Bellingham Planning Commission
The Bellingham Planning Commission held a comprehensive work session reviewing draft Transportation and Parks & Recreation chapters for The Bellingham Plan comprehensive plan update. Staff presented major policy directions emphasizing safety, climate resilience, and equitable access while preparing for a formal public hearing this summer. The Transportation chapter represents a significant shift toward prioritizing safety through a "Vision Zero" approach, strengthening collaboration with Whatcom Transportation Authority (WTA), and implementing comprehensive transportation demand management. Dylan Casper from Public Works detailed five reorganized goals, down from six in 2016, with transit collaboration now elevated to its own dedicated goal reflecting community priorities. The Parks & Recreation chapter introduced a new two-pronged approach separating policy goals from implementation details. Peter Gill explained how the Parks Recreation and Open Space (PROS) plan will now live separately from comprehensive plan policies, allowing for more targeted updates and better integration with other city departments. Public input has heavily emphasized transit frequency and coverage, pedestrian and bicycle safety, and park accessibility. Notable concerns include parking minimum reductions, trail surface materials, and the need for expanded aquatics facilities. Staff reported receiving extensive feedback through multiple engagement channels, with safety emerging as the top concern for transportation users. The work sessions revealed ongoing tensions between development pressure and infrastructure capacity, particularly around transportation impact fees, multimodal connectivity, and maintaining service levels during growth. Both chapters now emphasize regional coordination and climate resilience as core organizing principles.
This was a work session with no formal votes taken. The Planning Commission provided input on draft policies that will return for formal action in August. Key discussion topics included: **Transportation Chapter Review:** Staff presented five reorganized goals emphasizing safety, transit collaboration, mode shift, connectivity, and equity. The Transportation Commission has already provided extensive input, resulting in transit being elevated to its own goal. No formal action required at this stage. …
**June 26, 2025:** Community Well-Being chapter presentation to Planning Commission, completing the comprehensive plan chapter review process. **August 2025:** Transportation chapter technical aspects including 20-year project list will return to Planning Commission. **August 2025:** Formal public hearing on Transportation and Parks & Recreation chapte…


