Sightline in the News
Since 1993, Sightline has been covered extensively by Northwest media. Here are a few of the most recent articles about our work.
Since 1993, Sightline staff have published dozens of articles and op-eds in publications in the Northwest and nationally. Here are a few of our most recent. Also see our daily weblog, the Daily Score.
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Green With Envy
04/21/2008
Williamette Week Online
“At one point we were the greenest corner of the country and perhaps one of the trendsetters of the world. And now, I don’t want to say we’re falling behind, but we’re no longer uniquely the ones to watch,” says Clark Williams-Derry. . . -
Walk the Walk
04/21/2008
New York Times
Last summer, a trio of Seattle software developers started walkscore.com, which calculates the number of potential destinations within walking distance of any given address and then produces a rating. -
Growing cruise ship industry impacting air, water quality
03/31/2008
King 5
"The Port of Seattle tends to count only the benefits of the cruise ship industry and not count the costs. It's a bit like counting your paycheck, but the not the charges your racking up on the credit card," said researcher Eric de Place, Sightline Institute. -
Cyclists, skinny tires, streetcar rails — not a good mix
12/06/2007
Seattle Times
New streetcar tracks on Seattle's Westlake Avenue have turned into a trap for bicyclists. The tires on a standard road bike are narrower than the 1 ¾-inch groove that holds a streetcar wheel. If a bicycle veers into that gap, it can easily get stuck, pitching the rider onto the street. -
Nickels to employees: Take bus
12/05/2007
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Mayor Greg Nickels has proposed giving all city employees free bus passes by 2009 to encourage use of transit as a means for reducing the air pollution that causes global warming. -
Does building new roads help or hurt global warming?
12/05/2007
International Herald Tribune
Seeking a place in the vanguard of the battle against global warming, France last month unveiled a package of ambitious pledges that included a particularly bold proposition: An end to new highway construction. -
Licensing Bicycles
11/22/2007
CBC
One of the more sensational stories to come out of the mean streets of Toronto recently was not a driver committing an act of road rage, but a cyclist losing it and attacking a driver who cut him off. -
Climate change: Lead or step aside
11/21/2007
Seattle Times
The United States can best influence how the world addresses global warming by leading the way instead of sniping from the sidelines. Constructive participation in meetings next month in Bali, Indonesia, must set the tone. -
Visions of a sounder, safer future
11/19/2007
Seattle Times
Can today's Americans make wise choices for the futures of their communities? Accept some current pain for gains down the road? Think long-term? Too often, the answer seems "no." Although in a string of recent referendum votes across the country, glimpses of refreshing far-sightedness shone through. -
Era of big highway building is over
11/08/2007
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The loud gasp you heard Tuesday evening was the Big Highway lobby taking its last breath. For 50 years, in this region and across the country, big digs and paving rigs were the preferred answer to transportation needs. For the first time, a huge project was rejected here because of concerns over global warming. -
Transportation forever linked with climate change
11/07/2007
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The debate over Puget Sound's Proposition 1, the roads and transit measure rejected by voters on Tuesday, was tumultuous. It split the business community, divided political leaders of the same party, and surprisingly, it pitted environmental groups against one another. -
Biggest waste producers in state get best fee deal
09/04/2007
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Sigttline analysis illustrates that hazardous materials program is unfair to small businesses and that big polluters get a free pass to pollute. -
The Great Clog of '07: Seattle Met the Challenge
08/30/2007
Seattle Times
We've just experienced our own version of the Y2K bug: the partial closure of Interstate 5, the state's most trafficked highway, on a crowded stretch leading into the heart of the most concentrated employment district in the state. -
Q & A: Environmental sustainability can be reality, say conference speakers
06/22/2007
Columbian
Alan Durning speaks to the Columbian about the slow-motion revolution of sustainability. -
Gasoline use at a four-decade low in Northwest, report says
06/12/2007
KGW-TV
Because of rising electricity and diesel use, energy use in the region remains about twice as high as energy-efficient nations such as Germany.
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