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Bellingham City Council

BEL-CON-2025-04-28 April 28, 2025 City Council Regular Meeting City of Bellingham 8 min
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The April 28th Bellingham City Council meeting was a business-focused session centered on infrastructure investments, grant acceptances, and budget reconciliation. With Mayor Kimberley Lund absent, Mayor Pro Tem Michael Lilliquist presided over the mayor's report. The meeting processed nine action items, all passing unanimously 7-0, demonstrating Council alignment on the evening's agenda. The most significant financial decision was the approval of a $3.7 million contract for the Sunset Pond Loop Trail Project, which will create critical trail connections linking three neighborhoods to regional trail systems and park destinations. This project, coming in under the engineer's estimate, represents a major investment in Bellingham's recreation infrastructure with completion expected by February 2027. Council also accepted nearly $2 million in grant funding across two major infrastructure projects: $970,000 from the Washington State Department of Commerce for the new WhatComm 911 Dispatch Center Building and $950,000 from the Washington State Transportation Improvement Board for James Street multimodal improvements. These grants demonstrate successful state partnerships to advance critical public safety and transportation infrastructure. Three budget ordinances passed, reconciling 2025 beginning reserve balances, reappropriating $104 million in unused budget authority from the previous biennium, and making technical corrections to the 2025 budget. These administrative actions ensure proper financial management and budget authority alignment. The meeting concluded with an extended public comment period featuring 51 speakers, indicating significant community engagement on issues not detailed in the available source documents.

**AB 24517: WhatComm 911 Dispatch Center Grant Acceptance** - **Action:** Approved 7-0 - **Amount:** $970,000 from Washington State Department of Commerce - **Project:** New 8,000 square foot dispatch center building (EF-183) - **Timeline:** Bid in fall 2025, completion December 2026 - **Total Project Cost:** $12 million (increased from original $8.5 million estimate) **AB 24518: James Street Multimodal Grant Acceptance** - **Action:** Approved 7-0 - **Amount:** $950,000 from Washington State Transportation Improvement Board - **Project:** James Street multimodal improvements segments 3 and 4 (ES565) - **Scope:** Multi-use path from Telegraph Road to King Avenue, bike lanes and sidewalks to Gooding Avenue **AB 24527: Federal Building Re-Roof Bid Rejection** - **Action:** Rejected all bids 7-0 - **Issue:** Lowest bid of $533,010 significantly exceeded engineer's estimate of $323,833 - **Next Steps:** Project will be rebid with adjusted scope and budget **AB 24529: Alley Grading…

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**Infrastructure Investment Strategy** The evening demonstrated the City's multi-faceted approach to infrastructure development, combining grant leverage, local funding, and strategic partnerships. The acceptance of nearly $2 million in state grants for the dispatch center and James Street projects reflects successful grant-writing and state relationship management. Council members expressed satisfaction with coming in under budget on the Sunset Pond Trail project while achieving significant trail connectivity improvements. **Public Safety Infrastructure** The WhatComm 911 Dispatch Center project represents a critical investment in regional emergency response capabilities. While the $970,000 grant provides substantial support, staff noted the total project cost has escalated from $8.5 million to $12 million, requiring future bond funding that will return to Council for consideration. This project exemplifies the challenges of major infrastructure projects where costs can significantly exceed initial estim…
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**Council Leadership** Mayor Pro Tem Michael Lilliquist delivered the mayor's report in Mayor Lund's absence, announcing appointments to the Sexual and Domestic Violence Commission and Community Development Advisory Board. He also recognized International Workers Memorial Day, reading a proclamation honoring workplace fatality victims and referencing Mother Jones' quote "mourn for the dead and fight for the living." **Staff Recommendations and Council Alignment** All staff recommendations received unanimous Council support, indicating strong staff-council alignment on the evening's business items. Staff demonstrated thorough project preparation, with detailed cost estimates and timeline projections for all infrastructure projects. **Engineering and Public Works Leadership** Joel Pfundt (Interim Public Wor…
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**Michael Lilliquist, on International Workers Memorial Day:** "Today is International Workers Memorial Day. And it's at that event, I read a proclamation, which mentioned the theme for Workers Memorial Day, which is mourn for the dead in Fight for the Living. Famous quote from Mother Jones." **Hannah Stone, on the dispatch center project cost increase:** "I know it included the grant proposal and project outlines which at that time I noted this this afternoon was $8.5 million, but my underst…
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**Construction Timelines:** - WhatComm 911 Dispatch Center: Bid in fall 2025, completion December 2026 - James Street Multimodal Improvements: Construction in 2026 - Sunset Pond Loop Trail: Begin June 2025, in-water work completed by September, final completion February 2027 - Federal Building Re-Roof: Project to be rebid with adjusted scope and budget **Future …

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**Infrastructure Funding Secured:** - $970,000 in new grant funding committed for dispatch center - $950,000 in new grant funding committed for James Street improvements - $3.7 million construction contract authorized for Sunset Pond Trail **Legal Framework Updated:** - Waterfront district interlocal agreement modified to enable skatepark development - Three budget ordinances updated financial authorities and reserve balances **Project Status Changes:** - Federal building re-roof moved from contract award to rebid status - S…
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## Meeting Overview The Bellingham City Council convened for its regular meeting on April 28, 2025, at 7:00 PM in the Council Chambers at City Hall. All seven council members were present, with Council President Hollie Huthman presiding and Council Member Lisa Anderson participating remotely. Mayor Kimberley Lund was absent, so Mayor Pro Tempore Michael Lilliquist delivered the mayor's report. The meeting was notably efficient, lasting just over 25 minutes for the regular business portion before transitioning to an extended public comment session that ran until 10:08 PM with 51 speakers. The regular agenda focused primarily on routine municipal business: accepting state grants for infrastructure projects, awarding construction contracts, and making annual budget adjustments. Despite the straightforward nature of most items, the evening represented the steady work of municipal governance — approving millions in spending, securing grant funding, and maintaining city operations. ## Grant Funding for Emergency Communications Center The council unanimously approved accepting a $970,000 grant from the Washington State Department of Commerce for the new WhatComm 911 Dispatch Center Building. Council Member Hannah Stone, chairing the Public Works and Natural Resources Committee, explained that this project "is currently in the construction documentation stage and will be ready for bid in the fall of th…
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A structured study guide helping readers understand the meeting's content and context. ### Meeting Overview The Bellingham City Council held its regular meeting on April 28, 2025, led by Council President Hollie Huthman with Mayor Pro Tem Michael Lilliquist filling in for Mayor Kimberley Lund. The council reviewed afternoon committee recommendations and approved multiple infrastructure projects, budget amendments, and grant acceptances totaling over $6 million in funding. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Agenda Bill:** A numbered legislative item that comes before the city council for consideration, formatted as bill number followed by year and sequence (e.g., 24517 for the 517th bill of 2024). **Grant Acceptance:** The formal process by which the city agrees to receive and use grant funding from state or federal agencies, which requires council approval and typically includes conditions for how the money must be spent. **Interlocal Agreement:** A legal contract between two or more government entities (like the city and port) that defines shared responsibilities, costs, and authority for joint projects or services. **Committee of the Whole:** A meeting format where all council members participate in discussion, typically used for items requiring full council input before formal action. **Consent Agenda:** A group of routine, non-controversial items that are approved together in a single vote to save meeting time, though any member can request separate consideration. **Executive Session:** A closed meeting portion where council discusses confidential matters like property acquisitions or legal issues, with no public attendance allowed. **Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) Contract:** A contracting method that allows the city to have services available on-call without rebidding each time, with predetermined rates but flexible quantities. **WhatComm 911:** The regional emergency dispatch center that serves multiple jurisdictions in Whatcom County, including Bellingham. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Hollie Huthman | Council President, Second Ward | | Michael Lilliquist | Mayor Pro Tem, Sixth Ward | | Hannah Stone | First Ward, Public Works Committee Chair | | Daniel Hammill | Third Ward | | Edwin "Skip" Williams | Fourth Ward, Parks & Recreation Committee Chair | | Lisa Anderson | Fifth Ward, Budget & Fi…
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