King County to Sunset Public Restroom Program

King Coun­ty plans to remove two pub­lic restroom facil­i­ties at its tran­sit cen­ters, despite what The Urban­ist’s Ryan calls “promis­ing results.”

As Pack­er , “Cen­tral Puget Sound has a dearth of pub­lic restrooms, par­tic­u­lar­ly at tran­sit facil­i­ties, with the few avail­able often acces­si­ble for lim­it­ed and many rid­ers depen­dent on near­by pri­vate busi­ness­es for restroom access.” The six-month pilot was designed to explore options to expand restroom access.

“How­ev­er, the pilot pro­gram’s high , most­ly asso­ci­at­ed with pro­vid­ing 24-hour secu­ri­ty to both tran­sit cen­ters to mon­i­tor the restrooms, will like­ly prove the biggest deter­rent to mak­ing them per­ma­nent.” The pro­gram cost $568,567 to oper­ate — with rough­ly 70 per­cent spent on secu­ri­ty per­son­nel.

Coun­cilmem­ber Rod Dem­bows­ki, who cham­pi­oned the , said 24/7 secu­ri­ty may been ‘overkill.’ Dem­bows­ki added, “There’s a long his­to­ry in Seat­tle with strug­gling with pub­lic restrooms, they can be cost­ly, dif­fi­cult to , but I think for the usabil­i­ty of our sys­tem and the rid­ers, I think it’s some­thing we ought to con­tin­ue to on.”

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