Bellingham City Council
The Bellingham City Council advanced a comprehensive housing reform agenda at its November 17, 2025 meeting, passing five major ordinances and resolutions designed to increase housing production and reduce regulatory barriers. The four-hour meeting focused heavily on state-mandated changes to development codes, with Council taking action on middle housing extensions, co-living regulations, design review reforms, and two utility easement relinquishments. The most significant action was the passage of an amended interim middle housing ordinance (AB 24753) that extends current regulations by six months while expanding density allowances from four to six units per lot within a half-mile of major transit routes. Council Member Jace Cotton successfully amended the distance requirement from quarter-mile to half-mile walking distance, significantly expanding the geographic area where higher density is automatically permitted without affordability requirements. Council also approved a co-living ordinance (AB 24733) that eliminates the decades-old "family definition" restricting unrelated individuals in households and creates a new regulatory framework for large-scale co-living developments of 24+ sleeping units. An amendment by Cotton removed parking requirements from this ordinance, maintaining consistency with the city's interim parking reform. The design review ordinance (AB 24742) establishes objective standards to replace subjective design guidelines, streamlining the permitting process in compliance with recent state legislation. All three major housing ordinances must be implemented by the end of 2025 to maintain local regulatory authority. Two routine utility easement relinquishments passed without controversy, both supporting private property development while retaining necessary utility access. The meeting demonstrated Council's unified commitment to housing production, with all major items passing 7-0 except the co-living parking amendment which passed 5-2.
**Utility Easement Relinquishments (AB 24731, AB 24732)** - Both passed 7-0 - Relinquished partial utility easement at 925 10th Street (vacated Douglas Street) while retaining 10 feet of right-of-way for development - Relinquished water main easement at 404 Baker Street, surplus to city needs since 1931 - Both facilitate private property development while preserving necessary utility access **Middle Housing Extension & Amendment (AB 24753)** - Passed 7-0 as amended - Extended interim middle housing ordinance by six months to December 2026 - Amended density allowance from quarter-mile to half-mile of major transit routes for automatic six-unit development - Maintains four-unit base density with sixth units requiring affordability outside transit zones - Staff recommendation aligned with Council action…
**Immediate Implementation Deadlines:** - All interim ordinances must be fully implemented by December 31, 2025 to maintain local regulatory authority - Third and final readings scheduled for December 8 and December 15, 2025 - Staff will prepare clean ordinances incorporating approved amendments **Six-Month Work Program:** - Middle housing permanent code development coordinated with comprehensive plan adoption and zoning overhaul - Integration of ADU regulations with middle housing and co-living frameworks - Permanent parking code development to replace interim measures - Design review permanent standa…


