
TheForward Thrustballot initiatives were a series ofbond propositions put to the voters ofKing County,Washington in 1968 and 1970, designed by a group called theForward Thrust Committee. Seven of the twelve propositions in 1968 were successful; four of the remaining propositions were repackaged for a vote in 1970, when they were defeated in the darkening local economic climate of theBoeing Bust.[1][2] One of the most visible accomplishments of the Forward Thrust levy was the eventual building of theKingdome, ultimately the first home of the Seattle Seahawks and Seattle Mariners.
The initiatives were variously under the aegis of METRO (the Municipality of MetropolitanSeattle), King County, and the city of Seattle.[1] (METRO and King County merged in 1992.) The Forward Thrust Committee was founded byJames R. Ellis[1] and effectively disbanded shortly after the 1970 defeats.[2] It disbanded formally in 1974.[3][4] Seattle MayorDorm Braman was also a strong backer of the 1968 initiatives.[1]
The US$118 million passed in 1968 in support of the Department of Parks and Recreation was, at the time, the largest parks and recreation bond issue ever passed in the United States.[5]
The failure of therapid transit propositions meant that a nearly $900 million federal fundingearmark that had been secured by U.S. SenatorWarren Magnuson if local bonds passed went instead to fundAtlanta, Georgia'sMARTA.[2]
The elections took place February 13, 1968,[1] and May 19, 1970.[2] Each initiative required a 60%supermajority to pass.[1][2] The results were as follows; bold typeface indicates successful propositions:
| Year | Initiative | US$ amount (millions) | Yes | % Yes | No | % No | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1968 | METRO Proposition 1: Rapid Transit | $385M local + $765M federal | 97,339 | 50.8% | 94,187 | 49.2% | Failed |
| 1968 | METRO Proposition 2: Transit System Administration | N/A | Metro Council 75,808 | 46.8% | New Commission 86,202 | 53.2% | Voided by failure of Metro Prop. 1 |
| 1968 | County Proposition 1: Youth Service Center | $6.1M | 174,749 | 72.4% | 66,594 | 27.6% | Passed |
| 1968 | County Proposition 2: Multipurpose Stadium | $40M | 151,489 | 62.3% | 91,499 | 37.7% | Passed, resulted in theKingdome |
| 1968 | County Proposition 3: Community Centers | $26.2M | 136,804 | 58.7% | 96,129 | 41.3% | Failed |
| 1968 | County Proposition 4: Arterial Highways | $81.6M | 147,379 | 62.2% | 89,489 | 37.8% | Passed |
| 1968 | County Proposition 5: Storm Water Drainage | $68M | 139,254 | 59.3% | 95,373 | 40.7% | Failed |
| 1968 | County Proposition 6: Parks & Recreation (includingSeattle Aquarium) | $118M | 157,323 | 64.7% | 85,790 | 35.3% | Passed |
| 1968 | Seattle Proposition 1: Neighborhood Improvements | $12M | 74,915 | 60.8% | 48,259 | 39.2% | Passed |
| 1968 | Seattle Proposition 2: Sewer Bonds | $70M | 74,852 | 62.6% | 44,596 | 37.4% | Passed |
| 1968 | Seattle Proposition 3: Low Income Housing | $3M | 69,089 | 57.9% | 50,057 | 42.1% | Failed |
| 1968 | Seattle Proposition 4: Fire Protection | $6.2M | 82,867 | 69.8% | 35,758 | 30.2% | Passed |
| 1968 | Seattle Proposition 5: Maintenance Shops | $3M | 66,061 | 57.6% | 48,555 | 42.4% | Failed |
| 1970 | (Rapid transit) | $440M local $881M federal[6] | 46% | 54% | Failed | ||
| 1970 | (Storm water control) | $80M | Failed | ||||
| 1970 | (New community centers) | Failed | |||||
| 1970 | (New county jails) | $40.2M | Failed |