Transcribed by Ernie Piper.
Eli Sanders: The people of this region have voted repeatedly for light railโand they seem to like it, even if you donโt. How do you explain this disconnect?
Kemper Freeman Jr.: Well, in 1970, we virtually stopped building new roads as we had been before. Thereโs been some exceptions, but not much. Itโs been a very modest increase in land miles since 1970. So, weโre 41 years into this schemeโฆ
So why arenโt people driving around with pitchforks out of their car windows?
Sound Transit. I donโt know what their total budget in PR and advertising, marketing is, but itโs plus or minus a million dollars a month. Which makes them by themselves one of the largest advertisers in the market. And they use that money toโif thereโs another word besides advertising to describe it, Iโd call it brainwashing. I mean, it is the largest scale of brainwashing on any topic in the Northwest. There has never been a topic or policy or idea of the government that has had that much money spent on it. There isnโt even anyone in second place, not by far.
So what do you think the motivation is for this brainwashing?
This thing is being promotedโฆ by the people who are from the industry. They build the equipment, they sell the engineering services, financial services, everything relating to it. Theyโ When they run a public campaign, theyโll do everything they can to make it appear as if the publicโas if itโs bubbling up from the public. But when you look at where the checks really came from, 90 to 95 percent came from the industry.
Well, youโve put a lot of your own money into opposing light rail.
Weโre a little tin can compared to a million dollars a month since 1996.
So do you feel like youโre losing?
No, I donโt feelโweโre not losing. We arenโt able to play in the big leagues. I mean, nobody, no public agency or anybody can compete with Sound Transit. Nobodyโs got a million dollars a month to spend on thisโฆ
I would describe Sound Transit as an agency that doesnโt see any barriers, legal or otherwise. Ethics or fibs or anything elseโnothing is a barrier to them. They feel that. Iโve seen this in the legislature. There are people who have political drive, who are so certain that their goal is worthy, that the ends justify the means. Iโd describe Sound Transit as exactly that. They know theyโre doing Godโs work, philosophically. Iโm not sure how they can know that, because they arenโt, but they believe it.
You say they think theyโre doing Godโs work, but youโve also been associated with language that describes promoters of light rail as socialists and/or communists. And thatโs sort of a Godless ideology, at least to a lot of people. Do you really think light rail is the tip of the spear for a creeping socialism?
Well, I think it is a fantasy of the left that this is somehow good, nationally.
The socialist left?
Well, the left is a whole collection of different people. But I thinkโI think it is. It has been the adopted philosophy of Democrats, although not all of them, and people who Iโd say are the left. And, none of this means theyโre bad people. I have full regard for anybodyโs thought. Iโm not one of these guys who thinks that everyone who thinks different from me is somehow the devil. What I respect most is someone whoโs thinking. But in this case, most everyoneโs being led like sheep. And thereโs a lot at work leading this.
In a way, it was your grandfather who created the bridgeโthe I-90 floating bridge over Lake Washingtonโthat youโre now trying to keep light rail from going over.
My grandfather, from hisโif you read Generations, you know that he wasโ He went to hisโ They were fromโ He grew up in Yakima. He quit school in the fifth grade, working full time for his dad, setting type, delivering papers, collecting copy, writing stories, doing everything to put the paper out. And on his 21st birthday he went to his dad and said, โI appreciate all youโve done for me, Iโve worked for you full time since the fifth grade, but at some point could I get a salary? Or could I at least someday know that I might have some ownership in the paper, or some kind of remuneration? Because if there isnโt any, itโs my birthday today and I need to start seeing what Iโm doing for a living. Youโve helped me, Iโve helped you, that got us to here, but whatโs next?โ The great-grandfather, story goes, the great-grandfather blew his stack and said, โYou ungrateful son of a bitch.โ
This is Legh Freeman talking to Miller Freeman.
This is Legh talking to Miller. And he said, โYou donโt appreciate all weโve done? Weโve housed you, clothed you, fed you, treated you when you were sick, and now you want to be paid?โ So, my grandfather, Millerโฆ He left on his 21st birthday. The only thing he had with him was an old bicycle that he used to deliver papers, and the clothes he was wearing, and less than five dollars cashโฆ And heโs 21, and heโs healthy. And he rode away from the office and sat down and said, โWhat am I going to do?โ And his idea wasโwell, Legh Freemanโs paper had sort of covered the farm community of Yakima. And Miller, my grandfather, was already aware that in Wenatchee there was another farm community, and in other parts of Eastern Washington there were several, and he was even aware thatโthis is the way he tells the story: This community had more hay than it needed, but didnโt know what to do with it. This community had more cattle than it had hay, and didnโt know what to do with the extra cattle. And there was no way to communicate back and forth, so his idea was to do an Eastern Washingtonโwide, half-the-state-of-Washington farm paper that would cover all these different farm communities and become a vehicle for them to communicate things they couldnโt ever do before.
So that sounds kind of simple, but thatโs what he did. And in fact, then he got on his bicycle and went from farm to farm to farm, collecting the stories, and where he could, he got someone to pay for an ad for a paper that had never been printed. And then he would ride an empty boxcar over to Seattle and wander around until he could find someone to print the paper for him. And then he would take the paper back on the same route with nothing but his bicycle and drop off the paper and try to sell another ad. Well, that became what was for many years the largest farm paper in Eastern Washington.
And it sounds like he learned the power of a trade publication, because he went on toโ
Thatโs what he ended up specializing in. But he owned this farm paper for years, and what was one of the major stories all those years that he ran that paper was the railroads had a monopoly in this state, which was just driving the [agricultural] community crazy. And you had two choices, you could ship your goods to the world ports via the railroad and there was no competitor, or you could barge it down the Columbia River. But they didnโt have all the locks and all the stuff in it, so the barges would have been less expensive, but they didnโt have a way to work it very well. And the agricultural industry of the state said, โWe need an alternative to the railroad.โ And they started talking years ago about the cross-state highway. My grandfather ran for the legislature in 1913 on the single issue of creating the cross-state highway, and thatโs a story all by itself. But it got passed, by one vote, and then was built later on. So one day the director of engineering for DOT in Olympia called my grandfather and said, โWell, since this was your idea, that we have the cross-state highway, whereโfrom starting in Snoqualmie pass come down this sideโwhere should it go? Howโs itโwhere should it go to tidewater?โ So my granddad went down to Olympia and all he had with him was a Standard Oil road map, which is not a fancy thing, and somewhere in my files Iโve got this mapโall he did was take a ruler and a pencil, and he said, โElliott Bay is the best deepwater port in the Northwest; Snoqualmie Pass is here,โ and he just took a pencil, a map, and a ruler, drew a line from Snoqualmie Pass to Elliott Bay, and said, โThatโs where it should go.โ
And the engineer said, โOh my God, that goes right across Lake Washingtonโthe waterโs too deep, and thatโs too long a span for any normal bridge.โ My granddad said, โListen, you just asked me where it should be. Youโre the engineer, you figure out how to do it. Thatโs where it should be. Agricultureโs over there, this is the low pass, the road should come over here, thatโs where it should go. Youโre the engineer, you figure out how to build the bridge.โ And he did it, invented the floating bridge. They invented it in two years, from conception in 1938 to opening in 1940. Without computers or any of the other BS we think is standard today. They created something nobody else has ever done before of that scale. And it lasted until the contractor drilled holes at the waterline and, surprise, it sank.
I watched that happen when I was young kid.
Wasnโt that something? I went across that bridge one day, and I looked overโIโm a boater, have been all my lifeโand said, โThose guys think theyโre working on a bridge, they donโt realize theyโre working on a boat! You canโt put holes like that that close to the water and have that thing float.โ
What kind of boating do you do? Sailing or motorboating?
Iโve had a sailboat for 22 years, but we sold itโฆ When I was 10 years old, we had a 10-foot boat. When I was 13, I got a 13-foot boat. When I was 30-something, I got a 34-foot boat. Five years ago, I got a 55-foot boatโฆ I love boats, but it doesnโt matterโany kind of boat. So I love boating, I love to sail. My wife, after twenty years, four years ago, said, โIโm not sailing any more.โ I said, โWhy?โ She said, โIt tips.โ I said, โIt doesnโt tip, it heels.โ She said, โNo it doesnโt, it tips.โ
Sheโs a Virgo, which means everything needs to be in place.
Iโm a Virgo.
Is that right? Okay, you seem like you might be. [Laughs] My mom was a Virgo, my daughterโs a Virgo, my first grandsonโs a Virgoโฆ
What are you?
Iโm a Libra, on the cusp of Scorpio, so Iโm a balance with a little fire. But Iโm right on the cusp.
Back to the Lake Washington floating bridge. Do you feel a sense of ownership over I-90, since your grandfather helped get it built?
No.
The biggest thing I hear when Iโm talking to people about you, is that they donโt believe your opposition to light rail is financial. They think itโs ideological, or maybe something else. Like: You donโt think light rail will bring the right class or color of people to Bellevue Square.
Thatโs a Sound Transitโcreated perceptionโฆ Sound Transit will do everything, if you emerge in any way, with โem or against โem, they will come to you and see how they can get you on their side. If youโre not on their side, all kinds of things will happen, and all of them have happened to meโฆ And then, at the end, and then the last step isโand this is for any opponentโthe last one is to vilify, any way they can.
โฆThey vilify me. They just decide, well, heโs a developer, heโs a white boy, heโs a developer from Bellevue, obviously doesnโt like minorities, so he must be doing this just to keep minorities out of his shopping center. Thatโs the storyline they present to each other; thatโs how they explain me to each otherโฆ If any of those guys come see our center, theyโd see that we have twice the number of minorities than in Seattle, and they donโt even know that!
And the quote they refer back to is something you said about Southcenter a long time ago, is that right?
Okay, that is crazy. Okay, thatโevery shopping center that I know something about, thereโs 50-some-thousand of them in America, Iโve been a trustee of the shopping-center industry since 1987, I chaired it โ94 to โ95 worldwide, Iโve traveled the world, Iโve still got a lot to learn, but this is a topicโweโve got one of the best ones in America, in terms of productivityโI know something about shopping centers. I think I was being asked, I think she was covering retail, but I think [the Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporter] asked, โWhat is the difference between the markets, Southcenter, Northgate, et cetera?โ
โฆI said, โWell, I think one of the things youโll see when you come to Bellevue Square is that itโs an occasion they look forward to, theyโre a little more dressed up than they would be at Southcenter or someplace else. And anyways, it keptโ And weโre talking aboutโ And you can talk to any marketing person, and this is what they talk about all day long! This isnโt some weird thing, this isโany shopping center can describe in detail the profile of its shopper like it was one person! It isnโt one; itโs tens of thousands. So they pressed on and they said, โYou mean, if you go to Southcenter you can see differences?โ And I said, โOne thing you wonโt see around here too often is pink and blue hair curlers in a womanโs hair while sheโs shopping here.โ But, I guaranteeโ And that isnโtโ Is that wrong? It isnโt wrong. Itโs just true!
Occasionally people will just put onโI have three sisters and a mother. When they just want to be comfortableโand, two sisters lived in Hawaii for a year and a halfโthey would put on, the most comfortable thing is a, whatโs called a muumuu. And itโs just a shapeless dress thatโs comfortable, and when you want to be comfortable and relaxed you put that on. So I described sometimes theyโll wear something like that, and sometimes theyโll just wear flip-flops. And for that I was called a racist. Out of contextโฆ
So if itโs not about the type of people, why donโt you want a train that drops a whole bunch of people in front of your stores every eight minutes?
I would love it, ifโ This is the key point, and I can explain this in black and white: Today Bellevue attracts 350,000 trips, in and out of Bellevue, per day. In 20 years we expect it to be 695,000. So we have a problem of finding a way of getting 695,000 people in and out of here in a day, but the current trips is half that. So our trips are expected to double. And thatโs not my number, thatโs Puget Sound Regional Council, City of Bellevue, Sound Transitโฆ So, can we stop for a second? Sound Transit has never made good on original estimates of ridership, not even close, not even once. So theyโve never accomplished what theyโve sold us, when theyโre selling.
Okay, so [they estimate] 51,000 riders [on East Link each weekday by 2030], but specifically related to Bellevue: 9,000 get on or off in Bellevue. So thatโs 4,500 peopleโlike, if you commuted in and commuted out.
Okay, so, if you read the Environmental Impact Statement [EIS] youโll also see that of thatโof the 9,000 that get on and offโaccording to the EIS, 7,000 of them are already on the bus. Already using transit. And they just assume that the four bus routes are now going to be canceledโthe four best, most used, most efficient, most popular, are being canceledโand the assumption is the full number goes over to rail.
It may or may not, but itโs irrelevant.
So whatโs left is 2,000 new trips 20 years from now, out of 695,000 trips a day. This is a rounding error. Itโs two thirds of one percent of the new trips, is their best guessโฆ
I mean, I have gone through interviews as long as this, I have never had anyone use these numbers in the story. Never happens.
Iโll use them.
You can be the first, but Iโve been interviewed a lot of times. They donโt use that. They start with a picture of who I am, and all the things theyโve heardโฆ I donโt mean itโs bad, itโs just the way it is. Reporters, by the time they call me theyโve got a story in their head what theyโre looking for, and most often they want me to say things, theyโll record it, theyโll pick up the pieces that fit and fill in the blanks and write the story that they envision.
Well, Iโm going to take these numbers and call Sound Transit and see what they say. But Iโll use them.
Get a hardcopy of the EIS because they fiddleโthey have professionalsโyouโll forget what day it is by the time they get back to you. Butโฆ Iโll stake my life on those numbers. Thereโs nothing tricked-up about those numbers.
So your answer to get to 300,000 more trips is more bus transit and more roads.
Yes.
I think part of what people object to are the environmental concerns related to just building more roads and running more buses over them.
I can refute virtually 100 percent of all of those thoughts with facts. That is a facade of things that have been cloaked. This thing [light rail] has been blessed as if it somehow does all that stuff. Letโs start with electricity. Electricityโweโre not doing any more hydroelectric, sun and wind are minor players, very expensive, but minor players in terms of amount we get. About half of all new electricity is from coalโฆ it comes from carbon. And somehow, Sound Transit likes to take credit for the fact [that] theyโre environmentally sound. Like a light-rail carโs environmentally sound, because you canโt see the pollution. But believe me, it is polluting somewhere worse than a car.
So youโre saying that light rail, at some endpoint, uses just as muchโ
More. I can show you a proven chart.
Okay, but for now, how about just a basic question on pollution. Do you believe in global warming?
Iโveโmy favorite topics in high school and college were sciences and math. And Iโd taken literally all the math you can possibly take, and all the science you could take. I took seven periods, we have two study halls, I just went straight through. So Iโve had two years of biology, two years of botany, two years of zoology, a year of oceanography, and a whole bunch more at the University of Washington. So I understand a lot of those principles really well, and I understand also the synergy between plants and animals.
And anybody who could possibly vilify CO2 is beyond anything I could imagine. And theyโve done it, and I donโtโ I do not believe it, and hereโs why. Animals breathe oxygen and exhale CO2. Plants breathe CO2 and exhale oxygen. Itโs aโ Oxygen is a good thing. CO2 is a good thing. I think people get confused with carbon monoxide, which can kill you. But, I mean, CO2โs inert.
I thinkโ Iโve talked to people whoโve taken their boats through the Northwest Passage because the ice cap has moved north, and they did that to prove all the global warmingโand Iโve talked to some of the people on those boats that did it, and they talked to the Natives that lived all along the way, and they asked โem what they thought of this fact, and universally they all said the same thing. They said, this has been going on forever. There is nothing new here. This goes through cycles. This cycle weโre in is a warming cycle. Weโll be in a cooling cycle. This is continuous.
And I think whatโs gone on is more for political reasons. Donโt mistake me, I am an environmentalist. But I also believe in real science.
When youโre talking about adding road capacity for cars, youโre talking about increasing dependency on oil, and therefore dependency on foreign oil. Do you have a problem with that?
Okay, unlike everyone youโve ever met, I took a five-day trip 30 years ago, paid for it on myselfโit was half government people. I was either just finishing my term in the legislature or still in my last term. And a group of us, half public, half private, half Canadian, half American, chartered a 737 and had a well-thought-out trip where we basically stopped five times a day starting here, Spokane, going step by step all the way through Canada, Alaska, all the way up to Prudhoe Bay. This 737 had skis on it, landed places weโd never seen an airplane land before. A 737โlike we were in a little Alaskan piper bush pilot plane.
Anyways, breakfast lunch and dinnerโฆ We stopped and saw some of the biggest hydroelectric facilities, natural gasโฆ We saw Athabasca [oil sands] before anyone else. Iโd never even heard of it. Saw that they already had $2 billion worth of extraction equipment up there, and it had five times the known oil reserves of Saudi Arabiaโthat was just one stop. We got to Anchorage, a spokesman there saidโIโm not advocating this, but if the world were to decide the power itself, the world were to decide just to use coal from now on, and it could be solid, powder, liquid, gasifiedโ It could be made to burn as cleanโ Within an hour and a half of Anchorage we have enough energy to power the world for 200 years.
So you would be for more drilling in Alaska?
Absolutely.
I know it got boiled down to โDrill, baby, drillโ in the last election, but you would be in the โDrill, baby, drillโ camp.
Well, let me go further than that. Thereโs North Dakota, which is an unbelievably muted topic and should be in the headlines right now, and I have a copy of this hereโand I could give you a copy of it, a national agency that keeps track of known reserves, first announcedโ I think itโs the Bakken oil field that is most of North Dakota, part of it goes into Canada, part of it goes into Montana, part of it goes into South Dakota, that has eight times the known reserves of Saudi Arabiaโฆ We should be up there, with all the unrest in the Middle East. We should be tearing into thatโ
You donโt seem super concerned about the environmental impact of cars and oil consumption.
That is absolutely not true. Iโm as concerned as anybody who Iโve met. But Iโve studied on itโ I think at bestโ Unless we want to totally destroy the country, and some people do, and among us some people want to just destroy it, โTo hell with this country,โ itโs on their lips. Not just outside, but within. I think itโs a 30-year transition. If we were to decide that weโre no longer gonna be oil-dependent, as hard and as fast as we can go, short of destroying the country, itโs a 30 year proposition to begin to get us into meaningful alternatives to oil. And I am more than satisfied that we haveโwithin this countryโwe have all the oil we need to make it through that 30-year transition. And Iโm not saying we shouldnโt go through a 30-year transition. We ought to study this real hard and have a plan to get there. But to just with no planโ
Who are these people who want to destroy the country?
Thereโs always people who just donโt like whatโs going on in every country. Iโm not saying itโs a majority. Iโm just saying thereโs people within us, thereโs always people that donโt like whatโs going on.
And you think that anti-roads, pro-mass-transit sort of people are part of the problem.
If it was on your mind as the fall of this country, and you wanted to stick your thumb in and jam the gearsโ For whatever reason thatโs a legitimate thought of people, and Iโm not sayingโ Thatโs just somebodyโs thought, thatโs fineโbut itโs not my thought. There is no single place you could jam the gears better than screwing with the transportation system, if that were your goal. Iโm not saying thatโs everybodyโs goal thatโs against cars. Within some of the most ardent folks Iโve met, it is their goal. And, to just shut this country down is their goal. I donโt think thatโs the majorityโฆ but to some people, thatโs just fine. So, and Iโm saying itโs unnecessary to do that.
Iโm confused about something: You talk about socialism, and people wanting a state thatโs more intrusive in their lives, but youโre depending a lot on the state to intervene and build you bigger roads.
I think there are basic functions of government which are fundamental, and transportation is one of them. So I have my peace with them being in the transportation business.
Okay, well, like you suggested, Iโm going to talk to Sound Transit and see what they have to say about your arguments and ridership assertions.
They have hired, or employ on the side, the best spin guys I know. And they will spin these facts but they cannot change these facts.
Well, thereโs time before this piece runs, so I can come back to you with what they say.
Iโd love thatโฆ These points Iโve been making, Iโve made in every interview. If you put these points in there, youโll be the first one that did. Iโm an optimist so I keep thinking, โOkay, maybe this time thisโll be the one thatโs fair.โ
Well, when we do an article we can really give it some space.
I mean, you guys are a breath of fresh air. You guys are bringing some new, good stuff. The traditional mediaโs running out of gas. ![]()

Really? I know this is a blog post of a transcription, but does copy editing count for nothing?! This is barely readable.
@1: This was carefully transcribed and copyedited. What you’re reacting to, I think, is the way Mr. Freeman talks. We tried to preserve his style of speaking in order to most accurately portray him and the interview.
Occupy Seattle should relocate to Bellevue Square. Keeper Freeman is the 1%.
@1 What are you talking about? This is very easy to read – it reads like a conversation. Nice piece, Eli.
Dottering old meglomaniac. You can tell just from reading this that he’s one of those old blowhards that everyone is nice to because the only places he goes are places where people are paid to be nice to rich people.
Consequently, he’s never had anyone challenge any of his simple-minded notions. He just drones on, and people smile and nod and refill his coffee cup or wine glass, hoping for a big tip.
The idea that dear Grandpapa was the one who told the Dept of Transportation where to build the highway is patently ridiculous. The Milwaukee Road railroad had already built their line across Snoqualmie pass because it was the lowest and most direct to Seattle. He may be right about the bridge, but I suspect it was more than just Gramps involved in the planning.
Nitwit Freeman combines ignorance with assertiveness in defense of his conservative agenda.
CO2 is, as he asserts, perfectly natural in the environment, but only up to the limit our biosphere can handle it. There used to be much more in the atmosphere, true, but before aerobic life was established on the planet. Look at our “sister planet,” Venus. Over 96% CO2, crushing pressures, and flaming hot, despite being only a little bit closer to the sun than Earth.
Over the last couple billion years, early versions of life, probably chemosynthetic organisms related to those only found today in the volcanic ocean trenches, used vast quantities of that CO2, turning it into much of what today we find as fossil fuels. As the atmosphere changed, the ocean formed, and aerobic, photosynthetic life got established, another couple trillion tons got trapped in limestone. All limestone on earth started off as marine organisms.
So, here we are, a couple hundred years ago, on an earth made hospitable for us by a couple billion years of work by busy little organisms, which trapped and removed all that CO2, essentially sequestering it out of the biosphere and releasing oxygen in the process, creating Biosphere 2.0. So, what do we do? We dig it up and burn it. We burn coal and petroleum for heat. We burn limestone to make cement and concrete. We use our oxygen to make carbon dioxide. Up until then, the stuff we burned mostly got recycled in the biosphere. Plants could turn the gas back into solids and we could burn them again. Now, there’s way too much to recycle, and we keep adding more, and concurrently, decimating the forests that could recycle some of it.
Yes, it’s all natural, and nature might eventually correct it. But, only after we’ve wiped out Biosphere 2.0, our aerobic environment, and nature has to reboot and start over.
Idiot.
CO2 is NOT inert; it reacts readily with water to form carbonic acid. If you breathe a CO2-enriched atmosphere, you’ll end up with blood acidosis and die. Hell, even neon, which IS truly inert (or as close to it as you can get) will still kill you if that’s all you breathe.
This guy doesn’t know anything about chemistry or geology.
@7 -Yes, or biology or really any other -ology
If he “took all the science he could take” on college, why doesn’t he have a PhD? And why does he think a year of biology 50 years ago makes him a science expert?
I mean, I disliked the guy, but I didn’t know he was such a blowhard dipshit.
From one of Sound Transit’s legal reps –
“The adopted marketing budget for the entire agency (including light rail, Sounder commuter trains, regional bus service and Tacoma Link) was $1.013 million. For the whole year.”
@2 The version that was in my RSS was so littered with spelling errors, mashed-up words and strange punctuation that I was compelled to comment. It was pretty clearly a direct transcription before editing. Apparently the one on the site was fixed by then… so complaint retracted.
I do like the piece.
I agree 100% with Kemper. Sound Transit is a big waste of $$. We need a light-rail across Lk Washington like we need a hole in our head. People are never gonna give up their cars – period. Use toll-bridges, make people pay for the roads that Washington can’t afford but are needed. If it starts to cost people too much to commute across the lake, they will MOVE. I hope Kemper & Tim Eyeman succeed with their initiative and I hope Washington residents WAKE UP and see Sound Transit for the waste of money they really are.
Troll dear, Kemper doesn’t care about you, for you will never be wealthy enough to be one of his premiere customers. Just because you finally got a Penney’s card, that doesn’t mean you fit in at Bell Square.
So you might as well tell him to get off your face and go clean yourself up. It’s unseemly.
This interview succeeded in making me like Kemper Freeman much, much, much less. This guy is the definition of “ignorant blowhard”. Catalina’s description is spot-on: he is obviously used to talking with people who will not challenge any of his assumptions.
The adopted marketing budget for the entire agency (including light rail, Sounder commuter trains, regional bus service and Tacoma Link) was $1.013 million. For the whole year
Sound Transit’s proposed 2012 budget includes
$7 million for “communications and external affairs.”
$6 million for “planning, environment, and project development.”
Hmm, that’s $13 million. I think Freeman is exaggerating when he says they spend a million a month on marketing and advertising. A bunch of the $13 million in the two categories I’ve highlighted aren’t marketing or promotion.
However, the Sound Transit estimate is undoubtedly narrow. When they send lobbyists to Olympia and elsewhere, or conduct “public education” about “sustainability,” whatever the hell that is, I’d say it fits with what Freeman was talking about.
My biggest complaint about Freemen is that he does the mirror image of what his critics do. They launch ad hominem attacks against Freeman and his family, and Freeman returns the favor with that typical rich-guy “socialism” crap. He’s right in describing the transit people as essentially a bunch of quasi-religious zealots, but the “socialist” charge is absurd.
The biggest problem with the Stranger’s article is that you never seriously looked at the transit utilization numbers — past, current, or projected. Freeman is on very solid ground there, but the Stranger is deathly afraid to admit it. Sound Transit is a very large rat hole, and will get a hell of a lot worse. We’ll all come to sorely regret this “investment” in light rail.
#14, something tells me you didn’t like ol’ Kemp too much to start with. Come on, admit it.
I think Freeman is on target. I’ve watched time and time again how Sound Transit blows budgets and wastes money. The Link Rail is a perfect example of a 2 Billion dollar rail that ended up costing 4 Billion dollars and all it did was move people from busses to rail that doesn’t even have the right-of-way. Meanwhile, the majority of us sit in conjested freeways that haven’t changed much in 30 years except for more cops, more tickets, and signs to tell us to slow down to 40 MPH when you can only drive 3 MPH. In Kemper’s hood the parking rates are the same for your Prius as they are for your Hummer: Free.