Tag: ST3

  • Sound Transit’s New ST3 Plan Fully Funds Everett Link — Here’s What Resolution R2026-11 Actually Says

    Sound Transit’s New ST3 Plan Fully Funds Everett Link — Here’s What Resolution R2026-11 Actually Says

    Q: Is Everett Link still happening?
    A: Yes. Under Resolution R2026-11 presented to Sound Transit’s Executive Committee on May 7, 2026, both phases of the Everett Link Extension are listed as fully funded. The Sound Transit Board votes on the resolution on May 28.

    For years, Snohomish County residents have watched Sound Transit’s budget crisis unfold with a single question hanging over everything: will Everett actually get light rail?

    Sound Transit answered that question Thursday. Board Chair Dave Somers — Snohomish County Executive — presented Resolution R2026-11 to the agency’s Executive Committee, formally proposing a restructured ST3 System Plan. Under that resolution, both phases of the Everett Link Extension are listed as fully funded. The board votes on May 28.

    This is the specific plan that was described in broad strokes at April’s town hall and debated ahead of the May 28 board meeting in recent months as Sound Transit navigated a $34.5 billion funding shortfall. Now it’s a named resolution with line-item project determinations, and Everett’s two light rail phases are in the fully-funded column.

    Here’s what the resolution actually says — and what it means for the people who live between Lynnwood and downtown Everett.

    What Is Resolution R2026-11?

    R2026-11 is the Sound Transit Board’s formal proposal to update the voter-approved ST3 System Plan to bring it within the agency’s actual financial capacity. The resolution was introduced at the Executive Committee meeting on May 7, 2026, as a “discussion only” action. The board will take final action on May 28, 2026.

    The resolution covers every project in the ST3 program and places each one in one of three categories: fully funded, partially funded through planning and design only, or construction not currently affordable. It also establishes a separate “defer until resources are identified” list for items like parking garages.

    Staff preparing the resolution are Dow Constantine (CEO) and Alex Krieg (Deputy Executive Director – Enterprise Planning). The $34.5 billion shortfall driving the restructuring reflects COVID-era construction inflation, right-of-way cost escalation, added design complexity, reduced sales tax projections, and higher financing costs.

    The Bottom Line for Everett: Both Phases Are Fully Funded

    The resolution’s “Fully Funded Projects (opening order)” table includes:

    • Everett Link, phase 1
    • Everett Link, phase 2

    Both phases appear in the same column as West Seattle Link, Tacoma Dome Link, and the Ballard Link initial segment to Seattle Center. The word “construction” is the operative term — these are not design-only commitments. The trains, the tracks, and the stations are funded. This is the answer to the uncertainty that has hung over Snohomish County since cost estimates started climbing.

    The only Everett-related item on the deferred list is Everett Link Parking, which is pushed until additional resources are identified. The light rail service itself is funded. Park-and-ride construction is not.

    What Got Cut

    R2026-11 is explicit about what does not fit within Sound Transit’s financial capacity right now.

    Construction not currently affordable: The full Ballard Link Extension from Seattle Center to Market Street is not funded for construction — only design through final stages. The Boeing Access Road Link Infill Station and Graham Street Infill Station are also in this category for construction, along with the remainder of Sounder South Additional Trips and remaining ST4 planning studies.

    Deferred until resources are identified: In addition to Everett Link Parking, this list includes Tacoma Dome Link Parking, Stride Parking, North Sammamish Park & Ride, Edmonds and Mukilteo Parking and Access, the Bus on Shoulder Project, SR 162 Corridor Improvements, and multiple Sounder improvements.

    Some projects remain funded but on extended timelines: The Tacoma Community College T Line extension is still funded but pushed back to 2043. The South Kirkland to Issaquah Link remains funded but pushed back to 2050.

    Why Everett Wins: The Subarea Equity Explanation

    Sound Transit’s taxing district is divided into five geographic subareas: Snohomish, North King, South King, East King, and Pierce. By policy, tax revenue collected in each subarea is primarily used on projects within that subarea.

    This structure is the central reason Everett Link survives while the full Ballard extension does not.

    The Ballard Link Extension is by far the most expensive project in ST3. It includes a second light rail tunnel under downtown Seattle — a design choice that has driven its costs far above initial estimates. Funding that project fully would require the North King subarea to borrow so aggressively that it would push other systemwide projects back by decades.

    The Snohomish subarea, by contrast, has lower cost overruns relative to its budget. Everett Link’s cost increases, while real, are smaller as a percentage of the subarea’s overall financial capacity. The resolution is explicit: building extensions to Everett and Tacoma Dome is affordable within available resources, while building the full Ballard extension is not.

    This is exactly what Everett City Council’s unanimous April demand letter to Sound Transit argued: that the Snohomish subarea pays its own way, and that Snohomish taxpayers should not be asked to fund Seattle projects at the expense of their own extension.

    The resolution also makes one financial adjustment to address debt allocation: interest on bond repayments will be shared systemwide across all five subareas, rather than charged only to the subarea that incurs the debt. This is described as compliant with ST3’s financial policies.

    What Comes Next

    May 28, 2026 is the next critical date. That’s when the Sound Transit Board takes final action on R2026-11. The May 7 Executive Committee meeting was discussion-only; no vote was taken.

    If the board adopts R2026-11 on May 28, the restructured ST3 System Plan becomes the official program of record. Projects that are fully funded would proceed on their adopted schedules. Projects in the “not currently affordable” category — like the full Ballard extension — would wait until costs drop, revenues increase, or additional funding sources are identified.

    The resolution also directs Sound Transit’s CEO to develop an adaptive program management plan by Q4 2026. That plan is designed to provide earlier warnings when project costs exceed forecasts, so the agency does not face the kind of sudden multi-billion-dollar reckoning that drove the current restructuring.

    Timeline: When Does Everett Actually Get Light Rail?

    Resolution R2026-11 does not update specific opening year projections for Everett Link. The current published range — 2037 to 2041 — remains the planning framework, and the resolution states that “all previously baselined projects are proceeding on their adopted schedules.”

    What has changed is the funding certainty behind that timeline. The unresolved question at the April town hall — whether Everett would even be in the plan — now has an official answer in the form of a board resolution. Both phases are funded. Construction will proceed.

    The Draft Environmental Impact Statement, which will set more precise station locations and alignments, is expected later in 2026. That document will open a formal public comment period that Snohomish County residents will be able to participate in directly.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is Resolution R2026-11?

    A formal Sound Transit Board resolution to update the ST3 System Plan, placing each project into a funded, partially funded, or not-currently-affordable category based on the agency’s actual financial capacity. The Executive Committee heard it May 7; the board votes May 28.

    Are both phases of Everett Link funded?

    Yes. Under R2026-11 as presented May 7, both Everett Link phase 1 and phase 2 are listed as fully funded projects. Everett Link Parking is deferred to a separate future funding decision.

    Is the resolution final?

    No. The Executive Committee heard the resolution on May 7 as a discussion item. The full Sound Transit Board votes on May 28, 2026.

    Why is Everett funded but Ballard is not?

    Sound Transit’s subarea equity structure requires that Snohomish tax revenues be spent on Snohomish projects. The Snohomish subarea has lower cost overruns relative to its budget than the North King (Seattle) subarea, which bears the cost of the Ballard tunnel project.

    What does “Everett Link Parking” being deferred mean?

    Park-and-ride garages at Everett Link stations are not included in the current funding plan. The light rail stations, tracks, and service remain fully funded. Parking construction would require additional resources to be identified before proceeding.

    When will Sound Transit make the final decision?

    The board is scheduled to take final action on R2026-11 at its May 28, 2026 meeting.

    What To Do Next

    • Comment on R2026-11: Submit public comment at soundtransit.org or contact Sound Transit before May 28. Written comments submitted before the board meeting are included in the public record.
    • Watch the May 28 board meeting: Sound Transit board meetings are open to the public and streamed online. Meeting details are published at soundtransit.org/board-of-directors.
    • Contact your Sound Transit board representatives: Snohomish County board representatives include the County Executive and Mayor of Everett. Find contact information at soundtransit.org/board-of-directors.
    • Watch for the Draft EIS: The Everett Link Extension Draft Environmental Impact Statement is expected later in 2026 and will open a formal public comment period on station locations and alignments.
    • Track the adaptive management plan: Sound Transit’s CEO is directed to present the new adaptive program management framework by Q4 2026.
  • Moving to Everett? The June 30 Sound Transit Vote Is the Question You Need to Answer First

    Moving to Everett? The June 30 Sound Transit Vote Is the Question You Need to Answer First

    If you are considering moving to Everett: The June 30, 2026 Sound Transit board vote is the single most consequential near-term decision for Everett’s long-term livability and property values. The Everett City Council voted unanimously April 29 to demand Sound Transit deliver the full 16-mile Everett Link Extension to downtown Everett Station. Here is what you need to understand about that vote before you decide where in greater Seattle to put down roots.

    Why the Sound Transit Vote Matters If You Are Moving to Everett

    People choosing between Everett, Bothell, Kirkland, Lynnwood, and other north Sound commuter cities in 2026 are making a 5–10 year bet on where each of those cities will be in 2030–2035. Transit infrastructure is one of the biggest inputs to that calculation. Lynnwood already has light rail. Bothell is on a Sound Transit express bus spine. Everett’s light rail future hinges on what Sound Transit’s board votes on June 30.

    If full delivery of the Everett Link Extension is confirmed, downtown Everett and the north Everett corridor will have direct light rail to Seattle, Bellevue, SeaTac, and the broader regional spine by 2037. That connectivity transforms Everett from a commuter city into a node on the regional network — with corresponding effects on housing demand, walkable development, and neighborhood investment along the station corridor.

    If the extension is truncated — stopping at SW Everett Industrial Center rather than downtown Everett Station — downtown Everett does not get light rail access on the current timeline. The economic development investment predicated on that connectivity ($7.7 billion, per Mayor Franklin’s April 23 letter) becomes uncertain. The calculus for buying or renting in downtown Everett versus Silver Lake or the suburbs changes meaningfully.

    Everett’s Position Heading Into June 30

    Everett has mounted a strong, unified advocacy campaign. The City Council voted unanimously April 29 to formally demand full delivery. Mayor Cassie Franklin sent her own letter April 23. Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers chairs the Sound Transit board — meaning the county’s own elected leader is the person responsible for managing the vote that determines the county’s light rail future. The politics are complex, but Everett’s case is substantively strong: the Everett Link Extension’s cost overruns are among the smallest in the ST3 package (approximately 5–10%), and the case for protecting Snohomish County from cost cuts driven by King County project overruns is documented and public.

    What This Means for Different Parts of Everett

    Downtown Everett and north Everett neighborhoods (Rucker Hill, Port Gardner, Broadway District): Directly served by the full extension. If light rail comes, these neighborhoods will be within walking distance of regional rail. If it is truncated, they remain bus-dependent for regional connectivity. For buyers or renters making a decision in 2026, this is the highest-stakes geography in Everett relative to the June 30 vote.

    South Everett neighborhoods (Silver Lake, Casino Road, Cascade View): The SW Everett Industrial Center station — which serves Paine Field and the southern employment cluster — is in the corridor that even a truncated extension would serve. South Everett commuters have somewhat more insulation from a truncation scenario than downtown Everett residents.

    Mariner neighborhood: Explicitly slated for its own station under the full extension. The Mariner annexation study (City Council approved the study in April 2026) adds another political dimension — Mariner residents would have stronger standing to demand transit service if they are incorporated into the city of Everett.

    What to Watch Before Deciding to Move to Everett

    June 30 is the key date. Watch the Sound Transit board meeting and vote. If the revised ST3 System Plan confirms full delivery of the Everett Link Extension to downtown Everett Station on the existing timeline, the case for buying or renting in downtown Everett and the north city is significantly strengthened. If the extension is truncated or delayed, reassess the downtown premium.

    Separately from light rail, Everett’s fundamentals in 2026 are strong: $1B+ waterfront redevelopment underway at the Port of Everett, the Boeing 737 North Line opening midsummer 2026 with 1,200+ orders, Naval Station Everett securing a new FF(X) frigate homeport bid, and the Snohomish County housing market offering meaningfully lower prices than King County at the same commute radius to Seattle. The light rail question is significant but not the only variable in the decision.

    Frequently Asked Questions for People Considering Moving to Everett

    Will Everett get light rail?

    The full Everett Link Extension — running 16 miles to downtown Everett Station — is in Sound Transit’s ST3 plan, approved by voters in 2016 and targeted for completion by 2037. Whether it is built in full depends on the June 30, 2026 Sound Transit board vote on the revised ST3 System Plan. Everett City Council and Mayor Franklin have both formally demanded full delivery.

    When would light rail reach downtown Everett?

    Under the current schedule, the Everett Link Extension opens in phases through 2037. The downtown Everett Station terminus is the final phase of that buildout.

    Is Everett a good place to live if I work in Seattle?

    Everett offers significantly lower housing costs than Seattle or Bellevue at a roughly 35-mile commute radius. Community Transit and Sound Transit express buses connect Everett to Seattle. If full Everett Link Extension is confirmed, light rail will provide a faster, more reliable connection by 2037. Snohomish County’s March 2026 median home price was $738,000 versus King County’s significantly higher comparable.

    What neighborhoods in Everett are closest to the planned light rail stations?

    The Everett Link Extension includes stations at Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (Paine Field area), and multiple downtown Everett stops including Everett Station. The corridor runs along the I-5 spine through south and central Everett before entering downtown.

    What else is happening in Everett that makes it worth considering?

    Everett has over $1 billion in active waterfront redevelopment at the Port, the Boeing 737 North Line opening in summer 2026 with 1,200+ airline orders, Naval Station Everett securing a new Navy frigate homeport bid, and a housing market priced significantly below King County. The city’s Imagine Everett comprehensive plan is built around transit-oriented density.

    Related: Complete Guide to the Council Letter and June 30 Vote | Moving to Everett: Sound Transit Vote Guide | Everett Housing Market 2026

  • Everett City Council Sends Sound Transit a Unanimous Demand: Deliver the Full 16-Mile Everett Link Extension

    Everett City Council Sends Sound Transit a Unanimous Demand: Deliver the Full 16-Mile Everett Link Extension

    Quick Answer: The Everett City Council voted unanimously on April 29, 2026 to send Sound Transit a formal letter demanding full delivery of the 16-mile Everett Link Extension to downtown Everett Station. The letter arrives as Sound Transit prepares to vote by June 30 on a revised ST3 System Plan that will determine whether Snohomish County gets the light rail it funded in 2016 — or a scaled-back version that stops short of downtown. Snohomish County’s public comment window closed May 1.

    What the Council Did — and Why It Matters

    On April 29, the Everett City Council voted unanimously to sign a formal letter to the Sound Transit Board of Directors. The letter, brought forward by Vice President Paula Rhyne, makes a documented public demand: complete the Everett Link Extension in full, on schedule, terminating at downtown Everett Station — not at the SW Everett Industrial Center or any other intermediate point.

    The letter is both a political signal and a public record. By taking a unanimous vote, the Council puts every member on record as demanding full delivery. That unanimity matters because Sound Transit board members are elected officials accountable to their jurisdictions. Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers, who chairs the Sound Transit board, is now navigating a situation where every elected official in Everett has publicly demanded an outcome directly relevant to his jurisdiction.

    Mayor Cassie Franklin sent her own letter to the Sound Transit board on April 23, laying out the economic case for full delivery. The Council’s April 29 letter follows and amplifies Franklin’s position, creating a unified municipal front heading into the June 30 board vote.

    The $34.5 Billion Problem Sound Transit Is Trying to Solve

    Sound Transit’s ST3 package — approved by voters across King, Pierce, and Snohomish counties in 2016 — faces a $34.5 billion budget shortfall driven by construction cost inflation, right-of-way complications, and delayed revenue projections. The agency is preparing a revised ST3 System Plan to go before the board by June 30, 2026. That plan will prioritize which projects get built, which get delayed, and which get descoped.

    The Everett Link Extension’s cost increased approximately 5–10% relative to original projections — a relatively modest overrun compared to the West Seattle and Ballard Link extensions, which have seen far larger cost increases. That asymmetry is central to Everett’s argument: the Everett segment is not where Sound Transit’s cost problem lives, and cutting or shortening Everett Link to solve a problem caused elsewhere would penalize Snohomish County voters for cost overruns in King County projects.

    What “Full Delivery” Means for Everett

    The full Everett Link Extension runs 16 miles from Lynnwood City Center (where it connects to the existing spine) to downtown Everett Station. It includes stations at Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (Paine Field access), and multiple downtown Everett stops. The project is currently scheduled to open in phases through 2037 under the original timeline.

    A truncated version — stopping at SW Everett Industrial Center rather than continuing to downtown Everett Station — would serve Paine Field workers but leave downtown Everett and the north city without light rail access. For a city whose comprehensive plan is built around transit-oriented development along the light rail spine, a truncated terminus is not a minor adjustment: it changes where density can reasonably be built, where businesses locate, and where housing investment concentrates.

    Mayor Franklin’s letter quantifies the stakes: $7.7 billion in economic development investment is anticipated in the Everett light rail corridor. That figure includes the Millwright District, waterfront redevelopment, downtown housing, and commercial development that has been underwritten — in part — by the expectation that light rail is coming.

    What Happens Next

    The Sound Transit board votes on the revised ST3 System Plan by June 30, 2026. The public comment period for Snohomish County residents closed May 1 — the day after the Council’s unanimous letter. Between now and June 30, Snohomish County’s regional elected officials, including Somers as board chair, will be under sustained advocacy pressure from Everett, Marysville, and other Snohomish County cities to protect the full extension.

    Everett has also been navigating the parallel Everett Transit consolidation into Community Transit — a process that reduces the city’s independent transit capacity and increases dependence on Sound Transit’s light rail spine for long-haul regional connectivity. If the spine gets shortened, the consolidated transit system loses its primary high-capacity connection to the regional rail network. These two decisions — the Everett Transit consolidation and the Sound Transit revision — are structurally linked even though they are being processed on separate tracks.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What did Everett City Council vote to do regarding Sound Transit?

    On April 29, 2026, the Everett City Council voted unanimously to send Sound Transit a formal letter demanding full delivery of the 16-mile Everett Link Extension to downtown Everett Station, ahead of the Sound Transit board’s June 30 vote on a revised ST3 System Plan.

    When is the Sound Transit board voting on the ST3 plan?

    The Sound Transit board is expected to vote on its revised ST3 System Plan by June 30, 2026. Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers chairs the board.

    Could the Everett Link Extension be shortened or cut?

    Yes. Sound Transit is addressing a $34.5 billion budget shortfall across its ST3 projects. The revised plan could stop the Everett extension at the SW Everett Industrial Center rather than continuing to downtown Everett Station. That is the specific outcome Everett’s unanimous Council letter is demanding be avoided.

    What is the economic value of the Everett Link Extension?

    Mayor Cassie Franklin’s April 23 letter to the Sound Transit board cited $7.7 billion in anticipated economic development investment in the Everett light rail corridor, including waterfront redevelopment, downtown housing, and commercial development that has been underwritten on the assumption that light rail is coming.

    How does the Everett Transit consolidation connect to this Sound Transit vote?

    Everett is consolidating its transit system into Community Transit under SB 5801, reducing the city’s independent transit capacity. That consolidation increases Everett’s dependence on Sound Transit’s light rail spine for regional connectivity — which makes the June 30 vote on full delivery of the Everett Link Extension even more consequential for south Snohomish County commuters.

    Can Everett residents still comment on the Sound Transit plan?

    The formal Snohomish County public comment window closed May 1, 2026. Residents can still contact Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office and the Sound Transit board directly. The June 30 board meeting will include a public comment period.

    Related Exploring Everett coverage: Everett Council Sends Sound Transit Letter | Everett Transit Consolidation Complete Guide | Everett 2027 Budget Deficit Guide

  • The June 30 Sound Transit Vote and Everett’s Light Rail Future: A Complete 2026 Guide to What’s at Stake

    The June 30 Sound Transit Vote and Everett’s Light Rail Future: A Complete 2026 Guide to What’s at Stake

    Quick answer: Sound Transit’s board must vote by June 30, 2026 on a revised ST3 System Plan that will determine whether Everett gets full light rail to downtown Everett Station or a truncated line ending at SW Everett Industrial Center near Paine Field. Mayor Cassie Franklin sent a formal advocacy letter April 23. The public survey closes May 1, 2026.

    Ten years after voters approved Sound Transit 3, the promise of light rail from Lynnwood to Everett is approaching its most consequential decision point yet. By June 30, 2026, Sound Transit’s 18-member board must adopt a revised ST3 System Plan — and the outcome will determine whether downtown Everett gets the light rail connection voters were promised, a truncated connection ending miles short near Paine Field, or something in between.

    Why the Vote Is Happening

    When ST3 passed in November 2016, it committed to a regional light rail spine connecting Tacoma, Seattle, and Everett. The Everett Link Extension — the planned 16-mile segment from Lynnwood City Center north to downtown Everett Station — was one of the program’s anchor commitments.

    Since then, construction cost escalation, inflation, and rising labor costs have opened a projected $34.5 billion gap between what ST3 promised and what current funding can deliver. Roughly $30 billion of that gap is driven by cost growth in east-west extensions to West Seattle and Ballard — but the shortfall affects all projects, including the Everett extension, whose estimated cost now runs $6.8 billion to $7.7 billion for the full 16-mile build.

    State law requires the board to adopt a revised System Plan by June 30, 2026. That deadline is now less than 60 days away.

    The Three Approaches on the Table

    Approaches 1 and 2 fund full construction of the north-south spine, completing light rail all the way to downtown Everett Station. They achieve this by deferring or truncating east-west extensions — primarily West Seattle and South Kirkland–Issaquah. Everett gets a complete connection under both approaches, though opening timelines may shift from the original 2037–2041 window.

    Approach 3 phases all extensions. Rail would reach the SW Everett Industrial Center station — the stop serving the Paine Field/Boeing corridor — but would stop short of downtown Everett Station. The truncation is estimated to save $1.8 billion to $2.5 billion on the Everett segment. Downtown Everett, Everett Station, and the neighborhoods between SW Everett and the city’s core would not be connected in this phase.

    Sound Transit’s capital delivery team has also identified design changes — specifically at-grade or surface-level routing at Ash Way, West Alderwood, and the SR 526/Evergreen Way stations — that could reduce the full Everett extension cost to approximately $6.4 billion to $7.3 billion while preserving the downtown connection.

    Mayor Franklin’s April 23 Letter

    On April 23, 2026, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin sent a formal letter to the Sound Transit board making the case for keeping the full Everett spine in the revised plan. “We are ready to support a strong, regional transportation system that works in lockstep with Sound Transit’s network,” Franklin wrote.

    The letter connected light rail advocacy to the ongoing Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation: a merged feeder network feeding into a completed spine would drive significantly higher ridership and improve Sound Transit’s financial projections. Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers has joined the advocacy. Both have framed the Everett extension as foundational to decades of regional planning made in good faith.

    What “Finish the Spine” Actually Means for Everett

    Light rail drives development decisions. Businesses, housing developers, and employers make long-term location choices based on transit access. Without a firm commitment to complete the Everett extension to downtown, those decisions shift.

    The city’s ongoing study of annexing the Mariner neighborhood — which sits near a planned light rail station — depends partly on the assumption that the station will be built. A truncation at SW Everett would undercut the transit-oriented development assumptions baked into that study. Everett also faces a projected $14 million 2027 budget gap; regional infrastructure that catalyzes economic activity is part of the long-term revenue picture.

    See also: What Everett’s Mariner Annexation Study means for residents.

    The May 1 Survey Deadline — Today

    Sound Transit is accepting public input through a survey closing May 1, 2026 — the same day this article publishes. Residents, commuters, and businesses can submit preferences at soundtransit.org/system-expansion. This is the primary formal mechanism for Everett community input before the board vote.

    The Everett Transit Merger Connection

    Separately, Everett Transit is merging into Community Transit — a change Mayor Franklin explicitly cited in her Sound Transit letter. A consolidated feeder network serving the completed Link spine is more efficient and more ridership-productive than a fragmented system. The complete guide to the Everett Transit merger explains what changes for local riders.

    What Comes After June 30

    The June 30 vote adopts the revised ST3 System Plan — a policy document setting priorities, timelines, and funding frameworks. It does not immediately change construction schedules. If Approaches 1 or 2 pass with full Everett spine funding, next steps involve finalizing station designs and entering environmental review. If Approach 3 passes with the SW Everett truncation, Everett leaders have made clear they would continue advocating for completion in a future phase.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the June 30, 2026 Sound Transit vote?

    By June 30, 2026, Sound Transit’s 18-member board must adopt a revised ST3 System Plan resolving a projected $34.5 billion funding gap. The vote will determine which projects get built, in what order, and on what timeline — including whether the Everett Link Extension goes all the way to downtown Everett Station or stops at SW Everett Industrial Center near Paine Field.

    What is the Everett Link Extension?

    A planned 16-mile light rail segment from Lynnwood City Center north to downtown Everett Station, approved in the 2016 ST3 ballot measure. The extension would include stations at Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (near Paine Field), Airport Road, Evergreen Way, and downtown Everett Station.

    How much does the full Everett extension cost?

    Sound Transit’s 2025 estimate is $6.8 billion to $7.7 billion for the full 16-mile build. With at-grade routing changes at several stations, the capital delivery team estimates costs could fall to $6.4 billion to $7.3 billion while preserving the downtown connection.

    What does Approach 3 mean for Everett?

    Approach 3 truncates rail at SW Everett Industrial Center — serving Paine Field — rather than extending to downtown Everett Station. The savings are estimated at $1.8 billion to $2.5 billion, but downtown Everett and Everett Station would not be connected in this phase.

    When is the public survey deadline?

    May 1, 2026. Submit input at soundtransit.org/system-expansion before the board vote on June 30.

    How does the Mariner annexation connect to this vote?

    The Mariner annexation study — which Everett City Council approved funding for — is partly premised on a planned light rail station serving that neighborhood. If rail is truncated at SW Everett, the transit-oriented development case for annexation weakens.

    What did Mayor Franklin argue in her April 23 letter?

    Franklin argued that completing the spine to downtown Everett Station — not truncating at SW Everett — is essential to regional transit effectiveness, that the Everett/Community Transit merger makes the case stronger by concentrating ridership on the spine, and that decades of development decisions in Everett were made in good faith based on the full spine commitment.

  • Everett’s Light Rail Future Comes to a Head: What the June 30 Sound Transit Vote Means

    Everett’s Light Rail Future Comes to a Head: What the June 30 Sound Transit Vote Means

    What is happening with the Everett Link Extension in 2026? Sound Transit’s board must vote no later than June 30, 2026 on a revised ST3 System Plan — a decision that will determine whether Everett gets light rail, and when. Mayor Cassie Franklin sent the board a formal letter on April 23 making Everett’s case. Here’s what the June vote means for residents.

    What Is the ST3 System Plan Vote?

    Sound Transit’s ST3 ballot measure passed in 2016, promising light rail from Lynnwood to Everett as part of a regional spine connecting Everett, Seattle, and Tacoma. Ten years later, construction cost escalation, inflation, and rising labor costs have opened a projected $34.5 billion gap between what was promised and what current funding can deliver.

    To resolve that gap, Sound Transit’s 18-member board is required to adopt a revised ST3 System Plan no later than June 30, 2026. The revised plan will set new priorities, timelines, and cost targets — and will determine which projects get built on what schedule. For Everett, the stakes are direct: the Everett Link Extension is one of the projects whose cost, timeline, and design details are under active review.

    The April 14 town hall at Everett Station established that costs for the Everett extension had ballooned to a range of $6.6 billion to $7.7 billion — and that one scenario under consideration by the board did not reach Everett at all.

    What Mayor Franklin Told the Board

    In an April 23, 2026 letter to the Sound Transit board, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin made a formal, multi-pronged case for keeping a fully funded Everett Link Extension in the revised plan.

    “We are ready to support a strong, regional transportation system that works in lockstep with Sound Transit’s network,” Franklin wrote.

    The mayor also connected the light rail advocacy to the ongoing Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation discussions — arguing that a merged transit network feeding into the Link spine would increase ridership and make the Everett extension more cost-effective for Sound Transit’s projections. “With a consolidated transit network, riders travelling both from and to Everett will benefit from more frequent service and fewer transfers which will make choosing transit more convenient,” Franklin wrote.

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers has joined the advocacy effort. Both county and city leaders have argued that cutting back or delaying the Everett extension would undercut decades of regional planning and transit-oriented development decisions made in good faith.

    What “Finish the Spine” Means

    Everett officials have repeatedly invoked the phrase “finish the spine” — a reference to Sound Transit’s original vision of connecting Everett, Seattle, and Tacoma as the backbone of a regional light rail network.

    The concern is practical: without a firm commitment to complete the Everett segment, investment decisions made by the city lose their transit-oriented foundation. Light rail drives specific development patterns. Businesses, housing developers, and employers make location decisions based on transit access. If Everett’s connection to the network is uncertain or delayed beyond 2041, those decisions shift.

    The city’s current push to study annexing the Mariner neighborhood — which sits near a planned light rail station — depends partly on the assumption that the station will be built. The projected $14 million 2027 budget gap makes it even more important that regional infrastructure like light rail provides long-term economic return, not just capital cost.

    What the Cost Options Look Like

    Sound Transit’s capital delivery team has been evaluating design changes that could reduce the Everett Link Extension’s cost significantly without eliminating the Everett connection.

    The key option under evaluation: shifting to surface-level or at-grade routing at several stations — specifically Ash Way, West Alderwood, and the SW Everett Industrial Center. At-grade construction is less expensive than elevated tracks and could bring the Everett extension’s total cost down to a range of $6.4 to $7.3 billion, compared to the higher end of current estimates. Additional design changes are being studied at the SR 526/Evergreen Way interchange.

    The board is weighing three broad approaches to closing the system-wide $34.5 billion gap:

    Cost savings through design changes and value engineering. The at-grade routing proposals are the primary example — building the same basic network with less expensive construction methods where the ridership math supports it.

    Project delays or deferrals. Some ST3 projects could be pushed out in time, freeing up near-term budget. For Everett, even the current schedule already runs to 2037-2041.

    New or enhanced revenue tools. The board could seek additional funding sources — potentially requiring a separate voter approval — to close the gap without cutting projects.

    The June 30 vote sets the direction. A final project list, timeline, and funding plan follows from that framework decision.

    How the Transit Merger Connects to This

    One thread running through Mayor Franklin’s advocacy is the Everett Transit and Community Transit consolidation — ongoing discussions about merging Everett’s municipally owned bus system into the regional Community Transit network.

    The logic: a consolidated transit system would create a larger, more integrated network that funnels riders toward the light rail spine. That increases the ridership projections for the Everett Link Extension — making it a stronger investment case for the Sound Transit board. It also potentially simplifies operations once light rail arrives, reducing the number of agencies a rider has to navigate to get from a Snohomish County suburb to downtown Seattle.

    Franklin’s April 23 letter makes this connection explicit, tying the transit consolidation talks directly to the Sound Transit advocacy effort. The two decisions — who builds and runs Snohomish County’s buses, and whether light rail reaches Everett on schedule — are not separate issues.

    What the 2037-2041 Timeline Actually Means

    A completion window of 2037 to 2041 means Everett residents are looking at a decade or more before light rail service begins. Every year of delay pushes back the development patterns, ridership, and regional connectivity that the extension enables.

    For context: Lynnwood Link, which connects Lynnwood to the Seattle light rail network, opened in 2024. The Everett extension adds the next major segment north. The gap between Lynnwood and Everett — roughly 16 miles — is the remaining piece of the “spine” that Everett advocates are fighting to protect.

    The June 30 board vote will not determine a final construction date. But it will determine whether Everett is in the funded plan at all, and whether the design options that could bring costs down to $6.4-7.3 billion are adopted or rejected.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What exactly is the June 30 vote? It is a required Sound Transit board decision to adopt a revised ST3 System Plan — a document that sets the new priorities, timelines, and cost targets for the entire ST3 light rail expansion. The board must vote no later than June 30, 2026.

    Will Everett definitely get light rail? The June 30 vote will clarify that. One scenario evaluated by the board would not extend rail to Everett. Mayor Franklin’s April 23 letter and local advocacy are directed at ensuring Everett remains in the funded plan.

    What does “at-grade” routing mean? Instead of elevated tracks (more expensive), at-grade rail runs at street level with dedicated right-of-way. It typically costs less to construct, with trade-offs for speed and grade crossings depending on design.

    What year would Everett get light rail? Current estimates put the window at 2037-2041. Design decisions in the June 30 vote could affect where in that range the final opening falls.

    What does the transit merger have to do with Sound Transit? A merged Everett Transit / Community Transit system would create a larger rider base feeding into the light rail network — strengthening the ridership case for the Everett extension in the Sound Transit board’s analysis.

    What to Do Next

    • Follow Sound Transit board meetings: Meeting schedule, agendas, and public comment sign-up at soundtransit.org/board. The next board sessions before the June 30 deadline are the primary opportunity to weigh in publicly.
    • Track the Everett Link Extension: Project updates at soundtransit.org/system-expansion/everett-link-extension.
    • Submit written comment: Sound Transit accepts written public comments through its website. Comments submitted before the June 30 vote become part of the public record.
    • Contact Mayor Franklin’s office: The mayor sits on the Sound Transit board and represents Everett’s interests directly. Contact via everettwa.gov/citycouncil.
    • Contact Snohomish County: County Executive Somers also represents Snohomish County interests on regional transit matters at snohomishcountywa.gov.
  • Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    Sound Transit Faces Up to $1.1B in Added Costs for Everett Light Rail — What Happened at Tuesday’s Town Hall

    What is the Everett Link Extension? The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail line connecting Snohomish County communities — including Lynnwood, Mariner, Paine Field, and Everett Station — to the regional Sound Transit light rail network. It was included in the ST3 ballot measure approved by Puget Sound voters in 2016, with an original 2021 cost estimate of $6.6 billion.

    On the evening of April 14, a standing-room-only crowd packed Everett Station to hear Sound Transit explain what is happening with the light rail extension their communities voted for — and to press officials on whether it will be built on anything close to the original terms.

    The short answer: Sound Transit faces costs that have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the original 2021 estimate for the Everett extension alone, as part of a system-wide budget challenge the agency describes as a $34.5 billion gap. The timeline has already slipped. And one of the scenarios the agency is weighing would not complete the connection to Everett at all.

    Why Costs Have Climbed

    Sound Transit attributes the cost increases to a combination of forces that have hit infrastructure projects broadly in recent years: inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions, and escalating right-of-way acquisition costs. Together, these factors have driven costs up 20 to 25 percent above what the agency’s 2021 financial plan assumed.

    For the Everett Link Extension specifically, the increase ranges from $200 million on the low end to $1.1 billion on the high end — on top of the original $6.6 billion estimate. That would put the project’s total cost at up to approximately $7.7 billion, depending on which scenario the Sound Transit Board pursues.

    The Timeline Has Already Slipped — Significantly

    When Snohomish County voters approved ST3 in 2016, the Everett Link Extension was projected to open in 2036. That target has already moved. Sound Transit now says the first phase — reaching as far north as Paine Field — may open by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station potentially not arriving until somewhere between 2037 and 2041.

    A five-year window of uncertainty for a project’s completion date is itself a signal of how unsettled this extension’s future is. For residents who counted on light rail as a long-term alternative to the I-5 and Highway 2 commute into King County, that uncertainty is not abstract.

    Three Scenarios — Including One That Stops Short of Everett

    The most consequential piece of information for Everett residents at Tuesday’s town hall: Sound Transit is weighing three different approaches to closing its budget gap, and at least one of those scenarios would not complete the connection to Everett Station.

    The agency has not publicly labeled all three options by name, but previous Sound Transit documents have described approaches ranging from phasing the extension to terminate before reaching downtown Everett, to pursuing new financing mechanisms, to restructuring which ST3 projects get built first and on what timeline.

    For a city that anchored a significant portion of its long-term transit vision around being the northern terminus of Puget Sound light rail, the prospect of a scenario that bypasses Everett Station drew pointed and sustained questions from the crowd.

    Mayor Franklin and County Executive Somers Were in the Room

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin attended the April 14 town hall and were available to take questions alongside Sound Transit staff. Both officials have consistently advocated for the full Everett extension as a critical piece of the region’s transportation and economic development future.

    The day before the town hall, the Everett Herald’s editorial board published a call for Sound Transit to “exhaust every option to keep light rail on track” — a signal of the urgency local leaders and media are placing on this decision.

    What Happens Next

    Sound Transit’s board is expected to evaluate updated approaches to the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. That decision will determine whether the Everett Link Extension proceeds on a modified but still-complete schedule, gets phased to stop short of Everett Station, or faces some other restructuring.

    Residents who want to weigh in before that decision can:

    • Attend Sound Transit Board meetings, which are open to public comment
    • Submit written comments through soundtransit.org
    • Contact Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives directly
    • Reach out to Mayor Franklin’s office or the Snohomish County Executive’s office

    What This Means for Everyday Commuters

    Light rail was a central promise of the ST3 campaign: a reliable, car-free connection linking Everett to Seattle and the broader regional network. Lynnwood Link opened in 2024, giving riders a northern terminus — with buses bridging the gap into Snohomish County. That arrangement was always intended to be temporary, until the Everett extension was complete.

    If the extension is scaled back or further delayed, Everett-area commuters would remain dependent on transfers and bus connections for years — or decades — beyond what voters were told in 2016. For a region that has some of the country’s most congested commutes, the stakes of this summer’s board decision are substantial.

    Frequently Asked Questions About the Everett Link Extension

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?

    Sound Transit currently projects the first phase to Paine Field opening by 2037, with the full extension to Everett Station arriving between 2037 and 2041. Both timelines are subject to further change pending the board’s summer 2026 decisions.

    How much will the Everett Link Extension cost?

    The original 2021 estimate was $6.6 billion. Costs have increased between $200 million and $1.1 billion above that figure, meaning the project could cost as much as approximately $7.7 billion depending on the scenario Sound Transit pursues.

    Could the light rail extension stop short of Everett?

    Yes, this is one of at least three scenarios Sound Transit is considering to address its $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap. No final decision has been made — the board is expected to act in summer 2026.

    When will Sound Transit decide on the Everett extension’s future?

    The Sound Transit Board is expected to take up ST3 System Plan updates in summer 2026.

    Who attended the April 14 Everett transit town hall?

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin, and Sound Transit representatives attended and took questions from a standing-room-only crowd at Everett Station.

    What is ST3?

    ST3 is the third Sound Transit ballot measure, approved by voters in the greater Puget Sound region in November 2016. It authorized funding for multiple light rail expansions, including the Everett Link Extension connecting Snohomish County to the regional network.

    How can Everett residents give input on the Everett Link Extension?

    Residents can attend Sound Transit Board meetings, submit comments at soundtransit.org, or contact their elected Sound Transit Board representatives and local officials including Mayor Franklin’s office or Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’ office.


    → For the complete knowledge hub on the Everett Link Extension, see: Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future

  • Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: 2026 Status, Timeline and What the $500M Gap Means

    Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: 2026 Status, Timeline and What the $500M Gap Means

    Quick Definition: The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail segment connecting Lynnwood City Center to Everett Station with six new stations. Sound Transit targets a 2037 opening to SW Everett Industrial Center and 2041 full service to Everett Station, pending closure of a $500 million funding gap.

    We’ve been watching the Everett Link Extension timeline shift around for a few years now, and 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most consequential years for the project since voters approved ST3 back in 2016. This spring, Sound Transit is preparing to release its Draft Environmental Impact Statement — the document that narrows down exactly where the tracks, stations, and operations facility will go. This is what you need to know right now.

    Where the Project Stands in April 2026

    The Everett Link Extension remains in its Planning Phase, with the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) expected to be released for public review in 2026. The Draft EIS is a big deal — it’s the point where Sound Transit presents the preferred alignment, the six station locations, and the environmental and community impacts of building 16 miles of elevated light rail through Snohomish County.

    Once the Draft EIS is released, there will be a public comment period. Then Sound Transit prepares the Final EIS, currently expected around 2027. The Sound Transit Board formally votes on the route and station locations after the Final EIS — no shovels in the ground before that point.

    • 2026: Draft EIS release and public comment period
    • 2027: Final EIS and Board decision on preferred route and stations
    • 2030–2036: Construction phase
    • 2037: Target service opening to SW Everett Industrial Center
    • 2041: Projected full service to Everett Station

    The Six Planned Stations — What We Know

    The Everett Link Extension adds six new stations to the regional Link light rail network, connecting riders from the Lynnwood City Center terminus northward into Snohomish County. Here are the six stations currently planned:

    West Alderwood — Connects to the area between Lynnwood and southwest Snohomish County neighborhoods currently underserved by rail.

    Ash Way — Positioned near the Ash Way Park-and-Ride on I-5, already a major transit hub for express bus commuters heading to Seattle.

    Mariner — Serves the Mariner community in south Everett near the I-5 and Highway 526 interchange.

    SW Everett Industrial Center — Located near Boeing’s primary Everett manufacturing campus. This is the station that puts light rail walking distance from one of the region’s largest employment sites. Targeted as the first endpoint of service in 2037.

    SR 526/Evergreen — Near Everett’s southern approaches, serving Paine Field-area commuters.

    Everett Station — The northern terminus, connecting Link directly to Everett’s Amtrak Cascades and Sounder commuter rail hub downtown. Full service here is targeted for 2041.

    A seventh provisional station at SR 99 and Airport Road is also being studied, though it is not currently funded and would need additional financial support to be included.

    The $500 Million Funding Gap — What It Actually Means

    We’re not going to bury the hard part: Sound Transit has a $500 million affordability gap on this project. That’s a real number from Sound Transit’s own project documents — not a rounding error or a worst-case scenario.

    In practice, Sound Transit is pursuing increased local, state, and federal funding while simultaneously exploring cost-reduction options — different construction approaches, phasing strategies, or station design changes that could bring the price down without cutting service quality.

    The ST3 System Plan — the broader 25-year transit expansion voters approved in 2016 — is also up for a structural review by the Sound Transit Board in summer 2026. The board is evaluating “different approaches to updating the ST3 System Plan,” which could include new ways to build, phase, or sequence projects, including the Everett extension.

    What this means practically: if the board decides to phase the project and build to the SW Everett Industrial Center station by 2037 first, then complete the final stretch to Everett Station later, the shape of the project changes significantly. If new funding closes the gap, the 2037/2041 timeline firms up. We’ll be tracking whatever comes out of those board discussions as they develop.

    What the Draft EIS Will Tell Us

    When Sound Transit releases the Draft EIS this year, it will contain:

    • The preferred alignment — the exact route the tracks follow
    • Station designs and footprint maps for all six locations
    • Property acquisition requirements
    • Environmental impact analysis: noise, traffic, wetlands, neighborhood effects
    • Community benefit assessments
    • The preferred location for the Operations and Maintenance Facility North (OMF North), a critical piece of system infrastructure targeted for a 2034 opening

    The public comment period following the Draft EIS release is the moment for Snohomish County residents to officially weigh in. Station design concerns, community impacts, park-and-ride configurations — all of that input gets recorded in the official planning record during this window.

    Why This Matters for Everett’s Development Boom

    We’ve spent a lot of time covering Everett’s physical transformation — the waterfront, the stadium project, the housing surge. Light rail sits underneath all of it as a long-term infrastructure bet.

    When Everett Station connects to the regional Link network, the entire corridor from downtown Everett to Seattle becomes a roughly 45-minute commute without a car. That changes the math on living in Everett for people working Seattle-based jobs. It changes what downtown Everett can support in terms of retail, restaurants, and density.

    The Port of Everett’s Millwright District, the new downtown stadium, the apartments going up near the transit center — every one of these projects is betting on a future where Everett is a complete city, not a staging area for a Seattle commute. The $500M funding gap and the 2037-2041 window is the biggest variable in that long-term calculation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?
    Sound Transit is targeting 2037 for service to the SW Everett Industrial Center station and 2041 for full service to Everett Station. Both timelines are contingent on closing a $500 million funding gap.

    How many stations will the Everett Link Extension have?
    Six stations are planned: West Alderwood, Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center, SR 526/Evergreen, and Everett Station. A seventh station at SR 99/Airport Road is being studied but is not currently funded.

    What is the Everett Link Extension Draft EIS?
    The Draft Environmental Impact Statement is expected to be released in 2026. It identifies the preferred route alignment, station locations, and environmental and community impacts. There will be a public comment period after its release.

    How long is the Everett Link Extension?
    Approximately 16 miles of new light rail, running from the Lynnwood City Center terminus north to Everett Station.

    What is the $500 million funding gap?
    Sound Transit has identified a $500 million shortfall between current projected revenues and the estimated cost of the Everett Link Extension. The agency is pursuing additional local, state, and federal funding as well as cost-reduction options.

    What is the ST3 System Plan review?
    The Sound Transit Board is evaluating different approaches to updating the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. This could include new ways to build, phase, or sequence projects — potentially affecting the Everett extension timeline.

    Will there be park-and-ride access at Everett Link stations?
    Yes. The Ash Way station connects to an existing major Park-and-Ride facility. Specific configurations at each station will be detailed in the Draft EIS.

    How does this connect to existing Everett transit?
    The extension terminates at Everett Station, which serves Sounder commuter rail and Amtrak Cascades. It will also connect with Community Transit bus routes throughout the corridor.