City Council Planning Committee
The Bellingham City Council Planning Committee held a significant work session addressing fundamental changes to how the city approaches land use planning. The meeting focused on two major interconnected initiatives: retiring the current system of 25 individual neighborhood plans in favor of a unified citywide approach, and restructuring residential zoning to accommodate state-mandated middle housing requirements under House Bill 1110. Long Range Division Manager Chris Behe presented both items, emphasizing that these changes represent the most significant reorganization of Bellingham's planning framework since the 1980s. The shift from neighborhood-based to citywide planning aims to create more equitable, transparent, and administratively efficient land use policies. The current system, with 430 unique land use subareas across 25 neighborhood plans, has created complexity that requires expert-level knowledge to navigate and has resulted in systemic inequities between neighborhoods. The committee engaged in detailed discussions about preserving local knowledge and ensuring no valuable planning insights are lost in the transition. Council members expressed particular concern about maintaining the specialized zoning conditions and prerequisite regulations that address unique local circumstances, such as transition zones between different land uses. The conversation revealed tension between the need for simplification and the desire to preserve neighborhood-specific protections developed through decades of community input. The residential zoning discussion focused on implementing House Bill 1110's requirements for up to four housing units per residential lot, with potential for six units if affordable housing is provided. Staff proposed consolidating existing residential zones into three or four categories and establishing minimum density requirements to ensure efficient land use. Committee members explored the implications for lot sizes, ownership opportunities thr
No formal votes were taken during this work session. Both agenda items were informational presentations designed to gather feedback on proposed policy directions. **AB 24530 - Neighborhood Plans to Citywide Planning:** Staff recommended retiring all 25 neighborhood plans as part of the 2025 Bellingham Plan update due to state law conflicts and systemic inequities. The committee requested a follow-up session with more detailed implementation timelines and visual diagrams showing how exist…
**Immediate Timeline:** - End of 2025: Bellingham Plan adoption (retiring neighborhood plans) - June 30, 2026: Final middle housing code implementation deadline - Follow-up Planning Committee session to be scheduled with detailed implementation diagrams **Key Follow-up Items:** - Staff will prepare visual timeline and diagrams showing how neighborhood plan protections will be preserved - Analysis of setback requirements and building envelopes f…


