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Parks and Recreation Advisory Board

BEL-PRB-2025-10-08 October 08, 2025 Parks & Recreation Committee City of Bellingham 29 min
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The Parks and Recreation Advisory Board convened for their October meeting under unusual circumstances, with technology challenges affecting several participants throughout the session. The meeting began with Vice Chair Steve Walker presiding due to former Chair Brian's departure to the Netherlands, but connectivity issues forced an immediate transition. In a swift procedural move, the board elected Scott Pratschner as the new chair for the remainder of 2025, allowing him to lead his first meeting minutes after taking office. The session covered substantial ground on multiple fronts of Bellingham's parks system development. Peter Gill presented comprehensive updates on the Parks Recreation Open Space (PROS) Plan, including extensive community feedback from over 2,000 survey respondents and ongoing focus groups with specific communities including Latino, adaptive/inclusive, and Sikh Punjabi populations. Gina Austin provided a detailed update on the complex South State Street Manufactured Gas Plant cleanup project at Boulevard Park, a 20-year effort approaching final design phases. Paul Knippel secured board approval for three significant trail projects totaling millions in Greenways funding. Director Nicole Oliver delivered sobering budget realities, revealing the department's strategic response to a $10 million citywide general fund gap. The solution involved shifting additional positions and operating costs to the Greenways Fund while eliminating 5.3 full-time positions, including the entire park ambassador program set to sunset at year's end. Despite these cuts, Oliver emphasized that Bellingham's Greenways funding provides stability other cities lack during similar fiscal pressures.

The board unanimously elected Scott Pratschner as chair for the remainder of 2025, with Steve Walker continuing as vice chair. This fills the vacancy left by Brian's international relocation. The board unanimously approved three trail project designs totaling approximately $2-3 million in combined construction costs. The Bear Creek Open Space Trail will create 2,500 feet of surfaced trail with parking and boardwalks. The Middle Fork Spring Open Sp…

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The PROS plan update revealed significant community priorities emerging from extensive outreach. Over 2,000 survey respondents identified maintenance of existing parks and facilities as the highest budget priority. The community expressed strong demand for indoor programmable space, expanded aquatics access, and equal distribution of amenities across neighborhoods. Geographic analysis showed distinct neighborhood preferences: north side residents want local parks and forested areas, while Whatcom neighborhood prioritizes swimming beach access. Budget discussions exposed the department's strategic navigation of severe fiscal constraints. The $10 million general fund gap forced difficult choices, resolved primarily by expanding Greenways Fund usage rather than eliminating cor…
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Holly Miller raised concerns about beach access limitations from proposed tree plantings at Boulevard Park, questioning whether the clustering would restrict swimming entry points. She also highlighted ongoing water quality issues from storm water outfalls affecting recreational use of Bellingham Bay. Steve Walker advocated for physical trail maps, expressing frustration with the digital-only transition and requesting return to printed guides that were last updated in 2019. He also inquired about eagle nest interpretation opportunities and demolition material reuse programs. Jed Holm…
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**Nicole Oliver, on budget challenges:** "We are so lucky to have Greenways. I can't even tell you, whenever I go to conferences, I mean, during COVID, many, many park departments across the country were decimated." **Peter Gill, on community engagement:** "We got over 2,000 respondents to that survey, which is great for a city of 90,000 people." **Gina Austin, on gas plant project duration:** "Myself and Amy Cram have outlasted 4 cleanup managers at the state of Washington, and have been i…
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October 17th field trip to Sunset Pond construction site at 2:30 PM, pending sufficient board member interest to join Greenways Advisory Board participants. October 20th start date for Boulevard Park Shoreline and Beach Creation Project, with park closures expected through year-end. October 23rd open house for Baker View Neighborhood Park master planning process. October 27th Parks Department budget presentation to C…

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Scott Pratschner became Parks and Recreation Advisory Board chair, replacing Brian who relocated to the Netherlands. Three trail projects totaling millions in construction value received formal board recommendation, advancing them toward construction phases. Parks Department budget restructuring moved additional positions and fleet allocations to Greenways Fund, fundamentally altering the funding balance between general fund and levy resources. Park…
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# Parks and Recreation Advisory Board Welcomes New Leadership The Bellingham Parks and Recreation Advisory Board convened on October 8th, 2025, for what would prove to be a meeting of transitions and substantial planning updates. With chair Brian having recently departed for a new life in the Netherlands, vice chair Steve Walker took the helm, though technical difficulties would soon prompt an unexpected leadership change that would define the morning's proceedings. ## Meeting Overview The meeting, held both in-person and virtually, brought together board members to discuss the continuing development of the Parks, Recreation, and Open Space (PROS) plan, receive updates on major capital projects, and review three new trail proposals. What began as a routine gathering quickly became notable for its democratic process of selecting new leadership and the comprehensive scope of project updates presented by city staff. Steve Walker opened the meeting acknowledging his internet connectivity issues, a challenge that would persist throughout the early portion of the session. The board proceeded through the standard land acknowledgment, recognizing the traditional and ancestral homeland of the Lummi people, the Nooksack people, and other Coast Salish tribes. Board member Peter Gill raised an important point about consistency in acknowledging Indigenous names, noting that both English and Native language names should be used when referencing tribal nations. ## A New Chair Steps Forward The most significant procedural moment came when the board addressed the vacant chair position left by Brian's departure. Steve Walker, serving as vice chair, explained that board elections traditionally align with the calendar year, necessitating a temporary appointment through December before full elections for 2026. "I would like to nominate Scott Pratchner to be the chair for the remainder of 2025," Walker announced, prompting what would become Scott's first test of leadership. Scott Pratchner accepted the nomination with characteristic humility and enthusiasm. "I am very proud of the work this board does," he stated. "I am also extremely proud of Bellingham's Park and Rec Department, so I would be honored to take up that position to support what we're doing here. I think it's really good work, it's really central to what Bellingham is all about." The unanimous vote installing Pratchner as chair marked a seamless transition, and Walker's continued connectivity issues promp…
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### Meeting Overview The Parks and Recreation Advisory Board met on October 8, 2025, with Steve Walker initially chairing as vice chair before Scott Pratschner was elected as the new chair for the remainder of 2025. The meeting focused on the Parks, Recreation, and Open Space Master Plan update, Boulevard Park gas plant cleanup project, and three new Greenways trail projects. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Parks, Recreation, and Open Space Master Plan (PROS Plan):** The city's comprehensive planning document that guides park development, recreation programming, and open space acquisition through 2028. Currently being updated with extensive community input. **Manufactured Gas Plant (MGP):** Former industrial facility at Boulevard Park that operated in the early 1900s, burning coal to produce gas for Bellingham homes. The site requires environmental cleanup due to contamination that moved from the upper park down to Bellingham Bay. **Greenways Fund:** A voter-approved property tax levy that generates nearly $10 million annually for parks, trails, open space acquisition, and environmental stewardship. The fund has become increasingly important for supporting park operations. **Trail Facility Mapping:** High-level planning maps showing proposed trail connections between parks and neighborhoods. These are conceptual "point A to point B" connections, not detailed construction plans. **Capping in Place:** Environmental remediation technique where contaminated soil is covered with clean material rather than excavated, reducing risk of releasing contaminants during cleanup. **Critical Areas:** Environmentally sensitive lands including wetlands, steep slopes, and wildlife habitat that require special protection under city and state regulations. **RCO Grant:** Recreation and Conservation Office grants from Washington State that help fund park acquisitions and improvements. **Adaptive Programming:** Recreation services and equipment designed specifically for people with disabilities, including adults who need specialized equipment beyond what's typically provided for children. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Steve Walker | Vice Chair (chaired initial portion) | | Scott Pratschner | Newly elected Chair | | Peter Gill | Parks Planning Manager | | Gina Austin | Parks Project Engineer | | Paul Knippel…
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