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Transportation Committee

Helping to shape Bellevue’s mobility future by evaluating projects, recommending investments and collaborating with city and transit partners.

Mission & Scope

The Bellevue Chamber’s Transportation Committee convenes employers, developers, mobility providers, and public agencies to solve near-term transportation challenges and shape long-term investments. The committee studies and recommends state, regional, and city projects, tracks transit service changes, and explores technology that improves safety and access. Focus areas on the committee page include statewide priorities like I-405 corridor improvements, city planning items such as the Mobility Implementation Plan and Transportation Facilities Plan, transit integration, and transportation technology like C-V2X and AV policy. 

The Bellevue Chamber’s Transportation Committee convenes employers, developers, mobility providers, and public agencies to solve near-term transportation challenges and shape long-term investments. The committee studies and recommends state, regional, and city projects, tracks transit service changes, and explores technology that improves safety and access. 

Focus areas include statewide priorities like I‑405 corridor improvements, city planning items such as the Mobility Implementation Plan and Transportation Facilities Plan, transit integration, and transportation technology like Cellular Vehicle‑to‑Everything (C‑V2X), autonomous vehicle policy, and micromobility. 

The committee meets with city and agency staff, weighs in through letters and testimony, and partners with other Chamber advocacy groups when a cross‑cutting business issue is at stake. In recent cycles that has included curb‑management policy, funding needs tied to state initiatives, and network connectivity for bikes, pedestrians, and transit. 



The committee meets with city and agency staff, weighs in through letters and testimony, and partners with other Chamber advocacy groups when a cross-cutting business issue is at stake. In recent cycles that has included curb-management policy, funding needs tied to state initiatives, and network connectivity for bikes, pedestrians, and transit.


$450M

I-405 Corridor  improvements funded

$18M

Eastrail through Bellevue

$6.9M

Mountains to Sound Greenway “Bellevue Gap”

$8M

SR 520 at 148th Ave NE bike and pedestrian crossing

What We’ve Done
2025

Reset curb-pricing work with the City
At its January 9 meeting, the Transportation Committee re-engaged on Bellevue’s curb-pricing study, revisiting targets for curb occupancy and turnover and flagging how curb policy connects to the Mobility Implementation Plan, TFP, RapidRide K-Line, Project Zero and AV policy. The goal was to keep businesses at the table so curb-pricing tests protected access, safety and daily operations.


Launched the Bellevue Mobility Coalition (BMC)
In early 2025, the Chamber launched the Bellevue Mobility Coalition to match the Comprehensive Plan’s land use vision with a real mobility strategy. BMC brought together major employers, developers and mobility experts to analyze multimodal travel, prioritize high-impact projects and provide technical feedback as the City initiated a new Master Transportation Plan. Within its first year, that work helped prompt the City to start the plan and to use BMC as a regular sounding board.


Backed micromobility code adoption and scooter access
To modernize rules for e-scooters and e-bikes, the Chamber supported the 2025 Micromobility Code Amendment. The Chamber backed a code update aligned with state law and regional best practice and hosted Lime scooter demonstrations so decision-makers could see the technology in use. City Council adopted the update, clearing the way for pilots that improve first and last mile connections while maintaining safety and access.


Connected preservation, revenue and AV policy
Later in 2025, the committee reviewed WSDOT budget updates and the pressure that flat revenues put on basic preservation. Members discussed options such as road-usage charges and other tools, and tracked legislation on human safety operators in autonomous vehicles. The committee also continued to follow Bellevue’s Project Zero C-V2X pilot with T-Mobile and partners, which tested connected-vehicle safety applications on city streets.


2023 - 2024

Framed curb-pricing and statewide funding conversations
In October 2024, the committee heard from the Association of Washington Business on Initiative 2117 and long-term state transportation funding. The briefing covered gas tax alternatives such as road-usage charges, tire taxes and weight fees, and how they might interact with local revenue tools. That session set up a structured committee discussion on curb-pricing and on-street revenue options for 2025.


Shaped Bike Bellevue into a balanced multimodal plan
Throughout 2023, the committee worked through the Bike Bellevue proposal. Based on committee feedback, Chamber staff testified to remove language that would have converted key vehicle lanes to bike-only lanes, preserve core capacity and focus on high-value, connective bike facilities. The outcome helped reposition Bike Bellevue as part of a broader multimodal strategy for people walking, biking, taking transit and driving.


Shaped the Curb Management Plan to protect access and commerce
As Bellevue built its Curb Management Plan, the committee pushed for a balance of mobility, safety and economic activity. The Chamber recommended clear typology maps, digital tools to manage loading and on-street parking, traffic study requirements before lane conversions or pricing and safeguards for mobility hubs, freight and emergency access. Many of these ideas now appear in the City’s curb-management approach.


Kept RapidRide K-Line aligned with mobility and business needs
The committee consistently supported RapidRide K-Line while protecting key road capacity. Members emphasized needs for freight, emergency response and general traffic, raised concerns about designs that removed too many lanes and backed revised options that preserved critical capacity while still delivering frequent, reliable transit between Totem Lake and Eastgate.


Tracked East Link Starter Line decisions and station readiness
In June 2023, Sound Transit briefed the committee on the East Link Starter Line and phased 2 Line openings. The committee focused on access and circulation around stations in South Bellevue, Downtown Bellevue, Wilburton and the Spring District, as well as operational readiness and staffing, and how early rail service would support transit-oriented development and business access.


Protected Mountains to Sound “Bellevue Gap” trail funding
When funding shifts threatened the Mountains to Sound “Bellevue Gap,” the Chamber and local leaders pressed the Governor’s office to reprogram Move Ahead Washington dollars and protect Bellevue’s 2.37 million dollar federal match. The committee framed the gap as a critical connection between Eastrail, the wider trail network, Bellevue College and the Eastgate Park and Ride, helping keep the segment on track.


Advanced Grand Connection and Eastrail I-90 crossing priorities
The committee continued to champion The Grand Connection and the Eastrail I-90 crossing as signature mobility investments. The Chamber made the case for blended state, federal and private funding and highlighted design elements that improve safe crossings and access for commuters, shoppers and visitors, keeping both projects visible and competitive in funding and design discussions.


2021 - 2022

Helped to secure nearly 500 million dollars for Eastside projects
Through coordinated advocacy with the City of Bellevue and the East King Chambers Coalition, the Chamber helped shape the 2022 Move Ahead Washington package. For Bellevue and the Eastside, it delivered nearly 500 million dollars, including funding for I-405 Master Plan improvements, Eastrail through Bellevue, the Mountains to Sound “Bellevue Gap” and the State Route 520 at 148th Avenue Northeast bike and pedestrian crossing. These investments advanced long-standing committee priorities on throughput, safety and non-motorized access.


Showcased priority projects to lawmakers in a joint tour
Ahead of those funding decisions, the Chamber and City co-hosted a transportation tour for state legislators, City leaders and partners. The tour highlighted top projects such as I-405 improvements, Eastrail and the Wilburton Trestle, the Mountains to Sound “Bellevue Gap” and key State Route 520 and Interstate 90 access projects, giving lawmakers on-the-ground context that fed directly into the Eastside wins in Move Ahead Washington.


Kept I-405, SR 520/124th, I-90 and South Downtown access on the map
Throughout 2021 and 2022, the committee and staff consistentvly emphasized the importance of I-405 Master Plan projects, the SR 520 and 124th interchange, I-90 and South Downtown access and Lake Hills Connector and Downtowner connections for freight and commuters. That persistent drumbeat helped keep these corridors at the center of Eastside transportation conversations and set the stage for later funding and policy wins.


“The future of Bellevue calls for a safe, efficient, and data-driven multi-modal approach that is well understood by our community and its leaders.”Gavin Haines, Government Affairs Specialist
What We’re Working On


The Transportation Committee continues to influence transportation growth in the region:

  • Curb management and on‑street pricing: The committee is engaged with the City’s phased curb‑pricing study, which targets 80% curb occupancy and a 15–20% overstay rate. Data show many blocks at or above capacity with 20–50% of vehicles overstaying time limits. The City is conducting surveys, canvassing, and open houses; the committee stays at the table to ensure any pricing or policy changes balance access, safety, and business operations. 

  • Mobility Implementation Plan update: The Transportation Commission is preparing recommendations to update the Mobility Implementation Plan, with a particular focus on walking and biking networks. The committee tracks this work and relays member feedback so that multimodal improvements enhance safety and reliability without undermining freight and vehicle access to key employment centers. 

  • Transportation Facilities Plan (TFP) 2026–2037: As the City refines its next 12‑year Transportation Facilities Plan, the committee follows the project list and promotes community forums so employers understand which corridors, intersections, and trail connections are being prioritized — and can flag gaps that affect commuting and goods movement. 
  • RapidRide K Line to Council: With service planned for 2030 between Totem Lake and Eastgate, the RapidRide K Line will connect Downtown Bellevue, Bellevue College, and other hubs with frequent, reliable transit. The committee monitors scope, station planning, and lane configurations as Metro presents the project vision to Bellevue and Kirkland councils, emphasizing both transit performance and business access along the corridor. 

  • Transportation technology and safety: The committee tracks Bellevue and T‑Mobile’s Project Zero C‑V2X pilot, which uses 5G and connected‑vehicle technology to improve safety for drivers, pedestrians, and cyclists, and monitors emerging state legislation that would require human safety operators in autonomous vehicles. These discussions help members understand how new technologies and regulatory frameworks could affect fleets, deliveries, and street operations. 
  • Regional project advocacy: Beyond policy work, the Chamber continues to support high‑impact transportation investments around Bellevue — including I‑405 Master Plan projects and related interchanges, SR 520/124th Ave NE, I‑90 and South Downtown access/Lake Hills Connector, the Grand Connection, and Eastrail’s I‑90 crossing segment. The committee helps align local, regional, and state priorities so these projects remain competitive for future funding and move forward in ways that reflect employer needs. 
  • East Link and the 2 Line: As Sound Transit’s 2 Line becomes fully operational, the committee continues to track service levels, phasing, and station‑area planning for the East Link Starter Line segment between South Bellevue and Redmond Technology Center. That work helps employers prepare for new commute patterns, last‑mile connections, and transit‑oriented development opportunities near key stations. 
Committee in Action
Transportation Committee Chair Jessica Matthews discussing Bellevue's transportation infrastructure needs with Senator Maria Cantwell
Transportation Committee member Mariya Frost at an advocacy networking event.
PLUSH Committee Meeting
Bel-Red Walking Tour
PLUSH Committee Meeting
News & Updates
Resources & Letters

Transportation Committee Directory

Click here to view a directory of all of our members in the Committee.

Want to Join the transportation committee?

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Eligibility: Advocate‑level members and above may join this committee.

Contact

330 112th Avenue NE #100
Bellevue, WA 98004
United States

425.454.2464

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