Ferry fares to jump 12 percent

Keystone gets off easy, San Juans hit hardest

Washington State Ferries plans to increase ticket prices by an average of 12 percent beginning in May.

Whidbey Island ferry users won’t suffer as much as some. A car/driver ticket on the Mukilteo-Clinton route will go up from $5 to $5.50 under the proposal during the off-peak winter months. The same ticket during the busier spring and summer months will cost $7, an increase from the present $6.25. Car/driver ticket books for frequent ferry users will increase from $80 to $88.

For the comparatively few who use the Keystone-Port Townsend ferry, rates won’t go up at all, according to Ray Deardorf, planning director for Washington State Ferries.

Deardorf explained Wednesday that an effort is being made to bring ticket prices in line with the length of the route, and at present the Keystone-Port Townsend ticket prices matches its 4.5 mile length.

Clinton-Mukilteo is the shortest route at 2.6 miles, therefore ticket prices are the lowest.

Ferry ticket costs will continue to skyrocket for the lengthy trips to the San Juan Islands. Deardorf said rates in the San Juans are scheduled to increase 17 1/2 percent if the State Transportation Commission approves the fare recommendations. This comes on top of a rate increase of over 20 percent last year. The distance from Anacortes to Friday Harbor is 18.2 miles.

Ferry rate increases barely kept up with inflation for years, but have increased rapidly the last two years due to voter-approved Initiative 695. The “$30 license tab initiative” hit the ferry system hard and it’s been trying to catch up ever since.

Deardorf said the Legislature in 2001 asked that State Ferries set the goal of meeting 80 percent of operating costs through the fare box. This is the second year of a six-year effort to achieve that goal.

“It remains to be seen,” whether that goal can be reached, Deardorf said. As ticket prices increase, ridership is expected to decline, thereby reducing revenues. Deardorf said ridership declined about 3 1/2 percent after last year’s increases, “but that was better than anticipated.”

Fare increases are scheduled to take effect May 12. First, there will be a series of public hearings including one on Whidbey Island set for Monday, Feb. 25 from 7-9 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church in Freeland. The State Transportation Commissions is scheduled to take final action April 4 on rate increases.