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BEL-CON-2026-06-15 June 15, 2026 City Council Regular Meeting City of Bellingham 21 min
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The Bellingham City Council convened for its regular evening meeting on Monday, June 15, 2026, at 7 p.m. in Council Chambers on the second floor of City Hall at 210 Lottie Street. Council President Hannah Stone presided over a full chamber — all seven members were present: Hollie Huthman (Second Ward), Daniel Hammill (Third Ward), Edwin "Skip" Williams (Fourth Ward), Lisa Anderson (Fifth Ward), Michael Lilliquist (Sixth Ward), Jace Cotton (At-Large), and Stone herself (First Ward).

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| Deadline / Date | Item | |---|---| | **July 1, 2026** | City required to submit 2027–2032 TIP to the state (adoption completed June 15) | | **June 17, 2026 (Wednesday)** | Mayor Lund to present economic opportunity executive order at Whatcom County Business and Commerce Committee | | **June 16, 2026 (Tuesday, 9 a.m., Zoom)** | Behavioral Health Committee, Incarceration Prevention and Reduction Task Force (public meeting) | | **June 16, 2026 (Tuesday, 3:30 p.m.)** | Bellingham Public Library Board of Trustees (public meeting) | | **June 18, 2026 (Thursday, 2 p.m.)** | Justice Project Oversight and Planning Committee (public meeting) | | **June 23, 2026** | Whatcom County Council vote on proposed ordinance imposing interim moratorium on civil detention facility applications | | **Late summer or early fall 2026** | Staff anticipates completing permanent parking code amendments and adoption | | **July 13, 2026** | Next regular City Council meeting — TWO public hearings scheduled: (1) Landmark Tree Preservation Ordinance; (2) Permanent Parking Reform Ordinance (eliminate auto minimums, establish bike parking standards) | | **July 13, 2026** | Council lobbying…

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--- # Bellingham City Council Regular Meeting ## June 15, 2026 — Full Meeting Narrative --- ## Meeting Overview The Bellingham City Council convened for its regular evening meeting on Monday, June 15, 2026, at 7 p.m. in Council Chambers on the second floor of City Hall at 210 Lottie Street. Council President Hannah Stone presided over a full chamber — all seven members were present: Hollie Huthman (Second Ward), Daniel Hammill (Third Ward), Edwin "Skip" Williams (Fourth Ward), Lisa Anderson (Fifth Ward), Michael Lilliquist (Sixth Ward), Jace Cotton (At-Large), and Stone herself (First Ward). On the surface, the agenda was modest: a public hearing on a procedural extension of an interim parking ordinance, a couple of informational appointments, a transportation improvement program, committee reports, and a handful of executive session items requiring action. By the clock, the meeting adjourned at 8:21 p.m. — a brisk evening by municipal standards. But the meeting carried an undercurrent of larger urgency. Speakers at the public hearing arrived not merely to comment on a technical regulatory extension, but to deliver an emotional reckoning about housing, poverty, and whether the city was willing to act with intention when opportunity presented itself. One speaker had come straight from spreading the ashes of a friend she had originally begun advocating for because he could not afford to stay in his hometown. That grief, still raw, settled over the chamber and didn't entirely lift. The council also took action — unanimously, on every item — authorizing the mayor to pursue litigation against federal agencies over grant conditions, to enter an indemnification agreement involving a landfill site adjacent to a major affordable housing development, and to retain outside counsel for antitrust litigation against certain fire truck manufacturers. These votes, emerging from closed executive session, offered only glimpses of larger legal battles being waged on the city's behalf. Taken together, June 15 was a meeting that looked routine on paper and felt, in the room, like something more consequential. --- ## The Parking Reform Extension: A Technical Vote, An Emotional Night The evening's only public hearing centered on Agenda Bill 24968 — a proposed ordinance extending interim zoning regulations that eliminate minimum automobile parking requirements and establish consistent bicycle parking standards citywide. The extension itself was, as Council Member Cotton …
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