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Public Health, Safety, Justice and Equity Committee

BEL-PHJ-2026-02-23 February 23, 2026 Public Health & Safety Committee City of Bellingham
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The Public Health, Safety, Justice and Equity Committee received a comprehensive update on the Whatcom County Justice and Behavioral Care Center project, revealing significant financial challenges that threaten the scope and timeline of the voter-approved jail replacement. Deputy County Executive Kayla Shot Breler presented four budget scenarios ranging from $170 million to over $250 million, far exceeding the original $155 million estimate, due to construction cost escalation and stagnant sales tax revenue. The committee also approved continued funding for the Whatcom County Racial Equity Commission and passed a resolution reaffirming the city's commitment to immigrant and civil rights in response to federal immigration enforcement actions. The jail project discussion dominated the meeting, with officials struggling to balance competing priorities: eliminating booking restrictions, providing adequate behavioral health services, maintaining community-based programs, and managing costs within financial constraints. The county has reached consensus on building a separate behavioral care center on Division Street rather than integrating services within the jail facility. However, the fundamental question of jail capacity - ranging from 480 to 600 beds according to sheriff preferences - remains unresolved as officials seek to avoid both the risks of underbuilding and the financial impossibility of their original vision.

**Whatcom County Racial Equity Commission Funding Agreement:** Committee approved 3-0 to continue the interlocal agreement providing $100,000 in city funding for 2026. This maintains the city's commitment while the county reduced its contribution to $50,000, creating an imbalance that concerns some members about long-term sustainability. **Resolution on Immigrant Rights:** Committee approved 3-0 a resolution reaffirming the city's commitment to constitutional rights including due process and freedom from warrantless searches, …

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The jail planning discussion revealed fundamental tensions between vision and financial reality. The project began with a $155 million budget but now faces costs potentially exceeding $250 million due to construction inflation and revenue shortfalls. Sales tax receipts fell 9% below 2023 projections, and growth rates dropped from an expected 4% to 1.5%, dramatically reducing available funding. Four scenarios were presented: Scenario 1 at $170 million would create what officials called a "monument to the past" - a basic detention facility without adequate programming or flexibility. Scenario 2 at $200 million incorporates minimal operational improvements. Scenario 3, preferred by committee members, includes significant behavioral health programming and housing flexibility but costs substantially …
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**Deputy County Executive Kayla Shot Breler** emphasized the time-sensitive nature of decisions, with a county executive deadline of end-of-April for scope and budget direction. She stressed the need for consensus among multiple stakeholders including all city councils, county council, sheriff's office, and various advisory boards. **Mayor Kim Lund** acknowledged that Scenarios 3 and 4 represent the community's original vision but current financial constraints make them unattainable. She emphasized the importance of designing for operational efficiency to reduce long-term costs and building with future expansion capability. **Council Member Dan Hamill** expressed strong concern a…
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**Kayla Shot Breler, on financial constraints:** "Construction costs have risen steeply since 2023. We have also seen sales tax revenue stagnated. Our initial projections for how we would fund this project were based on 4% sales tax escalation, which I believe was an average of the previous 10 years. But sales tax receipts in 2025 were down 9% from 2023 projections." **Council Member Dan Hamill, on voter expectations:** "We started at 155 and our lowest scenario that you presented here was 170…
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**April 2026:** County executive deadline for final decisions on jail project scope and budget. Multiple advisory boards will continue discussions leading up to this deadline. **March 19, 2026:** Second community engagement workshop scheduled in Lynden for public input on jail project scenarios. **Summer 2026:** Target start date for architectural design phase of jail project, contingent on scope and budget decis…

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The jail project discussion marked a significant shift from expansion of vision to reduction of scope. Officials acknowledged that original voter expectations cannot be fully met within financial constraints, requiring painful choices between competing priorities. The 480-bed capacity emerged as a compromise position, with acknowledgment that it may not eliminate booking restrictions as originally promised. The behavioral care center model was finalized as a separate facility on Division Street rather than integrated jail services, representing a major change from initi…
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# Whatcom County Justice Center: The $200 Million Question ## Meeting Overview The Public Health, Safety, Justice and Equity Committee gathered on the afternoon of February 23, 2026, facing one of the most consequential decisions in Whatcom County's recent history. Committee Chair Dan Hammill was joined by council members Lisa Huffman and Hollis Williams for a meeting that would wrestle with fundamental questions about justice, public safety, and fiscal responsibility. The agenda carried three items, but it was the first—an update on planning for the Whatcom County Justice and Behavioral Care Center—that dominated the discussion and revealed the stark financial realities confronting a project that began with high ideals but now faces hard choices. What started as a $155 million vision for a transformative justice facility has become a negotiation over what the community can afford and what it's willing to sacrifice. The other items—continuing funding for the Whatcom Racial Equity Commission and a resolution on immigrant rights—proceeded with less controversy but reflected the committee's broader commitment to equity and civil rights. The meeting captured a moment when abstract policy discussions meet concrete budget constraints, and when elected officials must choose between competing visions of public good. ## The Jail That Became Too Expensive: Four Scenarios, Hard Choices Deputy County Executive Kayla Shaughnessy-Brehler arrived with charts, numbers, and what she called "uncomfortable" realities. The project that voters approved has run headlong into construction cost inflation, stagnant sales tax revenue, and the harsh mathematics of municipal finance. "Construction costs have risen steeply since 2023. We have also seen sales tax revenue stagnated," Shaughnessy-Brehler explained, setting the stage for what would become a detailed examination of how dreams meet budgets. "Our initial projections for how we would fund this project were based on 4% sales tax escalation, which I believe was an average of the previous 10 years. But sales tax receipts in 2025 were down 9% from 2023 projections, and instead of a 4% sales tax growth rate, we're seeing about 1.5%." The numbers told a sobering story. The project had grown from $155 million to scenarios ranging from $170 million to over $250 million, each representing different levels of ambition and compromise. **Scenario One: The "Scagit Model" - $170 Million** This budget-driven approach would build wh…
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### Meeting Overview The Public Health, Safety, Justice, and Equity Committee met on February 23, 2026, chaired by Council Member Hamill with members Huffman and Williams. The primary focus was a critical update on the Whatcom County Justice and Behavioral Care Center planning, presenting four budget scenarios ranging from $170-220 million as officials face significant cost increases and funding shortfalls that threaten the project's original vision. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Progressive Design Build:** A construction approach where designers and general contractors work together as a unified team throughout validation and design phases, allowing for iterative decision-making before reaching a guaranteed maximum price. **Validation Phase:** The pre-design stage where critical decisions about facility size, scope, location, budget, and programming are made before moving into formal architectural design. **Booking Restrictions:** Limitations on jail admissions due to capacity constraints, meaning law enforcement cannot book certain arrestees, potentially compromising public safety. **Housing Configuration:** The layout and classification system for jail beds that affects operational flexibility, including ability to separate inmates by gender, charge severity, and safety considerations. **Interlocal Agreement:** A formal contract between multiple government jurisdictions (all Whatcom County cities) that establishes shared financial responsibilities and decision-making authority for the jail project. **Whatcom Racial Equity Commission (WREC):** A county advisory group established to address racial equity issues and assist local governments in creating welcoming, inclusive, and safe communities. **Diversion Triage:** Assessment processes at booking designed to identify individuals who could be redirected away from incarceration to appropriate community-based services or treatment. **Average Length of Stay:** The typical duration inmates remain in jail, a significant factor in determining overall bed capacity needs and facility design requirements. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Dan Hamill | Committee Chair, Council Member | | Council Member Huffman | Committee Member | | Council Member Williams | Committee Member | | Hannah Stone | Council President (observing) | | Lisa Anderson | Council Member (observing) | | Jace Cotton | Council Member (observing) | | Kim Lund | Mayor of Bellingham | | Kayla Shotbrenner | Whatcom County Deputy Executive | | Janice Keller | Deputy Administrator, Mayor's Office | ### Background Context The Whatcom County Justice and Behavioral Care Center represents a voter-appro…
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