Within the Might 10 editorial, “Seattle, don’t let the prospect of a bigger icebreaker fleet slip away,” the editorial board shared its perspective concerning the strategic significance of Washington’s icebreaker fleet to bigger geopolitical issues relating to the Arctic Sea. The editorial implored Washington elected leaders and maritime stakeholders to try to recapture Seattle’s host duties for a deliberate U.S. Coast Guard growth on Seattle’s waterfront after a latest document of choice for Base Seattle revealed a smaller footprint for USCG’s future base of operations than was initially proposed.
Waterfront stakeholders who had been working with USCG for years on the growth have been simply as puzzled because the editorial board by the ultimate end result. Now we have been advocating for a model of USCG’s Different 2, which might have maintained a steadiness between marine cargo throughput to help industrial delivery operations and extra berthing capability to accommodate an expanded safety cutter fleet.
Earlier than the ultimate document of choice was issued, the Coast Guard had articulated three potential base growth pathways. First, the USCG’s most popular Different 1 would have expanded Base Seattle north onto Terminal 46, occupying as much as 54.1 acres. Second, Different 2 would have occupied 13.5 to 21.5 acres at Terminal 30 and 5.5 acres at Terminal 46. And third, a “no-action” various, would have maintained the established order.
From the get-go, Different 1 was incompatible with future financial improvement alternatives made doable by Seattle’s distinctive deep-water port. T46 abuts a naturally deep 50-foot water berth — good for the biggest containerized cargo ships, whereas Coast Guard vessel drafts solely vary from 20 to 36 toes.
USCG’s most popular plan would have diminished industrial berthing capability at T46 for bigger industrial vessels, simply because the NW Seaport Alliance is signing a letter of intent with a potential tenant who’s exploring alternatives to make use of the terminal at its full capability. Each misplaced acre of terminal area on 46 would cut back our capability to deal with 3,500 delivery containers yearly, doubtlessly undermining future progress alternatives. Additional, a lot of USCG’s proposed occupancy included workplace area to deal with administrative capabilities and parking to accommodate single-occupancy autos, capability that might simply be accommodated within the Different 2 footprint with multilevel constructions.
Billions of {dollars} in private and non-private infrastructure funding have been made by taxpayers in Washington to advance the freight mobility infrastructure that surrounds T46 to help industrial delivery and associated industries. Over 70,000 jobs throughout Washington state are depending on regional import/export actions, together with 7,160 direct jobs on the Seattle waterfront. Each direct job in marine cargo transportation creates a further 1.9 jobs all through our state’s financial system. Whereas the USCG growth dialogue is centered on the town of Seattle, our ports are statewide belongings and agriculture exporters in Japanese Washington are paying consideration. T46 is actually three stoplights from Boston, and our farmers are rooting for the NW Seaport Alliance to safe a buyer. They depend upon that entry as a result of it’s essential to their survival to have capability in our ports to ship their items.
Leaders on the metropolis of Seattle and in Olympia might all the time be extra attuned to the wants of our ports and regional freight networks, however it appeared clear that some model of Different 2 supplied a path ahead that was appropriate with potential marine cargo quantity progress and USCG’s growth wants. Sadly, this dialog occurred amid a tumultuous administration change in Washington, D.C., and high-profile Coast Guard management turnover the place pivotal choices have been scheduled to be made, however then delayed, all through 2025. This was compounded by stop-and-go funds negotiations in Congress, with continued uncertainty riled by the midterm election cycle.
The editorial board means that indifference from Washington’s elected leaders is the trigger for a disappointing USCG document of choice. But it surely takes two to tango. Native maritime business stakeholders, financial improvement entities, and elected officers noticed the trail to an answer — however to achieve that answer the USCG, impacted events and elected leaders must roll up their sleeves and do the onerous work of negotiating an end result that may work for everybody.

