Submitted by WSF
More than half of Washington State Ferries’ 23-vessel fleet is scheduled to be retired by 2040. The ferry system needs 16 new vessels in the next 20 years, including 13 ferries to replace vessels due for retirement and three additional vessels to fill in when other ferries are out for maintenance and to respond to growth.
These findings are among the recommendations of the newly released 2040 WSF Long Range Plan, which WSF submitted to the Washington State Legislature on Jan. 3. View the plan at www.wsdot.wa.gov/ferries/planning/long-range-plan/the-plan.
“This long-range plan provides a blueprint to guide WSF’s investments and meet our customers’ service expectations,” said Assistant Secretary Amy Scarton. “We need to invest immediately in building new ferries, developing our workforce and upgrading technology and terminals to provide reliable, sustainable and resilient ferry service through 2040 and beyond.”
The long-range plan builds upon WSF’s 2009 long-range plan by focusing on a set of investments and service enhancements for the agency to implement over the next 20 years. The plan addresses four major themes:Reliable service.
Customer experience.
Managing growth.
Sustainability and resilience.
In addition to recommending that the state build new ferries immediately, the plan includes investments in terminal improvements to support more reliable service, a focus on new technology and strategies to improve the customer experience and manage growth.
A greener future
For the first time, the WSF Long Range Plan includes recommendations for greening the ferry fleet and preparing for climate change and seismic events. Based on guidance from Gov. Jay Inslee, the plan calls for electrifying the ferry fleet to reduce fuel use, emissions, noise and maintenance costs.
The plan reflects extensive input from ferry customers, the public and stakeholders, including nearly 900 comments. More than 7,500 people participated in 32 public meetings on land and on board ferries and in two online open houses over the last 18 months.
Next steps
The long-range plan will help guide future funding decisions. WSF will use the plan to guide projects and adapt to changing conditions through 2040.
Washington State Ferries, a division of the Washington State Department of Transportation, is the largest ferry system in the U.S. and safely and efficiently carries 24.5 million people a year through some of the most majestic scenery in the world.