Washington Business Summer 2017 | Washington Business | Page 16

washington business Of Note BNSF Rail Workers Rescue Boater in Tacoma, Hiker in British Columbia Twice, within two weeks, BNSF railroad crews helped save the lives of people in distress. On May 22, a freight train stopped on its route after reports of a possible drowning along White Rock’s West Beach in British Columbia. The train first stopped so that emergency responders could use the tracks to reach what turned out to be an injured hiker. Eventually, the rescue workers asked for BNSF’s help to transport the first responders and the victim in the cab of the locomotive to medical personnel a quarter mile down the tracks. Two weeks later, in Tacoma, a BNSF conductor and his engineer saw a man in the water near the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. The man, a boater whose watercraft had overturned, was waving his hands at the train as he bobbed in the Puget Sound waters. The BNSF employees stopped the train. Conductor Trevor Smith got into the water to pull the man to shore after 30 minutes in the frigid water. (He was wearing a life jacket, but was struggling to stay afloat.) They then walked half a mile to meet firefighters. “I was just glad that we could stop and help someone in need,” Smith said. First Class Graduates from Walmart’s New Training Academy in Bonney Lake Sixty Walmart associates graduated from the new Bonney Lake Walmart Training Academy in June after completing classes in core retail skills, leadership, merchandising, operations and customer service. The graduates are the first to complete classes in the new facility, which is the third Walmart training academy to be opened in Washington. This facility will serve the Puget Sound region, from Bellingham to Pierce County. Other Walmart academies are already up and established in Poulsbo and Spokane. A fourth will open in Vancouver, likely in late summer. Walmart opened its 100th training academy in April in Edmond, Okla. The company plans to have 200 open by the end of the year, part of a $2.7 billion investment in greater training, more education and higher wages for associates. Each are at dedicated locations, in or near a Walmart Supercenter, where front-line hourly supervisors, department managers and assistant managers receive two to six weeks of training to help associates both better serve customers and see a clear path to career advancement. 16 association of washington business Alaska Airlines Will Begin Offering Passenger Flights out of Paine Field in Everett Alaska Airlines announced in May that it will begin offering commercial passenger flights out of Everett’s Paine Field. This will create an alternative to the long, traffic-clogged drive to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport for people living north of Seattle. “As our region continues to grow at a record pace and Sea-Tac Airport nears capacity, the time is right,” said Alaska Airlines CEO Brad Tilden. Paine Field, constructed in 1936 (eight years before Sea-Tac), does not currently offer commercial flights. Subject to government approval, Alaska plans to oper- ate nine daily flights by the fall of 2018, including daily nonstop flights to some of its most popular destinations. The two-gate terminal could handle about 16 flights per day, meaning about 1,000 passengers in and out of the airport. “Businesses will have easier access to major markets and leisure travelers can skip the commute down south, saving time and fuel,” said Snohomish County Execu- tive Dave Somers. “For decades, Alaska Airlines has been a responsible neighbor in our region, and we welcome them even closer to home at Paine Field.” An artist’s rendering of the new passenger air terminals at Paine Field in Everett (Courtesy Propeller Airports).