📋 Committee Meeting
Whatcom County Council
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Meeting Summary
The February 24, 2026 Whatcom County Council meeting was dominated by urgent calls for flood action from Sumas residents and broader discussions about public safety infrastructure. Council processed routine business including budget amendments and advisory committee appointments, but the evening's most significant moments came during the 56-minute public comment period where flood victims, business owners, and residents demanded immediate flood mitigation efforts.
The meeting's formal business included passing a $319,393 budget amendment (reduced from the original $1.8 million due to new charter requirements), postponing three additional budget items pending quarterly financial reports, and approving various interlocal agreements. Council also appointed members to multiple advisory committees and confirmed executive appointments.
However, the emotional weight of the evening centered on repeated testimony from Sumas flood survivors describing their community's devastation. Jessica Kohler corrected the record on displacement numbers, noting that Public Works had understated the scale—20 people are currently in hotels, but the actual displacement count is much higher. Nicole Sandoval, a small business owner, painted a picture of economic collapse: "Without immediate and intentional interventions, our historic town risks becoming a literal ghost town."
Council members appeared moved by the testimony, with several speakers thanking them for their strong pushback during earlier flood presentations demanding more immediate action. Stacey Daly noted that 56 days had passed since Council approved $750,000 from the Healthy Children's Fund for flood victims with children, yet none of that money had reached families despite Whatcom Long-Term Recovery being ready to distribute it.
The meeting also featured debate over infrastructure priorities, jail capacity issues, and concerns about planning department corruption. Multiple speakers linked inadequate jail capacity to constitutional violations, while others questioned why tax revenues have doubled but basic infrastructure continues to deteriorate.
