Secretary of Navy: Jet noise issue 'top priority'
COUPEVILLE During a visit to Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, Navy Secretary Richard V. Spencer called the conflict around jet noise a top priority, but said recently filed lawsuits prevented him from discussing possible solutions.
On Sept. 20, Spencer met for more than an hour with community leaders, including local mayors, congressional staff, state lawmakers, county commissioners, and representatives from chambers of commerce, Ebeys Landing Historical Reserve, National Parks, area school districts and the Economic Development Council for Island County.
This is front and center on the Navys radar, he told reporters afterward. But recent lawsuits from the state attorney general and a class-action lawsuit by homeowners have hamstrung his ability to discuss plans to resolve the noise disputes, he said.
He said the Navy could be willing to do noise mitigation or implement other practices that had been used in places like Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia. In the mid 2000s, the Navy settled with thousands of homeowners in Virginia Beach who claimed the noise from the F/A-18 Hornets decreased their property values.
Homeowners near Outlying Field Coupeville have filed a similar class-action lawsuit over the Navys planned 400 percent increase in the number of aircraft carrier landings practiced there.
Spencer said hes scheduled to meet with the state attorney general on Oct. 3 to discuss possible solutions. In early July, Washington states top lawyer announced a lawsuit in which he argues the Navy violated laws by not properly analyzing the impact the increased number of low-level training flights by the EA-18 Growler will have on human health, the environment and historic resources.
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