Planning Commission
The Bellingham Planning Commission held its regular meeting on June 26, 2025, addressing two major agenda items: proposed updates to the city's temporary shelter code and the final chapter of the comprehensive plan update focusing on community wellbeing and civic practices. The meeting marked the conclusion of a years-long comprehensive plan review process that began in 2023. During public comment, Brian Gass criticized the city's messaging around middle housing, arguing that planners were being deceptive by not calling it "multifamily rentals." The Commission unanimously approved temporary shelter code amendments that remove citywide caps on shelter guests, extend permit durations from 90 days to two years, and allow indefinite renewals for compliant operators. These changes respond to state law requirements under House Bill 1220 and lessons learned from seven years of operating temporary shelters. Mayor Lund personally attended to introduce the community wellbeing chapter, emphasizing the city's commitment to fostering conditions for all residents to thrive through inclusive governance, arts and culture, and partnerships supporting behavioral health and food systems.
**Temporary Shelter Code Updates (BMC 20.15) - APPROVED 6-0** - **Staff Recommendation:** Approve amendments - **Action Taken:** Commission adopted findings and forwarded approval recommendation to City Council - **Key Changes:** Removes citywide cap of 300 people in temporary shelters, extends permit duration to 2 years with one-year renewals,…
**Immediate Actions:** - July 10, 2025: Planning Commission will review draft Environmental Impact Statement overview for comprehensive plan - Temporary shelter code amendments move to City Council for final adoption hearing **Upcoming Deadlines:** - End of August 2025: Target for comprehensive plan public hearing (dependent on final EIS r…


