The Bellingham Planning Commission held a detailed work session on the Land Use and Housing chapters of the comprehensive plan update, focusing on four key areas: Urban Growth Area expansion, transit corridor planning, small-scale commercial in residential zones, and citywide planning approaches. Staff presented refined proposals for adding the north Bellingham Reserve area (approximately 1,200 housing units) to the Urban Growth Area while keeping the South Yew Street area in reserve, alongside new policies for transit-oriented development and allowing limited commercial uses in residential neighborhoods. Public comment dominated the evening with nine speakers, eight of whom advocated for inclusionary zoning studies to address affordability. Planning Commissioner Mike Estes announced this would likely be his last meeting, stating Mayor Lund has forwarded a new name to city council for his position. The session revealed significant community pressure for mandatory affordable housing policies, while staff emphasized monitoring existing voluntary programs before moving to mandatory requirements. Staff outlined a comprehensive framework for transit corridor planning that would identify key connections between urban villages and major destinations, followed by detailed planning processes to establish mixed-use nodes and transit-oriented development. The presentation also covered the proposal to retire existing neighborhood plans due to inconsistencies with state housing laws and administrative complexity, replacing them with citywide approaches to planning and zoning. #
Planning Commission
Executive Summary
Key Decisions & Actions
& Actions No formal votes were taken during this work session. This was an information and discussion session on draft comprehensive plan policies. The commission received presentations on Urban Growth Area modifications, transit corridor planning frameworks, small-scale commercial allowances in residential areas, and citywide planning approaches. Staff will incorporate feedback into summer 2025 presentations when formal voting is scheduled. Key policy areas discussed included H-20 (inclusionary zoning monitoring), transit corridor designation processes, Urban Growth Area Reserve area decisions, and neighborhood plan retirement. All policies remain in draft form pending further commission review and public input. #
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**April 3, 2025**: Planning Commission discussion of climate and environment chapters of comprehensive plan **April 14, 2025**: City Council Committee of the Whole work session on neighborhood plan retirement **May 2025**: Barkley sub area plan expected before Planning Commission **Summer 2025**: Full comprehensive plan document returns to Planning Commission with Environmental Impact Statement for public hearing and formal voting **Post-adoption work plan items**: Three major planning processes identified: annexation plan update including pre-zoning of UGA areas, new urban village identification process, and transit corridor planning connecting urban villages and destinations **18-month timeline**: Staff cited 13 housing-related ordinances to implement over next 18 months including middle housing bill, design standards, and parking regulation updates **MFTE program expansion**: 12-year and 20-year multifamily tax exemption programs being considered citywide as immediate affordable housing tools #
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