# Bellingham Transportation Commission March Meeting: Transit Future Takes Center Stage
## Meeting Overview
The Bellingham Transportation Commission convened on March 10, 2026, at the Pacific Street Operations Center for what would prove to be one of their most consequential meetings of the year. Chair Tim Wilder led the seven-member commission through an agenda dominated by transit infrastructure planning and safety improvements. The evening's headline item was WTA's presentation of their Locally Preferred Alternative for rapid transit enhancements — a proposal that could fundamentally reshape how Bellingham residents move around their city over the next two decades.
The meeting drew a notable level of public engagement, with four speakers offering testimony during public comment, all focused on the rapid transit proposal. Their voices represented a broader community conversation about transit equity, environmental sustainability, and the future of transportation in Bellingham. Following the presentations, commissioners would grapple with complex questions about funding, implementation timelines, and whether Bellingham's size and characteristics truly support the level of transit infrastructure being proposed.
## The Locally Preferred Alternative: WTA's Vision for 10-Minute Transit
The evening's centerpiece was Hayden Richardson's comprehensive presentation of the rapid transit study's Locally Preferred Alternative (LPA). Richardson, a transportation and land use planner with WTA, outlined an ambitious plan to transform Bellingham's existing GO Lines from 15-minute frequency service to 10-minute headways through a combination of infrastructure improvements, signal priority systems, and operational changes.
The proposal emerged from a multi-year study process that began with a feasibility analysis in 2023. As Richardson explained, the study initially considered full Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) implementation but ultimately settled on what they termed "Enhanced Go Lines" — a more incremental approach that would allow improvements to be implemented in phases as funding becomes available.
The LPA focuses on Bellingham's four GO Line corridors: Blue, Gold, Green, and Plum. These routes serve the city's major destinations including Western Washington University, Whatcom Community College, downtown, Cordata, Barkley Village, and Sunset Square. "These corridors serve the greatest concentrations of WTA's designated priority populations and carry the vast majori…