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PBDEs: Boeing, Going, Gone...

Posted by Clark Williams-Derry
Aerospace giant finds alternative to toxic flame retardant.

Apparently, Boeing was a bit of a sticking point in the negotiations over Washington's recent ban of the toxic flame retardants known as PBDEs.  In legislative negotions, the ariplane manufacturer won an exemption for one form of PBDE, arguing that there were no safe, effective alternatives for some aviation applications. 

All things considered, that exemption may have made some sense.  The PBDE ban was definitely a good idea; but it's hard to argue that preventing airplane catastrophes is a good idea too.  And it was definitely better to have a ban with a small loophole than no ban at all -- which might have happened, if Boeing hadn't gotten its exemption.

But now, wouldja look at what landed in my inbox: a press release from one of Boeing's suppliers:

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The Traffic is Jammin'

Posted by Clark Williams-Derry
I-5 construction non-mess proves that commuters are adaptable.

We tend to think of traffic as a given, and that the amount of driving we do is simply immutable -- that there's literally nothing we can do in our day-to-day lives to drive less.

But Seattle's continued breezy traffic -- in the midst of a major construction project that some feared would trigger a morass of congestion throughout Puget Sound -- shows that this is simply false. Far from being immutable, traffic and travel patterns are surprisingly fluid. If drivers have travel choices and the right kinds of information and incentives, they can get out of their cars -- or even use alternative surface routes more efficiently.

Expecting a quagmire, and warned off the highways, commuters found alternate ways to get to work -- despite having fewer lanes to drive on. Some drivers got out of their cars, switching to buses, commuter trains, and water taxis. Others stayed off the roads entirely, by telecommuting from home or from temporary workstations set up by far-sighted employers. The end result: despite the reduced highway capacity, traffic's been better than it's been in years.

Of course, this P-I editorial, by the redoubtable Cary Moon and Kamala Rao, makes the point better than I ever could. So I'll just shut up now and recommend that you read it.

(But before you go, the I-5 story has obscured some other interesting traffic news -- Puget Sound just got a big chunk of money from the feds to try out tolling on the Evergreen Point floating bridge. Maybe that'll help get people out of their cars too -- undermining the argument for widening the thing...)

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