I shadowed Tacoma mayoral hopeful Jim Merritt for several hours during a typical campaign day recently, collecting string for an eventual profile Ill do of the two candidates in the mayors race.
During one of Merritts stops, he met at the Mystic Mocha Cafe with one of his biggest supporters, Dome District construction firm owner Keith Stone. Stone and Merritt had called the meeting to discuss Sound Transits D to M Street rail project with two structural engineers.
The reason? Merritt is forging ahead with getting an alternative post-and-beam design plan drafted of the project even though Sound Transit has said it intends to use a different design plan that is now about 75 percent complete.
The Sound Transit proposal largely plans to install an earthen berm to elevate the commuter tracks through the Dome District, allowing the connection of existing and new tracks over the roughly 1.4 miles from D to M Street as part of the planned Sounder commuter trains Lakewood line.
In whats becoming the linchpin issue of his campaign, Merritt who insists the berm design will be bad for aesthetics and future development of the Dome District is trying to keep the post-and-beam idea alive.
Along with Stone, Merritts input to the structural engineers has them now working on a formal post-and-beam design draft. The work, largely being done on a volunteer basis at this point, will help determine if a post-and-beam plan is a feasible and cost-effective model, Merritt said.
If post-and-beams cost (is too much) and gets blown out of the water by the other proposal, thats a chance Ive got to take, Merritt said. Then Ill be willing to back off.
But I really dont think that will happen, he added. Its too simple of a design.
Merritt contends providing a formal alternative design plan will finally give the public a chance to see for themselves how post-and-beam stacks up with Sound Transits preferred berm design.
Lewis Kamb, The News Tribune
