” Hayes said of the total $5,553,000 grant funding needed. “There is not much we can do but wait until the rest of the money comes out of the federal pipeline. I think we have a good chance of getting those funds ... if the money doesn’t come through I don’t see how we can do it.”

  • letter
  • print
  • follow
COMMENTING RULES: We encourage an open exchange of ideas in the PNWLocalNews.com community, but we ask you to follow our guidelines for respecting community standards. In a nutshell, don't say anything you wouldn't want your mother to read. So keep your comments:
  • Civil
  • Smart
  • On-topic
  • Free from profanity

We ask that all participants own their words by registering for an account. It's a simple process that will take seconds and helps keep our comments free of trolls, cranks, and drive-by commenters.

As a community site, we ask that the community help by using the "Flag" button on each comment if they feel the comment has violated the rules. You can also use the up and down arrows on each comment to voice your opinion about that particular comment.

Want to tell us something but you don't want it to be public? Talk to us privately.

Most Read Stories

Most read in Kitsap County

  • Bainbridge house is one of a kind
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:10 AM · UPDATED
  • Let’s not target goose laying golden eggs
    PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT
    Jan 03 2009, 12:00 AM
  • Bainbridge Public Works Director Randy Witt resigns
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 06 2009, 2:28 PM · UPDATED
  • Island Snapshots | Storm Chasers-Bainbridge
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:11 AM · UPDATED
  • Bainbridge Police Blotter | FYI, Jan. 3
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 03 2009, 5:00 PM
  • Fire guts Port Madison home
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Today, 7:29 PM · UPDATED
  • Two dead following collision on Brownsville Highway
    NORTH KITSAP HERALD
    Dec 31 2008, 9:32 AM · UPDATED
  • The Year In Review 2008
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 05 2009, 10:03 AM · UPDATED
  • Suquamish man airlifted following jump from Agate Pass bridge
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Today, 3:17 PM · UPDATED
  • Bainbridge Islanders take a polar plunge | Slideshow
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 05 2009, 11:44 AM · UPDATED

Most read in Washington

  • Bainbridge house is one of a kind
    BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW
    Jan 02 2009, 8:10 AM · UPDATED
  • Log jam closes Williams Avenue Bridge over Cedar in Renton; reopening uncertain
    RENTON REPORTER
    Today, 6:23 PM · UPDATED
  • Evacuation urged as flood waters rise
    SNOQUALMIE VALLEY RECORD
    Jan 07 2009, 8:14 PM · UPDATED
  • Navy confirms P-8A squadrons
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jan 02 2009, 2:23 PM · UPDATED
  • Let’s not target goose laying golden eggs
    PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT
    Jan 03 2009, 12:00 AM
  • Washington rivers flood; flood warning still on in some areas
    PNW LOCAL NEWS
    Jan 08 2009, 2:04 PM · UPDATED
  • Update: Island woman loses lower right leg to crash injuries; another surgery scheduled
    JOURNAL OF THE SAN JUANS
    Dec 23 2008
  • Redmond woman who died in ice-climbing accident loved the outdoors
    REDMOND REPORTER
    Jan 07 2009, 11:36 AM · UPDATED
  • Changes begin Wednesday for Whidbey News-Times
    WHIDBEY NEWS TIMES
    Jan 02 2009, 2:22 PM · UPDATED