— from Norris Carlson —
The Port of Orcas posted its “preferred alternative” for the Master Plan on its site last week, along with a spreadsheet documenting all public comments to date. I perused the 174 pages of public comments, and on a first pass, I would estimate that a solid 2/3 to 3/4 of the commenters stated their desire for Alternative 1 ‘no change,’ for various strongly held reasons. The Port’s “preferred alternative” is obviously counter to Alternative 1; it looks to gradually incorporate many if not all of the most extreme changes possible, many of which have met with strong public resistance.
Having yet to hear anyone articulate how the will of the community is factoring into to this decision making process, I wrote to DOWL and the Port Manager Tony Simpson to ask how those comments have been used to date, and how they intend to address the strong preference of so many in the community that is at odds with the plan they put forth. Specifically, I inquired whether all parties (DOWL, Port Manager, All Commissioners) have read all of these comments to date, how they are they being applied to the considerations around the final Master Plan, what plans there were to summarize the comments and address replies back to the public in a formal way.
I have neither read nor heard anything specific on this topic from the Port Commissioners, our elected officials. Leah Henderson (at DOWL) told me that the comments “have been considered in the preferred alternative and weighed against the FAA’s requirements,” and that they would be included in a final report.
Port Manager Tony Simpson told me that he had read all 174 pages of comments and said that the commissioners will get a summary of “the rational/constructive inputs,” and that the comments that reflect Alternative 1 (‘No Change’) “are not worth summarizing.” He said he “personally dismiss[es] the ‘Alternative 1 No Change’ comments because they run counter to the mission of the Port and its obligations to the entire community/safety/operations and existing obligations under grant assurances to the FAA.”
I inquired further to understand why the Port paid DOWL to draft and include Alternative 1 in its plans if it is in fact NOT being considered an alternative at all. Simpson explained that the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requires, as part of an environmental impact study, an evaluation of the “No Action Alternative,” which they would recommend “only with strong, direct impacts to endangered species, etc. that cannot be mitigated at all (like destruction of the last habitat, etc.) or at unreasonable cost.” He stated that this possibility “is not likely here, even though the environmental impacts will probably require serious mitigation.”
He also described Alternative 1 as “a regression from the last two published master plans” that “effectively signs the long term intent to close the airport” and puts the Port “in jeopardy of financial bankruptcy.” (Three points that beg to be verified.)
I would venture to say that very few of the concerned public who felt strongly enough about this issue to formally state (with or without further elaboration) their preference for Alternative 1 had any idea that the ‘no action alternative’ is in fact not an alternative, and never was. In fact, the term “Alternative” in this context is deeply and consequentially misleading, and has had the effect of muting the voices of many in our community.
If the public had been made aware all along that Alternative 1 was and is effectively NOT an option, their many expressions of legitimate opposition to the scope and direction of the plans for airport development obviously would’ve had to focus only to the options that are actually under consideration (ie, what Simpson regards as “rational/constructive inputs”).
Simpson stated that he “take[s] as genuine and worthy of assessment all comments that are specific and objectively justified when balanced against all other obligations,” and gave this explanation:
– For example, if you say, “Please don’t move Mt Baker Rd and make to the runway longer,” I dismiss it because that’s not what’s happening. If you say, “Please don’t move Mt Baker Rd because it will hurt the Swale,” my answer is that we’ll do a better job crossing the swale in its relocated place and restore the current wetland crossing. If you say “don’t move Mt Baker Rd because it eliminates the truck route,” that is a false statement…any relocation would conform to truck route standards. If you say, “moving Mt Baker road will increase traffic noise at Lavender Hollow and slow Fire/EMS response to the West portion of Mt Baker Rd,” I take that in balance with the safety implications of leaving it where it is and in consultation with the fire department, the county and noise ANALYSIS.
I am sure that all commenters, including those with opinions at odds with the Port’s proposals, would have made every attempt to express their concerns and preferences in a way that would at least be found by the Port to be “genuine and worthy of assessment.” And the Port Manager’s ability to out of hand ‘dismiss’ as irrelevant almost all of the public objections to the Port’s Master Plan would have been harder to do.
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Norris, thank you for communicating the situation with how the public’s comments on the Port’s proposed “Alternatives” are being handled. It is disconcerting to hear a public official may be arbitrarily determining which public comments are “genuine and worthy of assessment.” When considering the reasons behind the proposed changes, it’s important for us to remember that FAA inappropriately gave permission to certain carriers to fly planes larger than what ordinarily would be allowed at the Port of Orcas. We have been led to believe we’re obligated to make major and costly changes to our airport to accommodate The FAA’s bending of the rules. Because this is the FAA’s mistake to allow these exceptions without our consent or permission, we are under no such obligation. We have the option of telling the FAA, “No,” especially when we know expanding the airport entails risks to the island infrastructure, ecosystem, and quality of life. Fortunately, the Port Commissioners are the ones who will make the final vote on the Master Plan. I just hope they will pay attention to the overwhelming comments and respect the will of the people they serve.
Thank you, Norris, for this informative letter. Thank you, Jill McCabe Johnson for clearing up the issue that it was the FAA that bent the rules, and that we are under no obligation. Friday Harbor airport is facing the same scenario but I believe they are holding their ground and saying no to the FAA demands. We should be following closely and learning all we can from their example.
I think we need to appeal to the Port Commissioners with all we’ve got. I have included them in all my corresponces with Tony and DOWL, as well as some FAA people. I hope the Port Commissioners are listening to us.
I’m particularly disturbed at knowing, through my own correspondences and responses, that the airport manager will advise our elected commissioners to ignore all comments choosing Alternative 1, when the people who commented thought it was a viable option, and had no idea that their comments would be discarded. The people weren’t vetted. I hope the Port commissioners are fully vetted and have read our comments and will not go against community wants and needs.
I advise that when we comment to DOWL on this phase (Draft master Plan), we include our thoughts about this, plus the knowlege laid out that this is not mandated – plus any suggestions that can help with safety issues with minimal impact.
Thank you Norris. And well said, Jill.
It seems most understand each alternative well and have judiciously applied the priorities that matter most in defining the optimal Orcas Island community.
Hence, the Orcas community is united both by Reason and Wisdom.
Stand your ground!
I cannot physically make the public access portion of the meeting tonight, so am hoping someone will read this to the Commissioners on my behalf:
Dear Port Commissioners,
The new documents on the website about the Master Plan are nearly impossible to see/understand on a computer — and several are not formatted to print larger than 8-1/2 x 11”, also rather indecipherable.
On behalf of a concerned public, I urgently request that you, our representatives, direct that The Port immediately provide the Orcas Island Library with all plan drawings in color, clear and readable, with all map keys, as well as the Power Point that will be shown at open houses and the DOWL Alternative Description Assessment.
These documents were placed on the website the evening of September 5, but that’s somewhat meaningless if nobody can see read or understand them. In all fairness, please extend your comment period to begin at the time when these documents become publicly available at the library.
Your attention to this matter will be so very much appreciated! Only you, our elected representatives, can direct DOWL or the Port to provide islanders with the necessary information we’re requesting — our requests to DOWL (which is being paid How Much?) have been rebuffed, but we’re certain you understand how inappropriate it is to proceed without providing comprehensible information to the public. Thank you for correcting this.
Best wishes,
Susan Malins
Many people may not have seen my comment on July 19 on one of the OI postings about the master plan discussion, so it bears mention again that the Library does have on paper the aerial depictions of the master plan alternatives, in 11×17″ size, for use in the Library. We also printed out two PowerPoint presentations, which were created for an open house and for a meeting describing the alternatives. Just ask at the service desk.
What does Mr. Simpson–who is apparently driving this train–say to the County refusing to move Mt Baker Road or surrender part of the Brandt’s Landing to the airport’s grand plans?
Peg Manning is right. There is no way the County will ever move Mt. Baker Road for expansion of the runway. The people and the Council won’t allow it. For the Port to spend any more time and money pursuing this is foolish.
Regarding the library’s collection; we’re updating those documents to include the current documents. Phil Heikkinen has the current slide show/power point that will be presented on the 19th. I’ll be bringing in large-copy color figures of the 3 alternatives posed and the 3 detail layouts showing what is planned in the new Alternatives. DOWL gives a presentation of these next Wed. and the Commissioners decide, based on our informed comments. Note that these plans go by a timeline: Under 8 years (short term), intermediate build (9-15 or 16 years, and “ultimate” – 20+ years.
At the Port meeting last night, it was said that the Master Plan is supposed to be “free of contraints” and so these ultimate plans are presented. My long experience of watching grant-driven program projects pushed through, is uncomfortable with this process, which seem to put the cart before the horse.
My burning question is this: Will the environmental review, which has been approved already for 2020 for the Master Plan Projects, include ALL projects presented, including “ultimate,” or just the first project, (which is likely to be the runway separation) ? We should be asking the FAA and the Port these questions and get concrete answers, so we know the scope of exactly what will be covered in the 2020 environmentals; that would be the time for the full EIS for all projects considered – ie constraints. Non Primary Entitlement Funds will give the Port $300,000 toward this, but the ST/DI (whatever that is) and Total Cost figures are $3 million dollars.
I hope someone can explain all of this to us.