Port of Camas-Washougal leaders gathered on Monday, Aug. 3, to discuss the results of a survey they had sent to their Grove Field Airport tenants about the possibility of switching to unleaded fuel.
About 20 minutes into the conversation, Port commissioner John Spencer decided that he couldn’t stay silent anymore. His ethical and moral concerns overrode anything else that may have been on his mind at that particular moment, and his words were laced with passion and conviction.
“We’re selling cigarettes, and it’s time to stop,” he said, referring to the leaded fuel. “Yeah, we’ll lose some money, but this is what we’re supposed to do. We’re here for the public good. We’re not supposed to be killing people with lead. I don’t understand why (any of this other stuff) matters. We have an ethical responsibility to stop poisoning people around us. You don’t do it because it’s not right. We should jump on (unleaded options) — not walk, not study. We need to jump. This is a big, big issue.”
The Port is now in the process of jumping.
The agency is attempting to bring two types of unleaded fuels, including a version recently approved for use by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), to the airfield to complement and eventually replace the leaded version it currently sells.
“We had been told by other people, because they were told the same thing, that we’re stuck with 100 low-lead right now until the FAA approves the use of an unleaded version, so we did not think we had options,” Port Chief Executive Officer David Ripp told the Post-Record. “Having more discussions and doing research, we realized there are options. Our focus is to be good stewards, and now that we know that there’s alternatives, we want to offer (them).”