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Juan Hood – Westlake Station

 

How do you bring humanity to your workday? Juan Hood, a 26 year King County Metro employee brought this spirit into his job when he worked as shop 2 custodian assigned to downtown Seattle’s Westlake Station at the time of this interview in 2020.  He describes the connection he makes with the commuters at the station.

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KBCS Sustainability Campaign

The KBCS Sustainability Campaign is underway. The goal of this campaign is to add 1,000 new monthly sustaining donors to the KBCS family of supporters over the next year (July 2020 – June 2021) and make the station financially sustainable.

The funding KBCS receives from individual donor-listeners make up the largest and most important portion of KBCS’s operating budget. It’s how we remain non-commercial and independent.

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Unmute the Commute: This is Home

Often in this series, we feature stories about people in dense urban areas taking buses to work or community events. Outside of Seattle and its suburbs, many people rely on public transit as well. But bus service hasn’t always been reliable in rural areas. Today we take a bus ride in Snoqualmie Valley and look at transit service in rural areas of King County.

Featuring: David Egan and Amy Biggs (Snoqualmie Valley Transportation)

 

Unmute the Commute is supported in part by Just One Trip, a King County Metro initiative to get you out of your car starting with just one trip.

Unmute the Commute: Access

King County Metro’s Access paratransit service takes around 3,000 trips a day. It carries passengers who would otherwise be unable to ride public transit due to a disability. But some who ride paratransit believe that it could be improved and feel now is the time for change. Produced by Rachel Stevens.

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Unmute the Commute: The Bus Roadeo

When you think rodeos, bucking broncos or steer wrestling may come to mind, but what about parallel parking and judgement stops? Tammy Klein is a King County Metro bus operator and right now, she is navigating a bus through a series of cones in paved lot behind Metro’s training center in Tukwila. She’s training for a bus roadeo.

Klein seems in her element behind the big steering wheel of this bus. In fact, she waits all year for this moment.

“I am very competitive, and I love to play games, so I always want to win,” she says.

Klein is training for the state bus roadeo. It’s sort of like the Olympics of public transit, with different agencies from around the state sending bus operators and mechanics to compete against one another in timed events. The winners will go on to the International Bus Roadeo, which, next year, is in Louisville, Kentucky.

Tammy Klein will represent King County Metro at the state competition – she received this honor after winning the roadeo for the transit agency, something she has done seven time before.

Seen from a distance, a bus roadeo run doesn’t look very impressive – it’s just a bus moving around some cones in an empty parking lot. But inside the bus, you can see the difficulty it takes to maneuver a big piece of machinery forward and backwards through impossibly tight spaces. Then, there is the final obstacle — the judgement stop, Where Klein accelerates towards and then attempts to stop within six inches of a single cone.

The roadeo is meant as a training exercise for bus operators. It helps them practice maneuvering and just getting used to driving a bus. It is also a chance to acknowledge some of the state’s best drivers and mechanics.

“I think that the bus roadeo is a great way to build the element of a competition with a training element and skill,” says Justin Leighton, executive director of the Washington State Transit Association – a trade group that puts the event on. “Really honing in [on] that skillset of being a driver, working in a maintenance facility.”

The state bus roadeo started over 30 years ago. Originally, it was just for bus drivers but the mechanics competition was added in the 1990s. In that event, a team of three mechanics try to fix different parts of a bus that judges have put bugs in. Fixing a bus is something normally done in a transit agency’s shop, the roadeo is a chance to showcase skills to other.

Klein says its gotten her used to driving a bus.

“It helps you with the safety issues of this big machine that is around fragile people,” she says. “To me, it makes the bus I’m driving — [it] makes me feel like it’s my second skin.”

It can also be motivation. It’s one of her favorite parts of the job. Originally, she wanted to be a truck driver but couldn’t with her schedule. Through a chance encounter, she became a bus operator for King County, and, during her initial training looked out at this roadeo course “and right from the get go, it was like, wow, I want to do that,” she says.

Klein training for the bus roadeo.

But, it wasn’t that easy – it took Klein 10 years to win her first King County Metro roadeo.

“And I would practice, every year, get better and better and finally just happened to be there – did a good score where other competitors just made a little bit more errors than I did,” she says. “The roadeo is once a year. You don’t make it – it’s 364 more days.”

And so, she keeps practicing and she does it on her own time. She’ll take days off work and spend them running the course over and over again – sometimes for 48 hours a week. The bus operator roadeo also consists of a precheck – basically, the driver checks the bus for mechanical problems or safety issues– and a uniform inspection. For this, Klein has an extra uniform that she leaves in her closet all year so it stays clean.

But, in the six years of going to state, winning has proven elusive.

She’s hoping her persistence pays off, but, until then, she’ll just enjoy driving.

“I like driving, and the bus, it’s like a challenge,” she says. “I like challenges. I like driving a car, I like driving a bus, I commute on my motorcycle every day – I just like driving. And I get paid for it. I’m like really?”

Produced by Hans Anderson

 

Unmute the Commute is supported in part by Just One Trip – a King County Metro campaign to get you out of your car starting with just one trip.

 

Unmute the Commute: Seniors’ Health and Public Transit

On today’s Unmute the Commute we look at the relationship between riding public transit and the health of older adults. Produced by Michelle Wallar Martin.

Unmute the Commute: Ramadan Stories

Ramadan, the month where Muslims fast, is May-June this year. For this week’s Unmute the Commute, we tagged along with some fasting Muslims for their daily commute to the mosque for dinner and prayers. Produced by Hebah Fisher.

Unmute the Commute is a weekly series highlighting commuter stories, supported in part by King County Metro’s Just One Trip.

Unmute the Commute: My Family and My Bus

May 15 is the International Day of Families as recognised by the United Nations. Today we celebrate all caregivers in families – parents, grandparents, siblings… all parental figures! For this week’s Unmute the Commute story, here is a parent who believes in raising her family on the bus. Produced by Hebah Fisher.

Unmute the Commute is a weekly series highlighting commuter stories, supported in part by King County Metro’s Just One Trip.

Unmute the Commute: Poetry on Buses

Remember seeing poetry on King County and Sound Transit buses a few years ago? After a brief hiatus, Poetry on Buses coordinated by 4Culture returns this Monday 24 April to the Puget Sound. KBCS’s Casey Martin brings us this week’s Unmute the Commute story.

For more details about the Poetry on Buses project, including the launch party Monday 24 April at the Moore Theatre, visit poetryonbuses.org.

Unmute the Commute is a weekly series highlighting commuter stories, supported in part by King County Metro’s Just One Trip.

Unmute the Commute: A Methadone Ride

Public health officials have called the opiate epidemic the worst drug crisis in American history – with overdose deaths nearly tripling since 1999. About 50 years ago, clinics starting treating opiate addiction with methadone, or controlled doses of an opiate to slowly wean patients off of their addiction. On today’s Unmute the Commute, we ride along with a methadone patient. Story produced by Hans Anderson.

Unmute the Commute is a weekly series highlighting commuter stories, supported in part by King County Metro’s Just One Trip.