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Lynden City Council

LYN-CON-2026-01-20 January 20, 2026 Committee Meeting City of Lynden 15 min
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The Lynden City Council convened for its first meeting of 2026 with a full agenda focused on state-mandated housing reforms, revenue generation, and development facilitation. The meeting began with the formal swearing-in of Jeremy Bos as Chief of Police, completing his promotion from Lieutenant announced earlier in January. The council's primary legislative action addressed state-imposed housing reforms through comprehensive amendments to the municipal code. Despite missing the December 31, 2025 deadline, the council unanimously passed Ordinance 26-1724, updating development regulations to comply with state legislation aimed at reducing barriers to housing construction and expanding childcare opportunities. The amendments impact multiple code chapters but exclude proposed Planning Commission attendance requirements that administration wants to review further. In a significant revenue move, the council unanimously approved a new 5% admissions tax on entertainment venues, expected to generate approximately $100,000 annually for the general fund. The tax takes effect April 1, 2026, with exemptions for schools, charitable organizations, and smaller events generating less than $2,500 in annual admission charges. The council also authorized negotiations for a complex easement agreement with Mountain Summit Ventures LLC that would facilitate proper traffic alignment on Benson Road while potentially benefiting city property through utility connections and future access to the planned Pepin Parkway corridor. Routine business included reappointing seven members to parks advisory committees and approving resolutions for check cancellation and reducing the city's revolving cash fund by $200 due to staffing changes.

**ORD-26-1724 - Housing Code Compliance (PASSED 7-0)** - **Staff Recommendation:** Approve amendments to LMC Chapters 3, 16, 17, 18, and 19 but delay Chapter 2 changes - **Council Action:** Approved as recommended - **Key Details:** Brings city code into compliance with state housing legislation, removes barriers to housing construction, enables childcare facilities - **Impact:** Ensures compliance with Growth Management Act requirements, avoids potential state sanctions **ORD-26-1725 - Admission Tax Creation (PASSED 7-0)** - **Staff Recommendation:** Implement 5% admissions tax effective April 1, 2026 - **Council Action:** Approved with amendment to section 3.29.030(C) - **Key Details:** Projects $100,000 annual revenue, exempts schools and smal…

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**State Housing Compliance** Community Development Director Heidi Gudde presented the comprehensive code amendments required by state legislation. The changes primarily target reducing regulatory barriers to housing development and expanding childcare opportunities, coinciding with the recent Comprehensive Plan update. The city missed the state-imposed December 31, 2025 deadline but is proceeding with implementation to avoid potential sanctions including withheld tax dollars or grants. The Department of Commerce provided comments on the amendments, and public input was received though not incorporated into the final proposal. Staff recommended delaying proposed changes to Planning Commission attendance requirements (Chapter 2) for further review with other committees, which council accepted. **Revenue Generation Strategy** The admissions tax represents part of the council's broader effort to identify alternative revenue sources…
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**Marsha Belvo, Lynden resident:** Expressed concerns about increasing water costs and requested staff explanation of utility bill charges. **Cynthia Ripke-Kutsagoitz, Lynden resident:** Raised concerns about "unlawful opposition to ICE" and expressed concern for flood-affected residents. **Mou…
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**Mayor Korthuis, opening public hearing:** "Mayor Korthuis opened the public hearing at 7:16 p.m." **Staff report on admissions tax:** "Initial estimates from Administration are that this additional revenue would generate approximately $100,000 for the City's General Fund." **Staff on housing code compliance:** "The State of Washington has passed extensive legislation that requires cities to mo…
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- **April 1, 2026:** New 5% admissions tax takes effect - **Future meeting:** Final terms of Mountain Summit Ventures easement agreement return to council for approval - **Ongoing:** Staff to provi…

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- Jeremy Bos is now officially sworn in as Police Chief - Lynden Municipal Code Chapters 3, 16, 17, 18, and 19 are updated to comply with state housing legislation - New 5% admissions tax will generate estimated $100,000 annually starting April 1, 2026 - Seven parks…
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