Skip to content

Features

2018 Year in Review: Seattle Environment News by the Numbers

We banned straws, made tree cutters pay and sweated through another smoky, hot summer in Seattle

By Niki Stojnic December 4, 2018

environment

This article originally appeared in the December 2018 issue of Seattle magazine.

This article appears in print in the December 2018 issue, as part of the Year in Review featureClick here to subscribe.

Zero

The amount of treated or untreated gallons of vessel sewage now allowed in Puget Sound; the waters were designated a “no dump zone” by the Washington State Department of Ecology in May.

1,429

The number of wildfires in Washington that the state’s Department of Natural Resources had responded to as of press time. Wildfires in Washington and British Columbia contributed to making 2018 the worst year ever for air quality in the state’s history.

$90,000

The amount a landowner was fined for draining, clearing and filling 1.5 acres of protected forested wetlands in Pierce County—lands that will take decades to restore. Altogether, the homeowners cleared 153 trees on more than an acre.

74

The number of critically endangered southern resident orcas that remain in Puget Sound, the lowest number since 1984.

82.8˚

The average high temperature in July, the new record high for the month.

77.9˚

The average high temperature logged at Sea-Tac airport this summer, making it the second-hottest summer on record. 

80,000

Gallons of sewage spilled into Sinclair Inlet (a Kitsap County arm of Puget Sound) in August, thanks to a blocked sewer line at Naval Base Kitsap.

One

Major U.S. city—Seattle—to enact a ban on plastic straws. The ban went into effect in July. 

$360,000

The amount nine West Seattle homeowners were fined for illegally chopping down greenbelt trees between late 2015 and 2016 to improve their views; two other couples were previously fined as part of this. 

Follow Us

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

Microsoft Awards $5M Worth Of Grants To AI innovators

The grants are part of the company’s 50th anniversary this year

Microsoft has given 20 organizations $50,000 each as part of its AI for Good grants program. The grants — part of an initiative to celebrate Microsoft’s 50th anniversary this year — recognize organizations for their innovations in artificial intelligence. The organizations — who applied for the grants earlier this year — receive resources to help…

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Seattle Commute Survey Shows More Office Activity

Both transit travel and driving trips are on the rise

Downtown Seattle foot traffic still isn’t nearly what it was prior to the pandemic, but more people are commuting to offices on a regular basis. The 2024 Commute Seattle Survey finds that both transit travel and drive-alone trips are on the rise as remote working drops. Citywide, the percentage of people reporting that their jobs…

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

Seattle Pride Seeks Support As Sponsorships Dry Up

The nonprofit has launched a fundraising campaign to make up for a $350,000 deficit

For Patti Hearn, no amount is too small. Every little bit helps. Hearn, executive director of Seattle Pride, is working feverishly to bridge a $350,000 fundraising gap because of shifts in corporate sponsorship. Seattle Pride — a nonprofit foundation that produces the annual Seattle Pride Parade and a slew of other events, including Seattle Pride…

Tapped Out

Tapped Out

Washington lawmakers propose doubling beer and wine taxes

You might be paying significantly more for your pint next year.  House Bill 2079, introduced by Representative Lauren Davis (D–District 32), would raise the tax on beer from $4.78 to $9.56 per barrel for most breweries. The bill also proposes doubling taxes on wine from 1 cent to 2 cents per liter and increasing taxes…