# When Technical Issues Meet Policy Priorities: A Morning at Whatcom County Council
## Meeting Overview
On a crisp Tuesday morning, March 31st, 2026, the seven-member Whatcom County Council convened for a special meeting designed to be brief but consequential. Meeting in hybrid format at 9:32 AM in the County Courthouse chambers, all council members were present: Elizabeth Boyle, Barry Buchanan, Ben Elenbaas, Kaylee Galloway, Jessica Rienstra, John Scanlon, and Mark Stremler. The agenda was lean—just two items for discussion and action—but the meeting would reveal both the mundane mechanics of local government and the complex dynamics surrounding a significant new tax proposal.
The session was scheduled to adjourn by 9:55 AM to allow for a 10 AM health board meeting, creating an atmosphere of efficiency tinged with urgency. What unfolded was a study in contrasts: the first item moved with remarkable speed and consensus, while the second became entangled in procedural questions and strategic positioning around a multimillion-dollar criminal justice tax that has captured the council's attention for weeks.
As Council Member Ben Elenbaas would find himself participating from his car, stuck in Ferndale traffic with spotty cell service, the meeting became an inadvertent demonstration of the challenges facing modern governance in an increasingly connected but sometimes unreliable digital world.
## The Defense and Indemnification Amendment
The meeting's first substantive business was AB 2026-233, an ordinance amending Whatcom County Code Chapter 2.56 regarding defense and indemnification of employees. Council Member John Scanlon quickly moved to approve, with Elizabeth Boyle providing the second, setting the stage for what appeared to be routine business.
But Elizabeth Boyle paused the proceedings, acknowledging she needed "to make sure I'm caught up on it" before voting. "I apologize," sh…