Seattle Paine Field Voted One of America's Best Small Airports for Second Consecutive Year
SEATTLE, May 20, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Propeller Airports is pleased to announce that the Seattle Paine Field Air Terminal is a recipient of Newsweek's Reader's Choice Award for Best Small Airport in the U.S. Seattle Paine Field took third place among a long list of exceptional airports around the country for the second year in a row. This award is added to Seattle Paine Field's growing list of accolades acknowledging the terminal's state-of-the-art facility, tranquil environment, and unparalleled customer service.
"Paine Field continues to earn accolades from the travel industry and media alike, who recognize and value our innovative and refined approach to the passenger terminal experience," said Brett Smith, CEO of Propeller. "We're proud of this recognition and remain committed to upholding the high standards we've set—for ourselves, for our passengers, and for the industry."
Nominees of this sought-after recognition are selected by a panel of travel experts including writers whose work has appeared in USA Today, Travel + Leisure, and Condé Nast Traveler. Seattle Paine Field ranks alongside long-established airports like Huntsville International Airport, Santa Barbara Airport, and Kentucky's Blue Grass Airport in receiving this reader-based recognition.
Since its inception in 2019, Seattle Paine Field has serviced more than 3 million passengers and has developed a reputation for enhancing the passenger experience with concierge services, valet parking, and locally sourced food and beverage options. The state-of-the-art terminal features floor-to-ceiling glass windows, lounge-style seating, fireplaces, and glass jet-bridges.
In addition to providing Puget Sound residents with close, convenient options for air travel, Propeller's public-private partnership with Snohomish County has resulted in tremendous economic success for the region, creating new jobs, supporting local businesses, and saving taxpayer dollars.
Seattle Paine Field is currently served by Alaska Airlines, with direct service to eight destinations on the west coast and Hawaii. Frontier Airlines will launch service from Seattle Paine Field on June 2nd, offering passengers low-cost flights to Denver, Las Vegas, and Phoenix. The addition of Frontier Airlines provides added options for convenient, time-saving travel and enhances nationwide connectivity from Seattle Paine Field.
About Propeller AirportsBased in Everett, Washington, Propeller identifies untapped potential for commercial air travel by working with local communities and government to maximize airport assets. Propeller Airports is focused on opportunities to invest, develop, and manage both general aviation and commercial service airports throughout the U.S. Propeller, along with Global Infrastructure Partners, a part of BlackRock, is focused on bringing best in class practices to Seattle Paine Field for the benefit of travelers throughout the Puget Sound Region. For more information, please visit www.flypainefield.com, www.propellerairports.com, and www.global-infra.com.
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Newsweek
3 hours ago
- Newsweek
Map Shows States With Best Work-Life Balance
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The industry you work in and your employer can make a huge difference when it comes to work-life balance. However, a new report from Solitaire Bliss indicates that the state you live in could also play a part. The report analyzed the average time spent on a variety of leisure activities reported in the U.S. Census Bureau's latest American Time Use Survey and found that Missouri, Louisiana, and Connecticut were the three best states for work-life balance. Why It Matters In the years following the coronavirus pandemic, conversations around work-life balance have reignited, with remote work and flexibility becoming key offerings for employers to attract top talent. While some employers feel it's vital to reduce turnover and attract top talent, others are more restrictive, preferring maximum time in the office. What To Know Missouri, Louisiana, Connecticut, Indiana and Massachusetts all ranked in the top five for states with the best work-life balance, with a leisure-to-work ratio of 1.3 or more. Closely following in the top 10 were Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Illinois. Meanwhile, Utah, Kansas, and Iowa are the three worst states for work-life balance. "You'd expect Utah to be near the top given its strong outdoor lifestyle and recreational appeal," Kevin Thompson, the CEO of 9i Capital Group and the host of the 9innings podcast, told Newsweek. "To see it ranked as the worst state is a bit of an anomaly. That said, Utah's cost of living is higher than the national average, which could be a contributing factor." Other trends emerged in the data, according to Solitaire Bliss. "Some states ranked higher in work-life balance due to outside factors such as shorter commute times, job flexibility, and access to leisure-friendly environments such as nature," Solitaire Bliss CEO Neal Taparia told Newsweek. "This is especially seen with states such as California, where people spend the most time playing sports and in spiritual activities." While California and Pennsylvania residents spent the most leisure time on religious and spiritual activities, people in Nebraska and Missouri spent the most leisure time socializing and relaxing. California and Oklahoma residents were heavy on sports and exercise, while Iowa and Michigan saw high rates of leisure time spent traveling. File photo of a child painting while his mother works in the background. File photo of a child painting while his mother works in the People Are Saying Solitaire Bliss CEO Neal Taparia told Newsweek: "The findings suggest that an even balance of work-life activities is closely tied to overall well-being, mental health, and productivity. States that support more leisure time often have healthier, more satisfied residents, and the residents are far less likely to experience burnout." Alex Beene, a financial literacy instructor for the University of Tennessee at Martin, told Newsweek: "It may surprise some to see Missouri, Louisiana and Indiana beating out states more renowned for their outdoor-heavy activities like Utah and Colorado when it comes to a better work-life balance. However, work-life balance isn't just about options; it's about accessibility. "Some states have a better mixture of not just increased options for life outside of work, but they also benefit from shorter commute times, better job flexibility, and more affordable options for making activities with families or groups an easier possibility." What Happens Next Companies that prioritize work-life balance are likely to reap the benefits in the years to come, Taparia said. "As more people recognize these benefits and as employees begin to speak out about the importance of having leisure time, employers could start offering more supportive practices, such as flexible hours or even four-day workweeks," Taparia said. "On the employer side, enacting these changes could improve morale in the workplace and retention rates."


Newsweek
5 hours ago
- Newsweek
H-1B Visas Under Scrutiny as Big Tech Accelerates Layoffs
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Tech companies in the United States have insisted repeatedly that they need high-skilled foreign workers through the H-1B program, but the visa is coming under greater scrutiny as claims circulate that American-born graduates are being pushed out of the high-paying sector. While Big Tech firms lay off thousands of workers — often specifically noting to investors the efficiencies in AI that allow them to reduce headcount — many of those same companies are still submitting H-1B applications, be they new visa holders or renewals, prompting further outcry from skeptics of the program who want far stricter policies from an administration that rode to power on bold immigration promises. "I don't think you can disentangle these, they have reinforcing effects," Ron Hira, an associate professor at Howard University and long-time H-1B critic, told Newsweek of the factors impacting American computer science and engineering majors. "Nobody knows how much the AI is actually impacting, how much offshore is impacting, the depression and labor demand, but not just H-1B but also OPT [Optional Practical Training], they're all competing for a shrinking labor demand and so that has major impacts on the wages and job opportunities for recent graduates." The H-1B has exploded in the past few decades. Around 400,000 visas were approved in 2024, more than twice the number issued in 2000, with the majority of these being renewals of existing visas, rather than new applications. Most of these foreign workers are employed by large tech companies like Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, who pay to keep hold of foreign-born workers. Those on H-1Bs have more difficulties changing jobs, as their immigration status is tied to their employer. Critics have also suggested that companies can pay these employees less than American-born employees doing the same job. Disconnect Between Layoffs and Visas The ongoing reliance on the H-1B comes as some of these same large companies have announced sweeping layoffs, with mid-level and senior roles often hit hardest. Some 80,000 tech jobs have been eliminated so far this year, according to the tracker Immigration skeptics have said employers are favoring cheaper foreign workers over U.S.-born staff, though those companies have strenuously pushed back on such claims. Microsoft, for example, has tried to denounce these claims after going through multiple rounds of layoffs in recent months. "Our H-1B applications are in no way related to the recent job eliminations in part because employees on H-1B's also lost their roles," the company said in a recent statement. "In the past 12 months, 78 percent of the petitions we filed were extensions for existing employees and not new employees coming to the U.S." For critics of the visa program, that doesn't add up. In 2023, U.S. colleges graduated 134,153 citizens or green card holders with bachelor's or master's degrees in computer science. But the same year, the federal government also issued over 110,000 work visas for those in that same field, according to the Institute for Sound Public Policy (IFSPP). "The story of the H-1B program is that it's for the best and the brightest," said Jeremy Beck, co-president of NumbersUSA, a think tank calling for immigration reform. "The reality, however, is that most H-1B workers are classified and paid as 'entry level.' Either they are not the best and brightest or they are underpaid, or both." "It's a program that displaces qualified Americans with cheaper workers from abroad," Beck added. While this is a prevailing argument, the data does not always back it. In 2022, the libertarian Cato Institute's David Bier found that the median wage for U.S. workers the previous year was $45,760, per the Department of Labor, while the median H-1B wage was $108,000. "So, for some folks, if there's a concern of wage depression," Ben Nucci, an immigration and compliance attorney at the law firm Snell & Wilmer, told Newsweek. "You know: 'Hey let's hire a bunch of foreign nationals and pay them peanuts' and it's the U.S. workers that want a decent wage, we've got prevailing wage requirements in the Department of Labor." That refers to regulations require employers to pay a similar rate to visa holders and U.S.-born workers, as dictated by the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The Trump administration has reportedly looked at raising the prevailing wage requirements, to bring them more in line with the salaries paid to U.S.-born workers, though an official announcement is still pending. How the H-1B Fits in Immigration Debate Harvard graduate students applaud during the 374th Harvard Commencement in Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 29, 2025. Harvard graduate students applaud during the 374th Harvard Commencement in Harvard Yard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on May 29, 2025. RICK FRIEDMAN/AFP via Getty Images The H-1B is just one aspect of the broader immigration debate that has long raged in the U.S. over how much immigration is acceptable and beneficial, and how the flow of new arrivals should be managed. "Something that's actually stayed pretty steady in the last five years is that Americans, for the most part, actually say that legal immigrants mostly fill jobs that American citizens don't want," Sahana Mukherjee, associate director of research at the Pew Research Center, told Newsweek. Pew found in August 2024 that 61 percent of those polled felt that legal immigrants filled jobs American citizens wouldn't do, essentially unchanged from when the same question was asked in 2020. "We also know, from public opinion pulling, that four in 10 Americans say that highly skilled workers should get top priority for legal immigration and another 45 percent say that they should get at least some priority," Mukherjee said, acknowledging that the results may be different if those polled were asked specifically about the H-1B. While Beck and Hira make arguments echoed by many immigration reformists – including Trump's MAGA base – that immigration should be prioritized only after Americans are employed, housed, and financially stable, there are many who broadly support legal, work-based visas as a way to boost the economy. Nucci, the attorney, told Newsweek that many employers who opt for the H-1B or similar programs do not necessarily do it lightly, given that such applications cost thousands of dollars and often require months of waiting for approval. "The clients I deal with would be happy to get a U.S. worker to fill the job," Nucci said. "But it's normally after a significant period of time of advertising and trying to search for someone, and not getting it, that they see this as one of the only options for them, because they are able to recruit someone." Nucci said that even if an employer files for an H-1B and gets approval, they could still opt to hire a U.S.-based worker if a better candidate comes along in the meantime – something which may not be reflected in the data. Priscilla Chan, Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg, Lauren Sanchez, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Tesla CEO Elon Musk attend the inauguration of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump in the Rotunda of the... Priscilla Chan, Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg, Lauren Sanchez, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Tesla CEO Elon Musk attend the inauguration of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol on January 20, 2025, in Washington, STEM Graduates Losing Out? As of July, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) has already reached the 2026 allocation for H-1Bs. While not all will go to those working in Science, Technology, Engineering, or Mathematics (STEM) roles, many AmericanSTEM graduates may be impacted at a time when companies are downsizing, looking to cut costs, and embracing AI. The July jobs report released Friday showed a deteriorating labor market in the U.S., with just 73,000 jobs added for the month. Revisions to earlier data were also significant, with a combined 258,000 jobs slashed from May and June's numbers. Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in February showed 6.1 percent of recent computer science grads were unemployed, while 16.5 percent were "underemployed", meaning they were in jobs not requiring their degree. Those figures were 7.5 percent and 17 percent for engineering graduates. The central bank data put these two majors among the highest unemployment rates, alongside sociology, information systems and management, with Hira, the Howard professor, telling Newsweek that there are no laws requiring Americans or green card holders to get priority before any H-1B applications are allowed through. "Over the last 15 years, there's been a drum beat by policy makers, by politicians, to push American students into STEM majors, and in fact, we've got record numbers of people graduating with STEM majors, in engineering and computer science, all to face a now very bleak job market," Hira said. "I think it's dangerous for politicians to keep claiming STEM shortages when there's no factual basis for it." This leaves questions hanging over tech companies, and the federal government's approach when STEM companies dominate H-1B allocations. In Fiscal Year 2025, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Google, Apple, Oracle, Cisco, Intel, and IBM all appeared in the top 50 employers granted visas – ranging from a few hundred to over 6,000. Mukherjee told Newsweek that a big shift in recent years among H-1B holders is the education level they arrive with. In 2000, 57 percent of H-1B holders held a bachelor's degree, with 30 percent had a master's. That has essentially flipped in the decades since, suggesting visa holders may now be more qualified than the American-born grads applying for the same jobs. What Will The Trump Administration Do? With immigration such a core element of President Donald Trump's return to the White House, there remains heightened interest in how his administration will change work-based visas – with the H-1B the main focus for both advocates and critics. Trump has been seen as a supporter of the program overall, saying he understands the need to attract the best and brightest workers to the U.S. in order to help the economy, while Vice President JD Vance has been openly critical of the program, accusing tech companies of replacing American workers with foreign-born substitutes. During his first term, Trump did attempt to raise wage requirements for the H-1B, but the policy was not pursued by the Biden administration. Now, a plan to introduce a weighted approval system, instead of the current lottery system that dictates most H-1B visas, is being considered. "It's a baby step in the right direction, but it's not nearly sufficient," Hira said. "I mean it's a small reform, there's many other reforms that need to be made to the program." U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters near the Rose Garden after returning to the White House on Marine One on July 29, 2025 in Washington, DC. U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters near the Rose Garden after returning to the White House on Marine One on July 29, 2025 in Washington, who advises employers on the H-1B, he was cautious of a skills-based approach, which he said could also be abused if not handled correctly. He emphasized that many of his clients would rather have an easier time employing those already in the U.S. "Employers are pretty frank with me that they would rather not have to pay the fee and have a system in place where they have to wait until the person is in H-1B status, and even then, they are on the clock," Nucci said. "There's a maximum of six years on the H-1B status. You can go past that six-year limit, but only if you're going to sponsor the employee becoming a permanent resident. "That's a big decision, because if you sponsor someone for permanent residency, you put in all this money, the moment they become a permanent resident, they are free to go." Newsweek reached out to the Department of Labor, the Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service for comment, but did not receive responses ahead of publishing.


Newsweek
5 hours ago
- Newsweek
Tariff Rebate Checks: Family of Four Could Get $2,400 From Trump Admin
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. American families could receive thousands of dollars from the Trump administration under a new bill introduced by Senator Josh Hawley. Newsweek reached out to Hawley's office for comment via email. Why It Matters Tariffs have brought in more than $100 billion to the United States so far in 2025, leaving legislators debating how those funds would best be spent. Hawley, a Missouri Republican, is proposing to use that money on direct payments for millions of Americans. The bill comes after many economists have warned that tariffs could lead to Americans paying higher prices for goods over time. So far, consumer inflation data does not suggest there have been major price increases due to the policies, as President Donald Trump put some tariffs on pause to try to negotiate trade deals. But critics say prices could still rise in the future due to tariffs. What Is the American Worker Rebate Act of 2025? Hawley introduced the American Worker Rebate Act earlier this week. If passed, the legislation would use revenue from tariffs to fund direct payments for Americans. The bill would provide a tariff rebate check to American workers and families this year, "with similar parameters to the direct payments passed by Congress in 2020," Hawley said in a statement this week. The payments would be at least $600 per adult and dependent, so $2,400 for a family of four, according to Hawley's office. It would allow for larger payments if tariff revenue increases. "It is the policy of the United States to use revenue raised from tariffs applied on foreign imports to provide relief for working people through immediate tax rebates," the bill reads. The payments would need to be made "as rapidly as possible," and refunds should not be made after December 31, 2026. Senator Josh Hawley speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference in Washington, D.C., on June 21, 2024. Senator Josh Hawley speaks at the Faith and Freedom Road to Majority conference in Washington, D.C., on June 21, Thompson, the CEO of 9i Capital Group and the host of the 9innings podcast, told Newsweek a rebate would be essentially a "small tax refund." "The impact would be minimal for most Americans, especially as grocery and utility prices have risen so significantly over the past few years. In fact, this could even add a slight bump to inflation," he said. Most of the money would likely "end up on corporate balance sheets, either through consumption or paying down household debt," he said. "Any potential rebate is just your own tax dollars being handed back to you, like a quasi-tax refund. In my view, this is more of a distraction than a solution," he said. "Because the real issue isn't just the trade gap, it's the strategic leverage that trade deficit gives us globally. The U.S. dollar's dominance isn't just about transactions; it's about influence, power, and regional control." What Has Donald Trump Said About a Rebate Check? Trump indicated in July that his administration was considering a rebate check, telling reporters that he is "thinking about a rebate" because of the revenue. He indicated that paying down the national debt is a priority, however. The debt remains over $36 trillion. "We have so much money coming in, we're thinking about a little rebate," he said. "But the big thing we want to do is pay down debt. But we're thinking about a rebate." Hawley responded that he would "introduce legislation in the Senate to send a rebate check to every working person in America." What People Are Saying Senator Josh Hawley, in a statement: "Americans deserve a tax rebate after four years of Biden policies that have devastated families' savings and livelihoods. Like President Trump proposed, my legislation would allow hard-working Americans to benefit from the wealth that Trump's tariffs are returning to this country." Senator Ron Johnson, a Wisconsin Republican, told The Washington Post he believes funds should be used to lower the national debt: "We're $37 trillion in debt. We're running deficits close to $2 trillion. I wouldn't support it. At some point in time, this madness has to end." What Happens Next It's unclear whether Hawley's bill would receive enough support to pass the Senate, with Johnson and other Republicans expressing skepticism about the bill.