Hearing Examiner
The City of Bellingham Hearing Examiner conducted a vehicle impound appeal hearing for file HE25VI-032, challenging the towing and storage fees for a vehicle impounded during the Bellingham Bay Marathon on September 21, 2025. Casey Gish, husband of vehicle owner Brooke Usrey, appealed the $710.14 impound fees after his car was towed from the 1200 block of Railroad Avenue while he was participating in the marathon. The case presented unusual circumstances involving a severe weather event that damaged temporary no-parking signage posted by race organizers, resulting in 32 vehicles being towed from the race route. City staff testified that while 28 temporary signs were originally posted, only 5-6 remained standing at the time of enforcement due to overnight winds up to 30 mph and heavy rain. The appellant argued inadequate signage was visible when he parked at 5:15-5:30 AM, and that race website information contradicted parking restrictions. Hearing Examiner Sharon Rice held the record open due to technical difficulties that caused the appellant to disconnect multiple times during testimony, allowing him until October 3 to submit additional evidence including email correspondence with race organizers and website screenshots. The city will respond by October 6, with a final appellant reply due October 7. The decision is due by October 21, 2025.
No formal votes were taken as this was an administrative hearing. The Hearing Examiner will issue a written decision within 10 business days of the record closing (by October 21, 2025) determining whether to uphold or overturn the vehicle impound and associated fees…
The record remains open until October 7, 2025, with a structured timeline for additional submissions: - October 3: Casey Gish must submit response to missed testimony plus email from race organizers and race website screenshots - October 6: City response to Gish's submissions - October…


