Posted on 03/25/2008 5:01:51 PM PDT by Stoat
Some city officials, including the city's wastewater utility director, want to remove the five automated, expensive and controversial toilets next year.
The large, self-cleaning lavatories went into service in 2004 -- three years after the City Council used a rare show of force to authorize the program as an alternative to less attractive portable toilets.
Since then, the five stalls have cost taxpayers about $4.3 million. The money came from a tax on wastewater rates that cost the average single family household about $2.59 per year on an annual sewer bill of $465.
A recently completed report found the unattended toilets have been well used -- both as they were intended, and as a refuge for drug use and dealing, booze drinking and prostitution. Some homeless people now avoid the toilets because of the social problems they attract, the report found. Meanwhile, there's been a steady increase in how much human waste crews clean each day in downtown alleys and walkways.
The report by Seattle Public Utilities also found the single-stall units required relatively large quantities of water, while offering a tiny fraction of the service available in some traditional public bathrooms. And, despite their automated cleaning functions, they are sometimes dirtier than traditional public bathrooms.
On Monday, Seattle Public Utilities recommended the city cancel its contract for the facilities early next year. In the meantime, officials hope to find other ways to help tourists, residents and the public find access to other safe, clean restroom facilities.
"It's a disappointment. I was hopeful that these would work, that they'd be successful," said City Councilwoman Sally Clark. "We're at the point now where we have enough data where we can say we should be done with it and take them out."
"I, and the rest of my colleagues, have heard a lot from businesspeople, residents, visitors, who have found the automatic public toilets to be unsafe, unavailable, broken, dirty -- you name it."
If the council and mayor agree to cancel the contract next year, as Seattle Public Utilities recommends, keeping the five toilets online until then will likely cost almost another $800,000 in lease, maintenance, repair, administrative and other costs. After that, the city could end its contract by paying a cancellation fee of nearly $491,000 plus $250,000 in toilet removal costs.
Once the toilets are gone, the city could save about $850,000 annually in lease and operations costs. But no one has proposed using that money to reverse the tax boost that funded the toilets.
Rather, the utilities department and others have suggested using the money to improve access to traditional restroom facilities, perhaps with contracts with privately owned facilities, expansions of publicly owned restrooms and installing signs directing tourists, shoppers and the homeless to existing public toilets. Right now, Seattle has no such signs or maps.
While the utilities department and some officials agree any solution will likely require hiring attendants to staff at least some public toilets, that alone does not appear to be enough. The city closed a five-stall public bathroom in late 2004 because of drug and prostitution problems -- despite staffing it with such an attendant.
The five self-cleaning, unisex toilets are located at Victor Steinbrueck Park near Pike Place Market, Pier 58 at Waterfront Park, Occidental Park in Pioneer Square, Hing Hay Park in the International District and 1801 Broadway on Capitol Hill.
The Capitol Hill location is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The other facilities are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. every day. On average, 85 to 124 users a day visit the toilets.
The busiest facility is the one at Steinbrueck Park. But, like the other automated toilets, it offers "margin value," the report found. In the 13 hours it's open each day, it can serve up to 195 visitors daily, city officials estimate. By contrast, the 23 stalls and urinals at the two nearby Pike Place restrooms have a maximum capacity of 11,903 users in an 11.5-hour day.
Also, the cost of operating that automatic toilet last year was nearly $130,000. Pike Place Market operated its nearly two dozen stalls or urinals for $200,000.
The five high-tech toilets have a sink and a hand dryer, and pneumatic doors that slide open like those on an elevator. After each use, the toilet flushes two to three times before the toilet seat retracts and is pressure-washed and dried, according to the report. Meanwhile, the slightly sloped floor can also be washed and drained, although that function was disabled by the city because of excessive litter, the report said.
Whenever the stalls are used and cleaned, 3.6 to 7.6 gallons of water flush down the drain. Typically, a visitor to Pike Place Market bathrooms only uses about 1.7 gallons, including hand-washing.
By the time the toilets were authorized in 2001 through an unusual council veto override, the idea of installing such toilets had already been the topic of years of Seattle political debate. It was even fodder on the City Hall campaign trail.
Some warned back then that such facilities would become a haven for illicit uses. At the time, "automated public toilet" supporters and officials with Seattle Public Utilities said the community would make sure that didn't happen. If one location did become a problem, SPU said, the city could adjust the maximum occupancy time.
Officials did try that when problems cropped up. And the city added lighting and closed most of the toilets overnight. It wasn't enough to control the problems.
Still, "the council made the right call at the time by trying this out. ... It was a good experiment," said Clark, who was not yet on the council. When the council's budget committee approved the toilets in July 2001, Councilman Richard McIver cast the lone dissenting vote. McIver said then he could think of more pressing needs for the money.
The council nonetheless went on to approve the facilities. And after then-Mayor Paul Schell vetoed the plan, council members overrode the veto and pushed ahead.
In late 2006, others on the council also publicly questioned whether the toilets were working out. A downtown group has found that people are actually relieving themselves on the streets 30 percent more often since the facilities were installed. And Seattle Public Utilities recommended the city rethink its "very expensive investment."
In response, the council directed the utility late last year to prepare the report evaluating the success of the high-tech toilets.
"I was right," McIver said Monday. "There are neighborhoods who have been trying to get rid of these things for years. They tend to encourage ... behavior that' s not good social behavior."
As he did several years ago, McIver acknowledged again a need for public restrooms. "There's a desire to provide a comfortable rest stop for people," he said. "The question is, 'How do you assure that behavior is legitimate?' "
Sound Politics There Are No Republicans On The Seattle City Council
So the Grand Old Party can't be blamed for this fiasco.
The naysayers may have been right: Seattle's multimillion-dollar, high-tech public toilet program looks like a washout.
. . .
A recently completed report found the unattended toilets have been well used -- both as they were intended, and as a refuge for drug use and dealing, booze drinking and prostitution. Some homeless people now avoid the toilets because of the social problems they attract, the report found. Meanwhile, there's been a steady increase in how much human waste crews clean each day in downtown alleys and walkways.
Would attendants solve the problem in Seattle? Maybe not, judging by past experience.
While the utilities department and some officials agree any solution will likely require hiring attendants to staff at least some public toilets, that alone does not appear to be enough. The city closed a five-stall public bathroom in late 2004 because of drug and prostitution problems -- despite staffing it with such an attendant.
(One would like to know more about why that failed.)
Other cities have solved this basic problem. The suburb where I live, Kirkland, has a public toilet in a very heavily used park, Marina Park. To the best of my knowledge, there have been only minor problems associated with it. There are even big cities that do better than Seattle. There may even be big cities dominated by leftwing Democrats that do better in providing this basic service but I don't know of any.
Cross posted at Jim Miller on Politics.
(There's a picture of one of the automated toilets here.
Note to commenters: Given the subject, some will be tempted to make crude comments. Please don't give in to that temptation. Let's keep this family friendly.)
Rather, the utilities department and others have suggested using the money to improve access to traditional restroom facilities, perhaps with contracts with privately owned facilities, expansions of publicly owned restrooms and installing signs directing tourists, shoppers and the homeless to existing public toilets. Right now, Seattle has no such signs or maps.
None of the Leftists on the Seattle City Council, that is.
Another crappy liberal idea.
That's pretty shitty.
Convert into voting booths?
Seattle has a long, embarrasing history of being quick to adopt incredibly expensive, cutting-edge technological solutions to concerns that other cities have solved in a much more reliable and much less spendy way.
I recall another fiasco involving a multimillion-dollar fireboat decades ago. At the time, the design was cutting-edge, including that of the pumping systems. Problem was, the designers hadn’t considered electrolysis issues that would crop up when salt water passed at high speed and high pressure through pipes that had only been tested in fresh water.
The result? The electrolysis gradually ‘ate away’ at the pipes until one burst, almost killing a firefighter belowdecks.
The fireboat went away after that, along with millions of tax dollars.
The only thing democrat politicians in Seattle care about:
Bike Trails
Expensive public toilets
Gay marriage
Bike Trails
Running businesses out of town
New ways to fund pork
Bike Trails
Unions
Tax increases
Regulation to drive up price of real estate development
Global warming
Bike Trails
Affirmative Action Quotas
Bike Trails
Car tab rate increases
Trees
Bike Trails
Environmental studies
Bike Trails
Bike Trails
Bike Trails
Well, for tourists, it’s easy. Spend a few bucks on a meal in a restaurant, and you can use the loo all you want.
Bike Trails
Expensive public toilets
Gay marriage
Bike Trails
Running businesses out of town
New ways to fund pork
Bike Trails
Unions
Tax increases
Regulation to drive up price of real estate development
Global warming
Bike Trails
Affirmative Action Quotas
Bike Trails
Car tab rate increases
Trees
...
Hey - add in multi hundred million city funded light rail and they’ll match us note for note here in Portland
If each of the 5 toilets were used once every 15 minutes, all day, every day — that would work out to just over $5.00/use.
A million a year per toilet. Thats just sad.
Yes, the grand promises of a urban utopia that turned into massive failures of Portland’s light rail system got Seattle’s politicians jealous and they had to get one too.
And to make sure its a even bigger unprofitable failure than Portlands, we are currently building one were most of the rail lines run through the warehouse district where the least amount of passengers would need to commute to. Whoo-hoo!!! Go Dems!!!
Welcome to Seattle!
Are the hookers still cheap?
So these geniuses couldn’t figure out that each toilet was costing them $170,000 a year not including the initial costs of having them installed?
They could have had a full time employee on each toilet cleaning them after every use for less...
Funny how that works when they’re spending other peoples money...
They just wasted about $1M/toilet for some stupid social experiment that anyone with a lick of common sense could have told them was a really bad idea. However, they don't seem to mind wasting taxpayer money trying out their utopian crap. A million here and a million there, and pretty soon you are talking about real money.
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