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

Whatcom County Communications (WatCom) and Prospect Administrative Board

BEL-WCP-2025-09-25 September 25, 2025 City Council Regular Meeting City of Bellingham
← Back to All Briefings
Sep
Month
25
Day
Minutes
Published
Status

Executive Summary

The WatCom and Prospect Administrative Board approved the 2026 budget, which reflects a significant cost escalation trend that has doubled expenses for most agencies since 2020. The budget focuses on staff wage increases already bargained through collective bargaining agreements and rising benefit costs, while limiting other expenditures. A major facility construction project is moving forward with bidding anticipated in mid-October, featuring a new $12 million dispatch center with 16 stations (double current capacity) and modern amenities designed to improve employee retention. The board also agreed to discuss potential changes to board membership composition in January 2026, following recommendations in a recently released EMS fire services report that suggested co-locating Prospect with WatCom. The meeting highlighted ongoing financial sustainability concerns, with Sheriff Tanksley noting the unsustainable 100% cost increase over five years and questioning when the trend would plateau. Officials acknowledged the cost escalation was primarily driven by necessary staffing increases to reach adequate service levels, major infrastructure investments completed over the past decade, and post-COVID wage pressures. #

Key Decisions & Actions

& Actions **Budget Approval for 2026:** Passed unanimously. The budget represents a "status quo" approach with increases limited to already-bargained wage increases and benefit cost escalations. For Prospect, a $175,000 annual loan payment that was scheduled to continue for infrastructure replacement will instead be used to offset wage and benefit increases. **Facility Construction Timeline:** The board received an update on the new $12 million WatCom facility, with bidding scheduled for mid-October and construction beginning after council approval expected by year-end 2025. The 420-day construction schedule includes complex phasing to maintain continuous service. **January Board Discussion:** Approved a motion to discuss board membership composition changes in January 2026, following recommendations in a consultant report about potentially co-locating dispatch services. #

Sign up free to read the full briefing

Unlock Full Access — It’s Free

Notable Quotes

**Sheriff Tanksley, on cost sustainability:** "At some point, we're gonna price ourselves out of dispatching services." **Mayor Kim Lund, on cost drivers:** "I'm intuiting it might have to do with FTEs as we've been hiring to dig ourselves out of that hole." **Justin, on future planning:** "I'm excited to bring to this board in January a full kind of presentation based on where I'd like to see the organization go, something for the board to consider, especially regarding alternative funding sources." **Council Member Dan Hammill, on board authority:** "This board does vote on budgets that the elected officials have to go back and find money for, which I think is part of what drives that conversation." **Chief on infrastructure investment timing:** "We had, in that 10-year window, there was a lot of what I'll say were 30-year projects that were completed in that 10-year window." **Deputy Director on employee wellness:** "We want to create that happy and healthy environment for them

Sign up free to read the full briefing

Unlock Full Access — It’s Free

What's Next

**Mid-October 2025:** Facility construction bidding process begins **November 2025:** Construction bids due **December 2025:** City Council approval of construction contract expected **Early 2026:** Bond issuance for facility construction **January 2026:** Board meeting with long-term financial viability presentation and board composition discussion **2027:** Agencies will see "decent increase" in fees (approximately $850,000 annually) to cover debt service #

Sign up free to read the full briefing

Unlock Full Access — It’s Free

Share This Briefing