# Hard Choices and Housing Policy: Committee of the Whole Tackles Budget Crisis and Rental Reforms
On a September afternoon marked by both financial reckoning and legislative ambition, Bellingham's City Council Committee of the Whole grappled with fundamental questions about the city's future. How does a community maintain essential services when revenues are declining? How far should local government go to protect renters from exploitative fees? And how can a city balance growth with housing affordability?
The September 30, 2024 meeting stretched from 1:00 PM to 5:22 PM, though council had met earlier for an executive session. Council President Daniel Hammill presided over most of the session, though left early and was succeeded by Council President Pro Tem Holly Huffman. All seven council members were present for the bulk of the deliberations.
## The Mayor's Sobering Budget Reality
Mayor Kim Lund opened the afternoon with what she called "hard decisions" reflected in her proposed 2025 budget. Standing before council, she painted a stark picture: Bellingham faced a multi-million dollar ongoing general fund deficit, flattening revenues, and what she termed "a legacy of debt now coming due."
"Excellence in government means being responsible stewards of our constrained public dollars while making progress on key community priorities," Lund declared, framing the budget as "a temporary bridge to a more financially stable future."
The mayor's proposed $543 million citywide budget represented a dramatic shift from recent practices. While maintaining critical services, it employed what Deputy Administrator Forrest Longman called "creative uses of existing resources" and "targeted reductions." The general fund alone faced a $1.5 million deficit, though when accounting for one-time revenues and temporary measures, the ongoing structural deficit reached $6 million.
Longman's presentation included sobering charts showing five of nine sales tax periods in 2024 had performed worse than the comparable 2023 periods. "We are likely to miss our revenue targets by 2 to $3 million for 2024," he reported, add…