Q: I work at Boeing Everett, at Paine Field, or somewhere along Seaway Boulevard. What changes for my commute if Everett Transit merges into Community Transit?
A: For aerospace workers commuting to the Boeing Everett factory, Paine Field, or the Seaway Boulevard industrial corridor, the Everett Transit → Community Transit annexation announced on April 22, 2026 matters for three reasons: (1) the Swift Blue Line and Swift Green Line — already the backbone of bus service to Paine Field and the 99 corridor — are operated by Community Transit and get a fully unified local feeder network inside Everett; (2) any route consolidation inside Everett that connects neighborhoods to the Swift lines and to Boeing could see schedule improvements funded by Community Transit’s 1.2% sales tax replacing Everett’s ~0.6%; (3) long-term, a single regional transit operator is the same agency that will connect you to Sound Transit’s future Everett Link light rail stations — including the Paine Field scenario that remains in active planning. For shift workers, the headline is: more consistent service planning across the county, funded by roughly 2x the transit tax revenue inside Everett.
Why aerospace commuters should care
The Boeing Everett factory, the IAM 751 Machinists Institute, Paine Field, and the surrounding supplier corridor on Seaway Boulevard and Airport Road employ tens of thousands of people. A significant share live in Everett neighborhoods — Casino Road, Silver Lake, Bayside, View Ridge-Madison, Evergreen — and need to reach the factory for shift changes that happen outside traditional 9-to-5 windows. Transit service to those shift windows has historically been the weakest link in Everett’s bus network. A consolidated Community Transit with more revenue per Everett-resident rider can specifically fund off-peak and early-morning/late-night service improvements that benefit aerospace shift patterns.
The Swift connection
Community Transit’s Swift Green Line already serves the Paine Field and aerospace corridor with 10-to-15-minute frequency most of the day. The Swift Blue Line on Evergreen Way and SR 99 connects south Everett and Lynnwood. Both are already Community Transit. What changes after the merger is the local feeder network inside Everett that connects neighborhoods to the Swift lines — the short-hop routes that take you from your apartment on Casino Road to the Blue Line station, or from your house off Airport Road to the Green Line. Those feeders are currently split between the two agencies. After annexation, they become one planning exercise, which should tighten timed transfers.
What about the drive? Parking? The commute lot at the factory?
Direct drive commute is unaffected by a transit annexation. If you drive, you still drive. What the merger does do over time: give Community Transit more budget to recruit choice riders — people who could drive but ride because the bus is faster or more reliable — out of the single-occupant-vehicle pool. That is the mechanism by which factory-area congestion on Airport Road and Seaway Boulevard typically improves. It’s slow. But it’s the lever that exists.
Shift work, early mornings, and nights
The 737 North Line activation, the 777X production ramp, and the 767/KC-46 transition all put Boeing Everett in a place where three-shift operations are the norm. Early morning and late-night bus service — historically thin on Everett Transit — is exactly the kind of capacity a larger Community Transit funded by a 1.2% sales tax is positioned to add. The interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle will show whether the agencies actually program that capacity. Watch public hearings in fall 2026 and the Community Transit service change proposals in early 2027.
The light rail tie-in
Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension — covered in our 2026 complete guide — remains the biggest long-term variable for Paine Field commuters. The 2026 planning scenarios range from the original 2036 Everett Station timeline to a phased delivery that reaches Paine Field first. Either way, the bus network that connects you to the light rail stations — including potentially a Paine Field station — is designed by Community Transit. A unified Community Transit covering all of Everett simplifies that design.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will Community Transit add more early-morning buses to Paine Field?
Possibly. The higher sales tax revenue inside Everett (1.2% vs. ~0.6%) is explicitly earmarked for service expansion per public statements from both agency leaders. Actual schedule decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle (expected 2027).
Does this change Sound Transit Everett Link or commuter bus to Seattle?
No. Sound Transit is a separate regional agency and its Express buses and future light rail are not part of this annexation.
What about the Boeing employee bus or carpool program?
Employer-sponsored commute programs are not operated by Everett Transit or Community Transit and are unaffected by the annexation.
Swift Green Line and Swift Blue Line — do they change?
No. Both are already Community Transit and continue as-is. They are, in fact, the backbone the rest of the network will be rebuilt around.
Will my sales tax go up if I live outside Everett but work in Everett?
Sales tax is collected based on where the purchase is made, not where you live. If you make purchases inside Everett city limits, you would pay the higher 1.2% transit portion. Purchases outside Everett — in unincorporated Snohomish County, Mukilteo, Lynnwood — are unaffected by this specific annexation.
Related coverage
See the complete 2026 Everett Transit merger guide, our aerospace worker guide to the IAM 751 Machinists Institute, and our breakdown of Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension.
Related Coverage From Tygart Media’s Exploring Everett Series
- The Everett Transit Merger Into Community Transit: Complete 2026 Guide
- What Everett’s Transit Merger Means for You as a Rider: A 2026 Resident’s Guide to the Community Transit Annexation
- Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders
- Boeing 777X Clears FAA Phase 4A: What Everett’s Biggest Certification Milestone in Years Actually Means
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