Washington Business Summer 2016 | Page 42

business backgrounder | transportation “Our members’ success depends on people being able to get to work and goods being able to get to market,” Daudon told the House Transportation Committee last March during AWB-led testimony. This transportation package will create jobs statewide for generations to come, said Tacoma Pierce County Chamber President Tom Pierson. “We’ve been waiting 30 years to complete 167, which will create 80,000 jobs,” Pierson told lawmakers as the bill was being debated last year. “This keeps Washington globally competitive.” “When we testified on the bill, we had a member from every corner of the state — from Vancouver and Spokane to Tacoma, Yakima and the Tri-Cities,” Ennis said. Gov. Jay Inslee signed the package in a July 2015 ceremony overlooking the 520 bridge, calling it “the largest single investment in transportation in state history.” ongoing support The project is already beginning to help with gridlock and improvement to commerce, but AWB’s involvement with the package isn’t over. During the 2016 legislative session, this fall’s general election, and on into 2017, AWB’s government affairs team is working to ensure that the projects and reforms in the package stay intact. AWB’s Transportation Committee voted this spring to reaffirm AWB’s support for the state’s last three major transportation packages: the “nickel” package of 2003, the Transportation Partnership Act in 2005 and the Connecting Washington package of 2015. AWB’s committee recommends opposing anything that takes away from these packages. In short, AWB maintains its commitment to Washington’s transportation packages, including reforms. “Our objective for the – Microsoft President Brad Smith, speaking at the ribbonsession is to make sure the Legislature maintains its commitment cutting on the new 520 floating bridge to the package,” said Ennis. That means projects that are funded need to stay funded, he said, and the $1.2 billion allocated for maintenance and preservation can’t be diverted for other uses. AWB is also committed to preserving the dozen-and-a-half reforms in the Connecting Washington package, including permit streamlining for transportation projects and making congestion relief an official transportation goal. There’s plenty of road ahead, and AWB is watching to make sure that the money and leadership needed to keep Washington moving will be there as promised. “Today a dream has come true. It's a day to look forward and a day to be inspired.” Connecting Washington www.wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/Funding/CWA/ “Congestion and lack of investment has broad implications for the ability of UPS to provide service to our customers, our quality of life, and the state’s economic competitiveness.” — Kristal Fiser, director of state government affairs, UPS 42 association of washington business