Planning Committee
Meeting Summary
The Planning Committee continued discussions on two major planning initiatives that will fundamentally reshape how Bellingham approaches land use regulation. The session focused on transitioning away from the current system of 25 neighborhood plans with over 400 sub-areas toward unified, citywide planning processes, and implementing new residential zoning frameworks required by state housing legislation. Staff presented compelling arguments for consolidating neighborhood plans into citywide approaches, emphasizing equity, efficiency, and administrative practicality. The Growth Management Act's demanding 10-year update cycles, combined with required buildable lands analysis every five years, make maintaining 25 separate plans increasingly impractical. Chris Behee noted that the city now processes thousands of permits annually compared to hundreds in the 1980s when neighborhood plans were created. The residential zoning discussion centered on implementing House Bill 1110's middle housing requirements through a simplified three-tier system: low, medium, and high residential densities. A critical development emerged when Blake Lyon announced that Senate Bill 5558 has accelerated implementation timelines, requiring adoption by December 31, 2025, rather than the previously expected mid-2026 deadline. Committee members expressed general support for the direction while raising important concerns about preserving neighborhood character and ensuring context-sensitive development. Lisa Anderson highlighted specific examples where neighborhood plans address unique site conditions, such as the York Neighborhood's live-work units along Alice Street. The discussion revealed tension between achieving citywide consistency and accommodating local variations. #
