Friends
of Guemes Island Objects To Extension Of Weeknight Ferry Operations
June
16, 2008
Statement to Board
of County Commissioners
Friends of Guemes
Island, and the 75% of registered voters on the island who voted to oppose
the extension of weeknight ferry operations past 6:00 p.m., remain steadfastly
opposed to the resolution you have just passed to continue this practice,
even on a temporary basis. Furthermore, we believe that the action you
have just taken is in direct violation of the court order issued in the
lawsuit between FGI and the county by the Superior Court in Snohomish
County.
In his ruling, the
judge stated that:
“At the end
of the two-year trial period, on June 30, 2008, the ferry schedule change
will automatically revert to its former 6:00 p.m. cut-off, and no weekday
evening extension will again be considered unless and until there is
a new, thorough, and SEPA compliant environmental review, including,
among other issues, the probability of induced growth, and the direct,
and indirect adverse environmental
impacts resulting from the same.”
| The
Environmental Assessment conducted by the county falls far short
of the SEPA compliant review called for by the judge. No rigorous,
valid new evidence was collected and analyzed about the issues raised
by the court in its ruling. |
We do not believe
that the county is in compliance with the terms of this ruling. The Environmental
Assessment conducted by the county falls far short of the SEPA compliant
review called for by the judge. No rigorous, valid new evidence was collected
and analyzed about the issues raised by the court in its ruling. For example,
unless and until the county completes studies that define the capacities
of the island’s sole source aquifer and the impact of growth on
this limited resource, no environmental review of the impacts of growth
caused by late ferry operations will be complete or credible.
To make matters worse,
analysis conducted by knowledgeable members of the Guemes Island Ferry
Committee continue to suggest that the late operations are causing the
ferry budget to hemorrhage resources and are contributing significantly
to the county’s budget woes and deficit problems.
We continue to ask:
Why waste valuable and limited taxpayer resources on ferry operations
that are potentially destructive to the environment, costly, wasteful,
and explicitly not wanted by the county residents it is intended to serve?
Is this good government, or profligate spending in a time of severe economic
difficulties?
Contact: Gary Davis,
President, (360) 202-3085.
The
FGI Board of Directors
In
previous episodes
Final
Court Order, November 5, 2007 [732kb PDF]
|