Skip to main content

Traffic delays and infrastructure costs identified in new study bolster opposition to coal train exports

News

King County Executive
Dow Constantine


Traffic delays and infrastructure costs identified in new study bolster opposition to coal train exports

Summary

King County Executive Dow Constantine said today's release of a new study supports the unprecedented groundswell of opposition to coal train exports.

Story

King County Executive Dow Constantine said today’s release of a new study supports the unprecedented groundswell of opposition to coal train exports, by documenting the economic impacts of up to 18, mile-and-a-half long coal trains coming through the heart of communities in the Northwest.

“It borders on madness to dig up a big chunk of North America, tie up traffic across the train route, and then ship off that coal to another country so they can bury us economically, and accelerate the decline of the global climate,” said Executive Constantine. “That is an economic model that creates very few jobs, even while hindering economic development and mobility here in central Puget Sound and saddling the region with significant costs to upgrade infrastructure at train crossings.”

The study commissioned by the Puget Sound Regional Council, “Economic Evaluation of Regional Impacts for the Proposed Gateway Pacific Terminal at Cherry Point,” confirms that much of the direct cost to King, Pierce and Snohomish Counties is related to increased train traffic – traffic delays at rail crossings and the cost of infrastructure improvements. Among the findings:

• Passing trains will increase wait times for traffic along the BNSF Railway mainline by an average of 65 percent – with a 147 percent increase in Marysville.

• The amount of additional time roads could be blocked by Gateway Pacific Terminal trains would range in places up to nearly 90 minutes per day.

• Improvements will need to be funded at 34 of 101 rail crossings to keep traffic moving.  

• Up to $200 million will be required to build new under-crossings or overcrossings for grade separation.

• Life-saving ambulances and fire engines could be held waiting at 21 crossings that are close to hospitals and fire stations.

• Low-income and minority populations in King and Snohomish Counties will be disproportionately hurt by train operations – especially in Kent, Auburn, Pacific, Fife, Seattle, and Everett. 

Last week the Executive convened more than 50 elected leaders from Washington, Oregon, Montana, and British Columbia to call for a full accounting of the true risks and costs of coal and oil trains on their communities, and to bring their voices together for a safer energy future.



King County Executive
Dow Constantine
Dow constantine portrait

Read the Executive's biography

expand_less