Navy weighs in Port Townsend-Keystone ferry criticism

PORT TOWNSEND — Are you still upset about the ferry situation, with one 50-car boat, the leased Steilacoom II, on the Port Townsend-Keystone run rather than the two 65-car Steel Electrics?

Do you fear that the run will become even more congested as the summer tourism season picks up and ferry traffic grows?

And do you think the new ferry reservation system caters to tourists, not local residents who may need to use the ferry on the spur of the moment?

Has nothing gone right since the corroded Steel Electrics were forcibly retired last November?

Do you chafe at the fact there won’t be any relief until two new Island Home-class ferries are built and go into service in 2010?

Your discontent is matched by the U.S. Navy’s.

The weekly Whidbey Examiner newspaper keeps close tabs on the complaints at the Keystone-Coupeville end of the ferry run.

“NAVY CHIEF CRITICIZES FERRY SERVICE” was the Page 1 headline in the Examiner’s May 30 edition.

“In a meeting last week in Coupeville, the Whidbey Island Naval Air Station commanding officer personally told the head of Washington State Ferries that poor service on the Keystone ferry route is having a negative impact on regional transportation for the military,” the newspaper reported.

”’This is already a community issue, as you already know, but I just wanted to make sure you didn’t miss how important it is to us,’ Capt. Gerral David told WSF chief David Moseley in a May 21 meeting at the Island County Courthouse.

“David told Moseley that the Keystone route has become so unreliable, it is becoming increasingly difficult to use the route to transport essential personnel and supplies between Whidbey Island and Navy facilities on the Olympic Peninsula.

“‘Almost exclusively, the 18-wheelers that supply the base go Highway 20 because they can’t either trust the ferries, or afford them,’ David said.”

More in News

Remains in shoe determined to belong to a bear

A shoe found earlier this week on the beach at… Continue reading

Patrick Zolpi-Mikols, a park aide with Fort Worden State Park, gathers and removes leaves covering the storm drains after an atmospheric river rainstorm early Wednesday morning in Port Townsend. A flood warning was issued by the National Weather Service until 11:11 a.m. today for the Elwha River at the McDonald Bridge in Clallam County. With the flood stage at 20 feet, the Elwha River was projected to rise to 23.3 feet late Wednesday afternoon and then fall below flood stage just after midnight. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Cleaning storm drains

Patrick Zolpi-Mikols, a park aide with Fort Worden State Park, gathers and… Continue reading

Woman files suit against city of Port Angeles

Document alleges denial of constitutional rights

State report shows clean audit of Port of Port Angeles finances

Commissioners review five-year strategic plan

Port Townsend School District’s Food Service Director Shannon Gray in the Salish Coast production garden’s hoop house. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Port Townsend schools’ food program thriving

Staff growing produce, cooking meals from scratch

Brake failure leads to collision on west end of Hood Canal Bridge

A semi-truck towing a garbage truck suffered brake failure and… Continue reading

A two-car collision at U.S. Highway 101 and state Highway 112 partially blocked traffic for more than an hour on Tuesday. One person was transported to Olympic Medical Center, Clallam 2 Fire-Rescue said. (Clallam 2 Fire-Rescue)
Collision blocks traffic at highways 101, 112

One person was transported to Olympic Medical Center following… Continue reading

Library system to host gift-wrapping workshops

The North Olympic Library System will host free “Wrap… Continue reading

Shoe with human remains found on Sequim beach

A shoe containing human remains was found on the beach… Continue reading

Sue Bahl walks with an umbrella on West Eighth Street on Monday. Heavy rainfall up to 8 inches over the past several days has increased the threat of landslides in Western Washington, according to the National Weather Service. A flood watch also has been issued until 4 p.m. Friday for portions of northwest and west central Washington, including Clallam and Jefferson counties. Sharp rises in rivers, especially those flowing off the Olympics and Cascades, are expected, the National Weather Service said. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Atmospheric river

Sue Bahl walks with an umbrella on West Eighth Street on Monday.… Continue reading

Clallam board approves budget, homelessness task force funds

County OKs eight proposals for housing, assistance

Five-year plan to address Jefferson County homelessness

Action steps assigned to jurisdictions, providers