# State Mandates and Local Tensions: Planning Commission Grapples with New Housing Laws
The Whatcom County Planning Commission held its April 9, 2026 meeting in a hybrid format, with Chair Matt Barry presiding due to regular chair Dan Den's video connectivity issues. What began as a routine session reviewing housing code amendments quickly evolved into a complex debate over state mandates, local control, and the challenges of implementing new legislation while ongoing comprehensive plan updates were still in flux.
## Meeting Overview
The commission convened at 6:01 PM with seven members present (Barry, Brown, Den, Gray, Hansen, Noel, and Moseri) and one absent (Vendalan). Mark Personius, Planning Director, joined remotely due to family obligations, while Senior Planner Maddie Shott presented the evening's main agenda item: eight proposed code amendments required under the Washington State Growth Management Act.
The meeting highlighted the ongoing complexity of the county's comprehensive plan update process, which County Council was simultaneously reviewing in committee sessions. Council aimed to introduce the complete ordinance on May 26th with final adoption on June 9th, though this timeline remained fluid as policy changes continued to emerge.
## Last-Minute Legislative Changes Complicate Proposals
The evening's first major development came when Shott announced significant modifications to the original proposals due to House Bill 2269, passed by the 2026 legislature just days earlier. The bill clarified that middle housing types—duplexes, triplexes, fourplexes, up to sixplexes, cottage houses, and town houses—could be permitted in Limited Areas of More Intensive Rural Development (LAMIRDs), but only if connected to public sewer service.
"Public sewer service is not available in the Birch Bay Ferndale corner, Pole Road guide, or Custer lands," Shott explained, forcing staff to withdraw portions of their original proposal for reconsideration…