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The Podcast!

Subscribe to the only podcast devoted to helping people under the flight path everywhere. It’s definitely not just about noise!Most Recent: Ep #35 Emergency! Try something different... (Part 1/3 Keep Sleepy Time Sacred!)
The Issues
The Sustainable Airport Master Plan (SAMP) is the blueprint for increasing flight capacity by one third in the next ten years. It will have the same community impact as the Third Runway. In fact, it is happening now. How this is possible, and what it means for us.continue...
A two minute presentation on how the Sustainable Airport Master Plan (SAMP) will increase flight operations at Sea-Tac Airport as much as a new runway. Without a new runway.continue...
Does your home have a Port Package of noise mitigation windows and insulation? Having problems with your windows? Mold? You're not alone. Help us help you.continue... -
The SAMP SEPA EIS Public Comment Period is open now from May 22 – July 21, 2026. Learn what is coming and what you can do to help reduce the noise, the pollution, and obtain the compensation we’ve deserved for decades.Top Story
Port of Seattle Glacier Middle School Open House

June 23, 2026
Different day. Same ol...
We attended the first of the four Port of Seattle open houses on the SAMP-NTP/SEPA-Draft EIS. We want to give a little context for those of you who will attend the next three.
Expect low turnout-- a trend over the past decade. Expect very silly posters. We've joked that the SAMP has been in process for so long they recycle the same ones every year. But neither should dishearten or dissuade you from commenting on the SAMP.
However, we do not like these open houses for a couple of reasons.
First, it is easy to blame the Port for this poor format. But frankly, most community members (unless you are following STNI, of course 😉 ) tend to be so low-information, it would be difficult to get much out of them without an entirely different format.
Even so, we see no reason that the average person should be required to learn about terms like 'Part 150' or 'ultrafine particles'. People want improved public health, less noise, more trees, better quality of life, and so on. Most do not want even the most slickly produced video explaining why they cannot have it.
In fact, the only winner is the Port of Seattle. These open houses tick the box for them with the FAA. It really is as simple as that. They have never been required to do better, so do what they are asked to do. Nothing more, nothing less.
Second, we think if you go there and you're upset, you're yelling at the wrong people and for the wrong reasons. To make that point perfectly clear: at least three of the stations we visited were manned by consultants from out of town — not even Port employees. They fly in to do these — in the unlikely event somebody has a technical question — and then fly out to the next airport. The Port is just one of their clients and airport planning is big business.
Beyond that, we don't think it's ever useful to vent your feelings to Port staff, any more than it would be OK to vent at your own city's employees. They don't set policy. They show up every day at their desks, or in the public works yard, or at the police department and do a job. In this case, they're not getting paid overtime to stand in front of those silly poster boards.
We know it's counterintuitive. But the people you should be upset with are every elected official in the area — not just the five Port Commissioners. You should be absolutely furious with every city councilmember you meet.
We try to remind those councilmembers that the SAMP was set in motion in 2012, with the Port's Century Agenda. Grasping that is rough. But if that seems like a long time ago consider this: the SAMP layout we're looking at now was arrived at by 2007 — even before the Third Runway opened. That is how far ahead airport planners think.

None of this has ever been any "secret." It is your city's failure to be on top of airport expansion — to monitor and understand where this was all heading and then develop a strategy -- that is at the heart of so many problems today. What we've tended to do is try to stop things and then, when it doesn't work out, try our best to forget about it until the next big permitting event.
Our advice has been, and will continue to be, this: if you want to vent, the people you want to vent at are the five Port Commissioners, and your city council.
Elected officials are the accountability piece that has been missing. If you're not happy with how things are going — and you definitely should not be happy — tell your elected officials.
The Port Commission has treated their neighbors with callousness. This is especially poor conduct given their constant drumbeat of 'green' and 'equity'. But the same could also be said of so many local electeds who touted the benefits of the Port--even as the evidence of far greater harms became clear.
What every local elected has used as their get out of jail free card? "Wasn't on my watch! " Tell your commissioners. Tell your city council. Whether you were in office or not does not matter. You are all responsible. Your governments cannot let this continue.
To get to a better place we will have to make airport competency a core function of our city's planning--not the public. Because — and we want to say this very clearly — after the SAMP is over, any success our cities have in improving our situation will require us all--meaning staff--to work together. We must develop a sense of shared interest and shared vocabulary, not mutual contempt and a never-ending cycle of "I'm new at this!"
The reverse should also be true: those cities that show no sensitivity should pay a cost for not supporting a more equitable relationship with the most affected areas--at a minimum in the court of public opinion. Currently they see no downside in free riding on the externalities fence line communities absorb decade after decade.
But the people you're talking to at these open houses are not them. They are there to answer your questions in front of some silly posters, tick a box, then go back to their desk the next day. Attend. Don't attend. But do comment on the SAMP in the only way that will really make a difference: your electeds. All of them.
Recent Stories
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Burien City Council Meeting June 15, 2026
No experts in the room Port government relations manager Dave Kaplan gave the city council background on the SAMP SEPA/EIS process and then took some sharp questions. He would be the first to say that he is not an airport expert. He is paid to take flack for the Empire. But he said some things -
Ep #35 Emergency! Try something different… (Part 1/3 Keep Sleepy Time Sacred!)
As the 2026 Sustainable Airport Master Plan public comment period moves ahead, focus more on the worst aspects of opens, activists face the same challenges tackled in 2018, but with less preparation and smaller budgets. Rather than drowning in thousands of SAMP pages, this episode reveals a powerful shortcut: use the extensive work already completed by hundreds of concerned residents and professionals. This isn't just about avoiding wheel reinvention; it's about standing on the shoulders of previous advocates to make stronger, more informed public comments that actually address systemic community impacts. -
Bellevue residents say new cross-lake rail line violates noise limits
By Chris Daniels,KOMO News Senior Reporter BELLEVUE, Wash. — A group of Bellevue homeowners says Sound Transit’s new 2 Line trains crossing Lake Washington are keeping residents awake at night and may be violating local noise ordinances. Residents in Bellevue’s Enatai neighborhood say a loud, low-frequency rumble generated by trains crossing the East Channel Bridge -
Ep #34 Emergency! Do This… (Part 3/3 Don’t reinvent the wheel!)
Don't start from scratch—the 2026 comment period is a do-over from 2018! As the 2026 Sustainable Airport Master Plan public comment period opens, activists face the same challenges tackled in 2018, but with less preparation and smaller budgets. Rather than drowning in thousands of SAMP pages, this episode reveals a powerful shortcut: use the extensive work already completed by hundreds of concerned residents and professionals. This isn't just about avoiding wheel reinvention; it's about standing on the shoulders of previous advocates to make stronger, more informed public comments that actually address systemic community impacts. -
Ep #33 Emergency! Do This… (Part 2/3 Appendix K-Socioeconomics)
The Port of Seattle's Sustainable Airport Master Plan promises community benefits, but decades of evidence suggest otherwise. The FAA and Port have systematically underestimated airport impacts on nearby communities—particularly affecting public health, children's wellbeing, and local socioeconomic stability. Appendix K's socioeconomic analysis is merely copied from flawed earlier documents, and how you can challenge this in the public comment period. The stakes are real: while the airport claims to boost the region, surrounding communities face declining municipal services and ongoing budget crises. Understand the disconnect between promised prosperity and lived reality, and find out exactly what your comments should address to make them count during this crucial 60-day window.
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Upcoming Events

Order of Business 10:30 a.m. 1. Call to Order 2. Executive Session (if necessary, pursuant to RCW 42.30.110 – not open to the public) 12:00 p.m. – Public Session Reconvene or Call to Order and Pledge of Allegiance 3. Approval of the Agenda 4. Special Orders of the Day 4a. Proclamation Recognizing June 2026 as
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The Port of Seattle is sponsoring four open houses to answer your questions about the SAMP/SEPA Draft EIS. There will be a reporter to take your comments in-person. Tuesday, June 23: 6–8pm Mount Rainier High School Cafeteria space 22450 19th Ave S Des Moines, WA 98198
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Overview of (SEPA) Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) (SAMP) Near-Term Projects, Part 150 update
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From The Web
EDITOR’S NOTE: The following is a Letter to the Editor, written and submitted by a verified resident. It represents the opinion of the author, and does not necessarily reflect the views of South King Media or its staff.] Dear Neighbors: You will have the chance this week to engage with personnel from the Port of [...]
From The Library
Under The Flight Path
Under The Flight Path: A Community History of Sea-Tac Airport. Help us complete the first comprehensive documentary of any major US airport; the impacts on the cities and the people.continue...
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