Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Highway Expansion

Washington Republicans: Put Seattle’s Highway-Borer Out of Its Misery

If nothing else, the politics of Seattle's deep-bore highway tunnel fiasco keep getting more interesting. With Bertha the tunnel-boring machine stuck underground and "rescue" efforts literally destabilizing city neighborhoods, a pair of Republicans in the Washington State Senate introduced a bill to scrap the project before any more money is wasted.

After Seattle has spent billions and more than a year and all it has to show for it is a hole in the ground. Photo: Washington Department of Transportation
Washington Democrats won't back off their support for a risky deep-bore highway tunnel in Seattle. Photo: Washington Department of Transportation
false

While putting a halt to the underground highway would limit Seattle's exposure to enormous cost overruns and open the door to more city-friendly transportation options, this effort to bury Bertha comes from outside the city. The Democratic establishment in the Seattle region isn't rallying around the idea.

Republicans Doug Ericksen of Ferndale and Michael Baumgartner of Spokane co-sponsored legislation to cease spending on the stalled tunnel project and use the remaining money to study alternatives. The text of their bill [PDF] is probably the most sensible thing any politician has said about this project in quite some time:

The legislature finds that the state route number 99 Alaskan Way viaduct replacement project has failed. The legislature also finds that the project as it is currently designed cannot be justified financially and is not in the best interest of the public.

The knock against the bill is that it's pure theater -- a political maneuver to place the blame for Bertha squarely at the feet of Democrats.

If that's the case, some Democrats are playing right into their hands. Democrat Judy Clibborn, who represents Mercer Island (directly east of Seattle) in the Washington House of Representatives, said of the bill: "It won’t help grow our economy or reduce gridlock, which means it doesn’t have any support."

Of course, taking a huge risk on a deep-bore tunnel that would only serve to generate more traffic even if it's completed isn't exactly resolving congestion or producing real economic benefits either.

Allegiance to the underground highway project cuts across party lines, however. The State Senate transportation committee, led by Republican Curtis King of Yakima, refused to bring the bill to a vote, according to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

Still, if scoring political points was the purpose of this bill, this point goes to the Republicans.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Queens Judge Orders City to Rip Up Half-Installed Astoria Bike Lane

The unprecedented ruling flies in the face of reams of data demonstrating the safety benefits of protected bike lanes.

December 5, 2025

Unions and Environmental Groups Push Council To Pass Delivery Protection Act

Intro 1396 would force Amazon and other delivery companies that use last-mile warehouses to ditch the sub-contracting model and directly hire their workers.

December 5, 2025

Watchdog Group Wants Hochul to Veto Bus Lane Parking Mulligan

Reinvent Albany thinks a carve-out for bus lane parkers in Co-op gives rule-breaking motorists a free pass.

December 5, 2025

Friday’s Headlines: Visionary NYC Edition

New York City stands out among U.S. cities with "Vision Zero" programs. Plus more news.

December 5, 2025

DMV SCANDAL: New York Faces Uphill Battle Getting Back Fraudulently Obtained Licenses

A longtime NYC driving teacher dishes on a pair of shocking scandals at the New York State DMV.

December 4, 2025

State DOT Hurts Cyclists in Rt. 9 Draft Plan: Advocates

The plan to redesign the spine of the river towns misses opportunities to equalize road access and safety for all travelers, according to advocates

December 4, 2025
See all posts