Search toggle
Contact toggle
Search toggle
Say hello.
Focus Str. 5th Ave, 98/2 34746 Manhattan, New York
+1 222 44 55
Real Briefings

BEL-PWN-2024-10-21 October 21, 2024 Public Works Committee City of Bellingham 34 min
← Back to All Briefings
Oct
Month
21
Day
34
Min
Published
Status

On a late October afternoon in 2024, the Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee convened with a packed agenda that would see them navigate everything from interstate highway maintenance to cutting-edge stormwater treatment. Committee Chair Hannah Stone, along with Council Members Lisa Anderson and Michael Lilliquist, settled in for what would become a methodical review of five significant infrastructure matters affecting the city.

Members only Sign up free →
Members only Sign up free →
Members only Sign up free →
Members only Sign up free →

**Electric Avenue Bridge Replacement:** Grant application cycle ends 2025, with potential funding leading to full bridge replacement by 2027, requiring 6-9 month closure similar to Eldridge project. **Little Squalicum Stormwater Project:** Construction expected to begin Q1 2025, with 3-4 weeks of construction work. Fabrication of treatment vaults may take 2-3 months before on-site work begins. **WSDOT Noise Vari…

About 49% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
Members only Sign up free →
# An Afternoon of Infrastructure Decisions: Bellingham's Public Works Committee Tackles Everything from Highway Noise to Water Quality On a late October afternoon in 2024, the Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee convened with a packed agenda that would see them navigate everything from interstate highway maintenance to cutting-edge stormwater treatment. Committee Chair Hannah Stone, along with Council Members Lisa Anderson and Michael Lilliquist, settled in for what would become a methodical review of five significant infrastructure matters affecting the city. The meeting, held in council chambers after what Stone apologized for as a brief delay, exemplified the nuts-and-bolts governance that keeps a city running. While the items may have seemed routine on paper, each carried implications for how Bellingham manages its growth, protects its environment, and maintains the systems its residents depend on daily. ## Highway Work Under the Cover of Darkness The committee's first order of business involved a request from the Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) for permission to break the city's nighttime noise ordinance. The state needed to perform roadway preservation work on Interstate 5 and State Route 542, but the only safe and practical way to do it was at night, when traffic volumes were low enough to allow lane closures without causing massive backups. Interim Public Works Director Joel Pfundt explained that the work would target specific trouble spots: the I-5 northbound ramp to King Street, the Ohio Street ramp to I-5 southbound, and a stretch of SR 542 from McLeod Road to Britton Road. "This work is part of a larger set of maintenance preservation projects being performed by WSDOT," Pfundt told the committee. "That's why you'll see that large window of when they're going to be performing the work." The timeline was generous—seven non-consecutive work nights spread across 14 months, from July 2025 to September 2026. Staff estimated it would take about one night each to handle the ramps, and perhaps four nights for the Mount Baker Highway work. Council Member Lilliquist, noting the minimal impact for important work, quickly moved for approval. But Council Member Anderson …
About 14% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
### Meeting Overview The City of Bellingham Public Works and Natural Resources Committee met on October 21, 2024, chaired by Council Member Hannah Stone with members Anderson and Lilliquist. The committee reviewed five agenda items including a state noise variance, multiple construction contracts, a stormwater treatment project, and received an update on Electric Avenue Bridge emergency repairs. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Noise Variance:** Official permission from the city to work outside normal hours in residential areas, typically granted when public safety or traffic concerns make nighttime construction preferable to daytime work. **Job Order Contracting (JOC):** A streamlined construction method where the city pre-qualifies contractors with fixed pricing for small to medium-sized projects, avoiding lengthy bid processes for each individual job. **Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ):** An on-call contract model where the city agrees to specific pricing but doesn't guarantee specific work amounts, allowing efficient procurement as needs arise. **Enhanced Stormwater Treatment:** Higher-level water quality improvement systems that remove pollutants including nutrients, settled solids, petroleum products, and trash from runoff before it enters waterways. **Apprenticeship Requirements:** State-mandated workforce development rules requiring a percentage of work hours on large projects be performed by workers in formal training programs. **Load Restricted Bridge:** A bridge with weight limits that prevent certain heavy vehicles (like fire ladder trucks) from crossing while allowing most normal traffic. **Emergency Declaration:** A formal resolution allowing the city to bypass normal competitive bidding requirements to address urgent public safety issues. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Hannah Stone | Committee Chair, City Council Member | | Lisa Anderson | Committee Member, City Council Member | | Michael Lilliquist | Committee Member, City Council Member | | Joel Pfundt | Interim Public Works Co-Director | | Mike Olinger | Interim Public Works Co-Director | | Mike Wil…
About 50% shown — premium members only Upgrade to premium →

Share This Briefing

Tags & Connections