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WHA-PLN-2026-01-22 January 22, 2026 Planning Commission Meeting Whatcom County
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The January 22, 2026 Whatcom County Planning Commission meeting marked the culmination of nearly two years of intensive planning work — the final public hearing on the county's comprehensive plan update, a massive undertaking required by state law every eight years. What unfolded was a three-and-a-half-hour marathon session that revealed deep tensions between economic development, environmental protection, and housing affordability that will shape the county's future through 2045.

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The County Council will review the Planning Commission's recommendations starting January 27, 2026, with Committee of the Whole examining Chapter 4 (Capital Facilities) and Chapter 5 (Utilities). Non-municipal UGAs including Cherry Point, Birch Bay, and Columbia Valley will also be discussed. Staff will package the recommendations with findings and submit to Commerce at le…

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# Final Comprehensive Plan Hearing: A Watershed Moment for Whatcom County Planning The January 22, 2026 Whatcom County Planning Commission meeting marked the culmination of nearly two years of intensive planning work — the final public hearing on the county's comprehensive plan update, a massive undertaking required by state law every eight years. What unfolded was a three-and-a-half-hour marathon session that revealed deep tensions between economic development, environmental protection, and housing affordability that will shape the county's future through 2045. ## Setting the Stage Chair Kelvin Barton, in his final meeting after 10 years of service, called the session to order at 6:00 PM in the packed council chambers at 5280 Northwest Drive. The gravity of the moment was unmistakable — this was the planning commission's last chance to shape a document that would govern land use decisions for the next two decades across Whatcom County's 2,100 square miles. Director Mark Personius set the tone early, noting this was "our final scheduled public hearing on the comp plan update" before passing recommendations to the county council. The plan, he explained, had been under review chapter by chapter throughout 2025, with the commission holding dozens of meetings to digest everything from housing policies to climate change provisions. Two new council members sat in the audience, underscoring the political significance of the decisions ahead. The evening's agenda included some last-minute technical items: reconciling inconsistent definitions of "urban and community forests" between different chapters, and adding language about emergency shelter capacity that had just been completed that afternoon. But these administrative details would prove minor compared to the industrial policy battle that dominated the night. ## The Industrial Lands Showdown The most contentious issue centered on Policy 2U-9, a seemingly modest provision stating that Whatcom County would "coordinate with the city of Bellingham in evaluating benefits and costs of existing or proposed industrial zoning in the Bellingham UGA, considering light impact zoning where appropriate to limit impacts on adjacent urban residential areas." To the dozen industry representatives who testified, these 23 words represented nothing less than an existential threat to Whatcom County's manufacturing base. To neighborhood advocates, they offered hope for reconciling heavy industry with residential areas. The c…
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### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Planning Commission held their final public hearing on the comprehensive plan update on January 22, 2026. This was the culminating meeting of a year-long process to review and revise the county's 20-year growth plan as required by the Growth Management Act, with commissioners making final recommendations to the County Council. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Comprehensive Plan:** A county's 20-year blueprint for growth that must be updated every 8-10 years under state law, covering housing, land use, transportation, and other elements. **Urban Growth Area (UGA):** Designated areas where urban-density development is encouraged and where cities can eventually expand through annexation. **UGA Reserve:** Land adjacent to UGAs that may be suitable for future inclusion but requires additional planning before development. **Growth Management Act (GMA):** Washington state law requiring counties and cities to plan for growth while protecting rural lands and the environment. **Policy 2U-9:** A controversial provision in the draft plan calling for coordination between Bellingham and the county to evaluate changing heavy industrial zoning to light industrial in the Bellingham UGA. **Heavy Industrial vs. Light Industrial:** Heavy industrial allows for manufacturing like cement plants; light industrial typically involves warehousing, assembly, and less intensive operations. **Land Capacity Analysis:** Technical study determining how much housing and employment growth an area can accommodate given infrastructure, environmental constraints, and zoning. **Reasonable Measures:** A specific Growth Management Act term requiring jurisdictions to modify their regulations if they cannot meet housing obligations through normal processes. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Rud Brown | Planning Commission Chair | | Matt Aamot | Senior Planner, Whatcom County | | Mark Personius | Planning & Development Director | | Coleman Hoy | Heidelberg Materials sustainability manager | | Matt Lloyd | Bell Lumber and Pole operations manager | | David Parsons | Heidelberg Cement Plant local manager | | Dan Tucker | Whatcom Working Waterfront Coalition | | Chris Behe | City of Bellingham long-range planning manager | | Peter Frasier | Housing advocate speaking on South Hill …
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