A
game rigged against us.
Want
to play a game? Regardless, you’re
in, and you can’t quit. Here
are the rules. I’ll roll a
standard die that has numbers from 1-6.
If it comes up as 1, you get $1. If the roll comes up with numbers 2-6,
you pay me $100,000. I will let you pay me over the next 10 years when you
lose. Of course, if you win, you
get what you had.
You
might call this unfair and rigged, but this is the game that the FAA and
Snohomish County are playing right now.
They want to impose scheduled air service on the Snohomish County
residents surrounding Paine Field and everyone under the flight paths. Residents don’t want this game, but we
have no choice under federal law.
The
law, as implemented in the Airport Noise and Capacity Act of 1990, requires “economic
non-discrimination” on behalf of the airlines. It doesn’t matter that Horizon Air and Allegiant want to
start with just a few flights.
Once the airport changes its Part 139 operating certificate from General
Aviation to scheduled air service, the FAA requires the airport to allow any
airline, any sized aircraft, any number of flights, at any time of the day or
night.
No
curfews or other restrictions allowed. Airlines can operate up to the full capacity of the
airport. In fact, the FAA helps by
subsidizing the airlines and by paying for the terminal and other improvements
that increase the airport’s capacity.
County
residents will lose and will pay.
Schools pay for the noise with an impaired learning environment even as
they shoulder the costs of noise mitigation. Highline school district needed $200 million for noise
mitigation costs when the third runway came to Sea-Tac.
Homeowners
can anticipate an additional 10-25 percent decline in property values. Total home values in south Snohomish
County are about $4 billion, so this impact on personal wealth and property tax
collections is significant.
Based
on a study of residents near other airports, we should expect a 57 percent
increase in asthma, 28 percent higher pneumonia/influenza, 26 percent higher
respiratory diseases and 83 percent higher pregnancy complications. Cancer, heart disease, hypertension
will also increase.
Traffic
congestion, pollution, a larger carbon footprint would also negatively impact
our community. These impacts will
occur gradually as the community spirals downward in a slow unrelenting decline.
The
FAA’s Environmental Assessment (EA) overlooks all of this. Based on only a few initial flights by
Horizon and Allegiant, the draft EA fails to consider the full capacity of the
airport or future expansion.
The
draft EA is dishonest and disingenuous.
It states that there are “no disproportionate impacts to children,” and “there
would not be any significant changes to the socioeconomic environment around
the Airport.” Even with odds heavily stacked in its favor, the FAA wants to
obfuscate.
The
community demands that, at the least, the FAA follow the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA), the legislation that requires the Environmental
Assessment. We should assess
environmental impacts based on the airport’s full capacity, not on just the
first few flights proposed. This
is fair since the FAA is the guarantor of full capacity to any airline that
wants to use the airport.
What
are the benefits of air service at Paine Field? The EA anticipates 17 new low wage jobs will be created
while the airlines enjoy government-funded subsidies of their businesses. Is this a fair game?
In
the six cities that oppose this issue (Edmonds, Lynnwood, Brier, Mountlake
Terrace, Mukilteo and Woodway), residents are neither hysterical nor fearful.
We know the costs will be daunting and painful.
We
are angry that the FAA and Snohomish County pursue this with no identified
economic upside and an epic downside for us.
Even
worse is Snohomish County’s promise over the past 33 years not to engage in
this game. The County promised the community, embodied in the Mediated Role
Determination of 1978, to maintain Paine Field as a General Aviation airport
that supports Boeing and encourages community development.
Zoning
laws were then passed, and development took place right up to the airport’s
boundaries, cementing the County’s promise in every foundation laid.
Rather
than come to their community’s defense against this ill-advised scheme, County
Executive Reardon and most of the County Council are breaking their promise so
they can collaborate with the FAA and place the local communities into
environmental and socio-economic peril.
We
will fight the FAA to the end, make them properly address the environmental
impacts, and hold our County elected “leaders” responsible.
Greg
Hauth is vice president of Save Our Communities, an organization that supports
our quality of life by opposing scheduled air service at Paine Field.