7. Attachment

Exhibit A

4/8/24, 3:01 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Iris Antman 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:01 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Iris Antman
antwomaniris@gmail.com
Seattle, Washington 98118













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 3:31 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Sally Bartow 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:31 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Sally Bartow
sallybartow@comcast.net
Mercer island, WA, Washington 98040













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:31 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Jim Bernthal 
Sat 4/6/2024 5:18 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:31 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Jim Bernthal
jimbernthal@hotmail.com
Seattle, Washington 98118













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/15/24, 9:25 AM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]PUBLIC COMMENT for October 27, 2020
Sharon Chafin 
Fri 4/12/2024 8:20 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or attachments may be unsafe.

Hello…
I don’t know if this has been covered so…..
As a volunteer in the airport I find it increasingly disturbing to find our elevators dirty and with trash,
many times, thrown on the floor. They are probably (?) cleaned from time to time, but the elevators
themselves are definitely not welcoming! Add to that they seem to be constantly in repair status. I
actually got stuck in one a few months ago! Luckiily, we had the number for maintenance and they were
right on it! Yay MAINTENANCE!
While I’m (sorry) complaining….sure would be nice to have a better cell lot. After visiting the one in
Tampa, FL with their REAL restroom building, and their big screen w/incoming flights, I am so
disappointed in ours. Yes, they have better weather, but we should figure that out?
Thanks for the ear!
Sharon Chafin
USO Volunteer










https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/1

      4/8/24, 3:26 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Cynthia Ervin 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:26 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Cynthia Ervin
cynthervin@msn.com
Seattle, Washington 98115













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/12/24, 3:14 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Sandra Jones 
Fri 4/12/2024 2:06 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/12/24, 3:14 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Sandra Jones
sandra.jones2278@comcast.net
Bellevue, Washington 98004













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:37 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Breck Lebegue 
Sat 4/6/2024 1:02 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
As a public health physician and past cruiser who got COVID on my final cruise, I urge you to
take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector. Giant cruise
ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit onboard workers,
and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:37 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Breck Lebegue
brecklebegue@gmail.com
Steilacoom , Washington 98388













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:09 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Cynthia Levine 
Sat 4/6/2024 1:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:09 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
- Cynthia Levine
Cynthia Levine
cynthia@thelevines.com
Seattle, Washington 98107













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:34 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
lrswtsn8@gmail.com 
Sun 4/7/2024 2:52 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:34 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
lrswtsn8@gmail.com
,














https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:30 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Shannon Markley 
Sat 4/6/2024 5:05 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:30 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Shannon Markley
markley.shannon@yahoo.com
Shoreline, Washington 98177













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 4:08 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Scott McClay 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:59 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 4:08 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Scott McClay
scottmc@riseup.net
Seattle , Washington 98106













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 2:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Patrick McKee 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:02 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 2:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Patrick McKee
patmckee@sbcglobal.net
Mercer Island, Washington 98040













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 3:25 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Anne Miller 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:25 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Anne Miller
annemiller2733@gmail.com
Seattle, Washington 98122













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 2:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Grace Norman 
Thu 4/4/2024 3:24 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 2:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Grace Norman
grace.norman@gmail.com
seattle, Washington 98104













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 2:26 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Sarah Ostheller 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:02 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 2:26 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Sarah Ostheller
chik.zilla@gmail.com
Tacoma, Washington 98408













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/12/24, 11:47 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Ayana Parrott 
Fri 4/12/2024 10:31 AM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I endorsed and attended the "Save Our Seas" demonstration at Pier 66 on April 6th with my 10-
year-old daughter, other concerned children, families, and community members. We are all
devastated by the cruise industry's impact on our environment and are demanding
improvements for the future of our children. I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the
harm caused by Seattle’s cruise sector. Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger
our health and our climate, exploit onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/12/24, 11:47 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Ayana Parrott
aparrott@live.com
Seattle, Washington 98178












https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 3:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Wade Phillips 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:24 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Wade Phillips
wadephi@gmail.com
Seattle, Washington 98115













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/17/24, 3:57 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Natalie Pierson 
Wed 4/17/2024 3:11 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/17/24, 3:57 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Natalie Pierson
natalie.kelly@gmail.com
Seattle , WA













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2



4/8/24, 4:35 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Improve the Land Stewardship Plan
Lauren Sewell 
Sat 4/6/2024 11:36 AM
To: Calkins, Ryan ; Cho, Sam ; Felleman, Fred ; 
Hasegawa, Toshiko ; Mohamed, Hamdi ; Commission-Public-
Records ; Aviation Environmental Information
 
Cc: info@treeactionseattle.com ; info@defendersofhighlineforest.org
 
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Dear Commissioners and Staff,
The Port’s Sustainable Airport Master Plan and Real Estate Strategic Plan recommend replacing an estimated
110 acres of forested land in residential neighborhoods near the airport with polluting industrial development. A
55-acre parcel inside North SeaTac Park is at risk. So are 17 acres directly south of Tub Lake Bog, 26+ acres in
the Riverton Heights community, and over 27 acres in southwest SeaTac - all close to homes and schools.
The map in figure 16 of your Land Stewardship Plan indicates that you are not reconsidering these proposals.
Adding more polluting sources in this densely-populated community will harm people. Removing air cooling
and purifying city trees here will harm them more. Doing both at once - in this lower-income, diverse, and
highly-impacted community where levels of pollution and heat are already high and trees are already scarce - is
deeply unjust. 
Commissioner Felleman made two important comments on the Land Stewardship Plan on March 12th. He
suggested including an inventory of already-developed Port-owned land in this plan to identify existing uses that
can be intensified and potentially avoid “sprawling to another site.” And he suggested that “adjacency to
community areas” - presumably of Port development plans - could assist in your equity analysis.
The Port should not swap out any large area of air-purifying forest with industrial sprawl in our near-airport
community. But you appear to still plan to remove most of the forest on the land you own here.
Therefore, we reiterate our call to you, expressed in the Community Forest Consensus now signed by nearly
3,700 community members, to protect all community forest in the near airport community. And we also ask that
you implement the suggestions that Commissioner Felleman made at your March 12th meeting.
Thank you,
Lauren Sewell, 98144





https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/1

      4/8/24, 3:30 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Vivien Sharples 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:30 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Vivien Sharples
vivs@igc.org
Seattle , Washington 98112













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/12/24, 11:45 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]Take Action to Reduce Cruise degradation!
Marc Smason 
Fri 4/12/2024 12:11 AM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/12/24, 11:45 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Marc Smason
worldmusicetc@gmail.com
Seattle, Washington 98144













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/8/24, 3:00 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL] Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
Nichole Snyder 
Sat 4/6/2024 12:03 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/8/24, 3:00 PM                                               Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
Nichole Snyder
nichole.lsnyder@gmail.com
Mercer Island, Washington 98040













https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    2/2

      4/12/24, 11:43 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
[EXTERNAL]Take Action to Reduce Cruise Harms!
XinTong H 
Thu 4/11/2024 10:14 PM
To: Commission-Public-Records  
WARNING: External email. Links or a achments may be unsafe.

Commission_Testimony Port Meeting,
Dear Port Commissioners and staff,
I urge you to take action to immediately reduce the harms caused by Seattle’s cruise sector.
Giant cruise ships pollute our waters and air, endanger our health and our climate, exploit
onboard workers, and overwhelm destination communities.
I urge the Port of Seattle to take the following actions:
1) Annually reduce the number of sailings, until there is zero water, air and climate pollution. The
“Green Cruise Corridor” claims that it may eventually reduce emissions, but we need to start
now!
2) Lobby the WA state legislature to expand the mission of WA ports to include stewardship. The
Port should advocate to update state law so that ports are no longer mandated to continually
grow business at the expense of the environment and our health. The current mission is obsolete
and dangerous in light of the climate and environmental crises we now face.
3) Support the proposed U.S. Clean Shipping Act, which would end emissions from all ships by
2040 and would also electrify ports to stop health-harming pollution. This law would apply to
freight and cruise ships, and contains reduction benchmarks. The “Greenest Port in North
America'' should champion the effort to raise the bar for all US vessels.
4) Reject false solutions and speak out publicly about the need for true solutions. LNG fracked
gas is proven to be as bad or worse for the climate than traditional fuels, yet cruise companies
sailing out of Seattle make claims that LNG cruise ships are environmentally friendly. “Engine
scrubbers” that turn air pollution into water pollution should not be allowed along the Seattle-
Alaska cruise route; instead of using scrubbers, cruise companies could simply pay for a higher
grade of available fuel. "Net zero" and "carbon neutral" are goals that allow climate pollution to
continue and are not in line with keeping global warming below 1.5 degrees - we need actual
zero emissions vessels and targets.
5) Approach discussions, goals, studies, and presentations about the cruise sector in an honest,
holistic, and unbiased way. When economics are discussed, there should be a transparent
breakdown of the purported financial benefit to our region, AND a breakdown of negative costs
caused by the industry directly, and the costs of exacerbating the climate crisis. Emissions from
the the flights associated with cruise passengers, and from the ships’ entire journeys, should be
counted in the greenhouse gas inventories. Environmental accomplishments must be framed in
the context of total emissions/pollution generated to give a true picture of their effectiveness.
https://outlook.office365.com/mail/commission-public-records@portseattle.org/inbox/id/AAQkAGE1YmYzYTk0LWE2N2YtNGZmYi05YjgxLTE5MDVjO…    1/2

      4/12/24, 11:43 AM                                              Mail - Commission-Public-Records - Outlook
Take responsibility for the four billion gallons of annual water pollution dumped along the SEAAK
route.
6) Work in collaboration to support regional solutions that could reduce harm immediately. The
entire Seattle-Alaska route should be a "no discharge zone," to stop the dumping of sewage,
toxic engine scrubber waste, garbage, oily bilge water, and greywater. The “Alaska Rangers”
onboard observer program needs to be funded by passenger fees, and expanded to enforce
environmental regulations along the entire route.
The destructive impacts of cruises are enormous & fundamental to the industry’s current
business model: cruise profits depend directly upon externalizing the costs of pollution &
exploitation. Seattle should lead the way for all North American ports to immediately to
immediately reduce harms, while exploring ways to equitably transition away from this
devastating form of toxic tourism.
Please consider this to be a written comment as part of public comment at the next Port
Commission meeting. Thank you.
XinTong H
Xinnophone@gmail.com
Seattle , Washington 98104













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Limitations of Translatable Documents

PDF files are created with text and images are placed at an exact position on a page of a fixed size.
Web pages are fluid in nature, and the exact positioning of PDF text creates presentation problems.
PDFs that are full page graphics, or scanned pages are generally unable to be made accessible, In these cases, viewing whatever plain text could be extracted is the only alternative.