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MG2 acquires Portland architecture company known for its work on affordable housing
Author: Marc Stiles
Joining the larger MG2 gives the Portland company the opportunity to do more for more people in less time, Principal Jim Walker says.

The Chronicle - Centralia

Navy jet noise could mean long-term health impacts for Washington's Whidbey Island

SEATTLE —More than 74,000 people on Whidbey Island could face long-term health impacts from the U.S. Navy jet noise that's blasted over residents several days a week for over a decade, new research shows.

A study from the University of Washington, published last week in the Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology, reports the noise from the Boeing EA-18G Growlers and their training drills present a "substantial risk" to two-thirds of Island County residents.

For everyone living in Oak Harbor and Coupeville and 85% of the Swinomish Reservation, the noise measured over 100 decibels — as loud as a rock concert, said lead author Gio Jacuzzi, a graduate student in the UW College of Environment.

The effects could expose communities to high levels of sleep disturbance, hearing impairment, increased risk of cardiovascular disease and delays in childhood learning, as well as annoyance and stress, the study says. The jets are based at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, whose noise has sparked various community and legal debates over the past decade.

"There is very little literature and comparatively few scientific studies that look at impacts of military aircraft noise," Jacuzzi said in an interview this week. "This is not an Alaska Airlines jet coming in every 10 minutes into Sea-Tac [International Airport]. These are sporadic events that can happen at any hour of the day or night."

A spokesperson for the Naval Air Station Whidbey Island declined to comment on the UW report, though Jacuzzi confirmed his team has been in communication with the air station throughout the research process.

The spokesperson instead cited Navy policy not to respond to matters pending litigation, as the station is involved in an ongoing lawsuit filed by state Attorney General Bob Ferguson and the Citizens of Ebey's Reserve in 2019, after the station increased the number of jet flights by about 33%. A U.S. District Court judge ruled last September the station could keep its number of flights, though because it failed to accurately quantify overall noise impacts, it had to redo its environmental impact survey — which remains ongoing.

In the past, the noise from the island's air station has shown to be so loud it travels underwater and can disrupt the habitats and lives of endangered southern resident orcas.

The latest UW study again draws attention to the flight racket, this time honing in on its serious risks for public health, Jacuzzi said.

According to the paper, about 74,300 people were at risk of adverse health effects, including annoyance and stress. Of those, about 41,000 had trouble sleeping, while about 8,000, most of whom lived near the aircraft landing strips, were at risk of hearing impairment over time, the study showed.

The researchers measured potential impacts by analyzing four weeks of acoustic and flight operations data collected by the Navy in 2020 and 2021, in addition to data collected by a private acoustics company and the National Park Service. The team then mapped noise exposure across the region to estimate how much noise specific communities were exposed to in an average year, and later brought in exposure-response models recommended by the World Health Organization to predict health outcomes, Jacuzzi said.

"Our bodies produce a lot of stress hormone response to noise in general, it doesn't matter what kind of noise it is," co-author Edmund Seto, a UW professor of environmental and occupational health sciences, said in a post. "But particularly if it's this repeated acute noise, you might expect that stress hormone response to be exacerbated."

What was really interesting, he said, was that researchers measured noise exposure levels that are "actually harmful for hearing."

"Usually I only think of hearing in the context of working in factories or other really, really loud occupational settings," Seto said. "But here, we're reaching those levels for the community."

In a video posted by UW, Whidbey Island resident Bob Wilbur describes the noise reverberating through the trees and shaking the windows in this home.

"It interrupts your day," Wilbur, current chair of the Citizens of Ebey's Reserve group, said in the post. "You're unable to have a pleasant evening at home. You can't communicate. You constantly try to organize your day around being gone when the jets are flying."

Another island resident, Jane Monson, described in the video the noise feeling "like you're in a war, like you're about to get bombed."

Despite years of disputes over the noise, the trainings at the station — which has been around since 1942 and received the Navy's first Growler production aircraft in 2008 — are crucial, Navy spokesperson Michael Welding has said in the past.

As of 2020, the military embarked on about 2,300 flights per year over Olympic or 6.3 flights per day when averaged over a full year, Welding confirmed this week, noting flights generally happen during the workweek, not the weekend.

Since then, the Navy has launched a new transit route between the air station and the Olympic training areas, which Welding said is outside the boundaries of Olympic National Park and has reduced the level of military aircraft noise over it.

It's still too loud, UW researchers contended in their report and a recent op-ed in The Seattle Times. In the op-ed, Jacuzzi and other study authors aimed to draw more attention to the sound of military aviation in general, which is "unlike any other source of noise," they wrote.

In a separate UW paper from 2020, researchers found military flights were the largest cause of noise pollution on the Olympic Peninsula, also affected by the increase in training flights at the Whidbey Island station.

"It's intense," Jacuzzi said. "It has this rumbling, low-frequency energy, and that is a kind of sound that penetrates windows and shakes walls."

In the op-ed, Jacuzzi and study co-authors urged the Navy to consider changes to its training operations and schedules — and by doing so, it could "demonstrate that the interests of national security need not come at the expense of protecting the public at home."

"This isn't a zero-sum game," Jacuzzi said. "There's a range of solutions to these public health impacts — that could be anything from altered flight paths to more strategic operational schedules to potentially avoiding sensitive periods or locations, like school hours and sleeping hours."

Past research has shown noise pollution is a growing concern among environmental and public health experts, contributing to both accelerating effects of climate change and a range of worsening health impacts.

According to the World Health Association, consistent evidence has confirmed noise exposure can harm children's cognitive performance and long-term academic achievement. One 2013 paper concluded noise can have worse long-term impacts on children than adults when it comes to speech perception, listening comprehension, short-term memory, reading and writing.

More research has emerged that also links exposure to traffic noise to higher risks of cardiovascular disease, such as ischemic heart disease and heart failure — largely due to the increase in stress hormone levels, blood pressure and other changes brought on by the commotion.

Jacuzzi plans to continue his own research this year with a follow-up study that includes door-to-door interviews with Whidbey Island residents to collect details from their personal experiences, he said.

"We hope that the Navy will take the next step in building on top of the science and engaging in open conversations with the communities that are affected, and use those two things together to be able to devise effective mitigation actions moving forward," Jacuzzi said.

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©2024 The Seattle Times. Visit seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Gluesenkamp Perez, Kent, Lewallen discuss timber issues, bridges in Third Congressional District 

The filing deadline Friday settled the state of the high-stakes race for Washington’s 3rd Congressional District.

Democrat Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez running for reelection this fall. Gluesenkamp Perez’s two main challengers in the election are Republicans, Joe Kent and Leslie Lewallen. A fourth candidate, independent John Saulie-Rohman, filed to join the race last week and faces long odds against the established trio of contenders.

The Daily News recently asked the incumbent, Kent and Lewallen about two issues close to Cowlitz County: the future of the Lewis and Clark Bridge and problems facing the region’s major timber companies. The Daily News held phone interviews with Gluesenkamp Perez and Lewallen. Kent responded to questions via email.

 

Lewis and Clark Bridge

There have been discussions about the need to improve the 95-year-old bridge since focus shifted away from the Industrial Way/Oregon Way intersection project on the Longview side of the bridge. The Lewis and Clark Bridge closed multiple times in 2023 for emergency repairs and a weeklong replacement of its finger joints.

Those replacement discussions gained momentum in March after the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed after being struck by a cargo freighter. Sen. Jeff Wilson, R-Longview, and local experts began asking for a serious effort to make the bridge safer or explore a replacement plan.

“We saw when the (Lewis and Clark) bridge was shut down last year, people had to use helicopters to get to work. The cost to the local economy is profound if that bridge fails,” Gluesenkamp Perez said.

At the end of April, Gluesenkamp Perez joined a group of Congress members requesting to continue and fund the Bridge Investment Program. The program through the Federal Highway Administration offers competitive grants to states to repair existing bridges. In 2022 the program gave planning funds to Vancouver’s Interstate 5 Bridge and Seattle’s 4th Avenue Bridge.

Gluesenkamp Perez said the state needs to strengthen the local construction trades who would work on the bridge during any repairs or replacements. Gluesenkamp Perez pointed out that the people who were killed in Baltimore during the collapse were construction workers.

Lewallen had a front-row seat to some of the discussions about replacing the I-5 Bridge, representing the Camas City Council on the Southwest Washington Regional Transportation Council. Lewallen said it was eye-opening to see how different levels of state and federal government could work together, as well as what delayed projects. She singled out the repeated efforts to incorporate public transit onto the I-5 Bridge.

For the Lewis and Clark Bridge, Lewallen said local governments need to start with a study to determine the bridge’s weaknesses and best paths forward. Lewallen said the region also needs a Congressional delegation that would push for projects in Southwest Washington.

“King County gets more of the lion’s share of attention, while down here we have some very critical needs that could use both federal and state tax dollars,” Lewallen said.

Kent said through email that the government should be paying to protect American drivers “before we go further into debt by sending hundreds of millions of dollars overseas.”

“Non-federal interstate highway bridges like the Lewis and Clark Bridge and Bridge of the Gods should be funded mostly by states with some federal funding,” Kent writes.

 

Timber and forestry

The timber industries have been a major focus for Gluesenkamp Perez during her first term in Congress. The representative said forest access is a major issue for her home in Skamania County and she sits on the forestry subcommittee of the House’s Committee on Agriculture.

One of the major focuses of the bills Gluesenkamp Perez has pushed for has been helping mills and timber companies find new employees. The biggest piece of that effort is the Jobs in the Woods Act, introduced with Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer, R-Oregon, to fund and establish workforce training programs for timber industry jobs.

“There are people who grow up liking something and knowing they have a gift for it, and it gets stamped out of them by a society that doesn’t value that work,” Gluesenkamp Perez said. “This creates a continuous line from what you’re doing as a local kid to finding a career in forestry.”

Kent and Lewallen focused more on the forest management side of the issue. Both candidates brought up supporting active forest management processes like controlled burns and regularly clearing underbrush. The Washington Department of Natural Resources limits the prescribed burns to central and eastern Washington, where forests are drier.

Lewallen said that seeing the Nakia Creek fire burn northwest of Camas in 2022 drove home the need for different forestry practices. The Nakia Creek fire was human caused and largely affected forests owned by the state Department of Natural Resources.

“There’s a liberal misconception that a hands-off approach is the best way to preserve and protect our environment. That’s not based on science or what we see at the local level,” Lewallen said.

Kent believes the government should also work to “onshore mill and timber processing” at U.S. companies, including halting exports of raw timber, he writes.

Gluesenkamp Perez also passed a forestry bill in 2023 to help Native American tribes directly enter forestry management plans with the Department of Natural Resources.

Second man charged with killing National Guard officer in Washington bragged about crime, records show

A man is accused of being a willing accomplice in a drive-by shooting that led to the murder of a National Guard officer in Fife last year.

Jedidiah Taimi, 18, has been charged with first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder, drive-by shooting, unlawful possession of a stolen vehicle and second-degree unlawful possession of a firearm, court records show. He is accused of partaking in the killing of 23-year-old Rudolph King III on Sept. 12, 2023.

Andrew Lautogia Fonoti, 29, was arrested on Dec. 21, 2023, outside a Kent hotel during a police standoff. He faces the same charges and is accused of being the shooter. He pleaded not guilty  and is being held at Pierce County Jail on a $1.5 million bail, a previous News Tribune story reported.

Taimi was arrested in October for previous crimes. Prosecutors charged him this week with King's homicide, records show.

A plea of not guilty was entered on Taimi's behalf at Wednesday's arraignment. Pierce County Superior Court Commissioner Barbara McInvaille set his bail at $1.5 million, records show.

Charging details

King's death initially was reported as a car crash near the intersection of 70th Avenue East and 20th Street East. At 9:32 p.m., Fife police were dispatched and found King with a single gunshot wound to the head. King was an active-duty National Guard officer, according to charging documents .

King was reportedly on the phone with his parents when the shooting occurred. His parents reported to police that they did not hear any yelling or other indicators that would have shown that King was involved in an altercation. King's mother said the phone just "went dead," and, when she called back, there was no response, prosecutors wrote.

King was driving a black Hyundai sedan. Witnesses said his car was traveling at high speed before the crash.

Through video footage, detectives noted that King likely was shot near the 6600 block of 20th street, and his car continued driving since his foot was on the gas pedal. Detectives also saw a 2013 Toyota Camry nearby, and it was later determined to be the suspect vehicle. The Camry was reportedly stolen, and it was recovered a few days later, prosecutors wrote.

The Toyota Camry had bullet holes in the windshield. Two live .22-caliber rounds and one live 9 mm round were found in the driver's door pocket. There was also graffiti written on the steering wheel with the name "Drewsky" on it. It was later discovered that that is one of Fonoti's nicknames, prosecutors wrote.

Prosecutors wrote it was determined that Fonoti was a passenger in the stolen Camry, along with Taimi and a 14-year-old boy.

A witness contacted detectives and said someone told them that Taimi was bragging about being the one to shoot King. A different witness that detectives spoke to also confirmed that Taimi was bragging about being the shooter, prosecutors wrote.

A witness spoke to Fonoti a day after the murder asking if Taimi had been the one to shoot King. Fonoti then told the witness he allegedly was the one to shoot King. He also said that Taimi was with him when the murder happened, documents show.

Detectives  later confirmed a palm print on the Toyota to be Taimi's.

Another witness told detectives that when they heard that King died, they confronted Taimi and Fonoti about it. They both allegedly told the witness what happened and that Fonoti shot King, prosecutors wrote.

After Fonoti's arrest in December, he told detectives he was the "trigger man." He said that when they were in the car right before the shooting, Taimi had a red-colored gun and pointed it towards King's vehicle. Taimi allegedly stated he was going to shoot King, and Fonoti took the gun because he was afraid of being accidentally shot, prosecutors wrote. They briefly argued on who would shoot before Fonoti allegedly fired two rounds at the vehicle.

Taimi took the gun back. Detectives noted that in jail conversation after he was arrested in October, Taimi mentioned owning a red-colored gun. A gun used in the crime has not been recovered, documents show.

Taimi currently has an outstanding Department of Corrections warrant for escaping from community custody. He has prior felony convictions from March 2023 for theft of a motor vehicle and attempting to elude police, records show.

     ___

     (c)2024 The News Tribune (Tacoma, Wash.)

     Visit The News Tribune (Tacoma, Wash.) at www.TheNewsTribune.com

     Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

NYT Politics

As Russia Advances, NATO Considers Sending Trainers Into Ukraine
Author: Helene Cooper, Julian E. Barnes, Eric Schmitt and Lara Jakes
The move could draw the United States and Europe more directly into the war. The Biden administration continues to say there will be no American troops on the ground.
Hogan Backs Codifying Roe, Tacking Left on Abortion Ahead of a Tough Race
Author: Luke Broadwater
The former two-term Republican governor, who vetoed legislation in Maryland to expand abortion access, called himself “pro-choice” in an interview and said he would back a federal law to ensure access to the procedure.

Seattle Times Politics

Catch a flight from Tacoma to San Juan Island? Hop aboard
Author: Lynda V. Mapes

In its second season flying from the South Sound, Kenmore Air is adding a new route in partnership with the Puyallup Tribe.

The Stand (Washington Labor News)

IBEW 46 brings the fight to NECA
Author: Sarah Tucker

Striking Limited Energy electricians and supporters picket outside NECA headquarters SHORELINE, Wash. (May 16, 2024) — Striking IBEW 46 Limited Energy electricians converged on National Electrical Contractors Association (NECA) Puget Sound headquarters in Shoreline on Wednesday, escalating their pickets after more than a month on strike. Labor siblings and supporters from all over the region […]

The post IBEW 46 brings the fight to NECA appeared first on The STAND.

ASEs reach TA with UW
Author: Sarah Tucker

Agreement includes the largest raises the bargaining unit has ever won in a contract The following is from UAW 4121: SEATTLE (May 16, 2024) — Tuesday evening, Academic Student Employees reached a tentative agreement on a new contract with the University of Washington. On Tuesday, thousands of ASEs walked off the job and onto the […]

The post ASEs reach TA with UW appeared first on The STAND.

Washington State News

FIFA: Publish Robust Rights Framework for 2026 World Cup

(New York) - FIFA should immediately release and commit to implementing the robust Human Rights Framework for the 2026 Men's Soccer World Cup, which it developed through extensive consultations with civil society stakeholders and public officials from across North America. The framework, which FIFA shared with host

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