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Whatcom County Council

WHA-CON-2025-11-18 November 18, 2025 Whatcom County Council Regular Whatcom County
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The Whatcom County Council met for a contentious 3-hour session marked by significant policy debates and emotional public testimony. The meeting's most dramatic moments came during public comment, when families affected by a recent car accident at Mount Baker High School pleaded for traffic safety improvements at the Mitchell Road and State Route 542 intersection. Helena Pierce, a junior involved in the November 12 crash, delivered powerful testimony alongside her parents and the family of Crystal Anderson, demanding immediate action on what they described as a dangerous intersection that claimed the life of Courtney Cadle in 2010. The evening's most divisive issue centered on Council Member Ben Elenbaas's attempt to add water adjudication mediation funding to the county's 2026 legislative priorities. Elenbaas argued passionately for getting ahead of what he predicted would be a 50-year court battle over water rights, similar to Yakima's 42-year adjudication process. His amendment ultimately failed 3-4 (with one abstention), but not before generating heated debate about water policy, tribal relations, and the role of county government in complex adjudication proceedings. The council approved several significant funding items, including $944,084 for early childhood education facilities at the Cedar Commons housing project, a five-year homeless housing plan that shifts some resources from families to single adults, and the establishment of an opioid settlement fund. Technical difficulties plagued the hybrid meeting, with Council Member Tyler Byrd experiencing power outages that temporarily disconnected him from proceedings.

**Water Adjudication Legislative Priority Amendment** - Failed 3-4 (Abstain: 1) - Elenbaas proposed adding mediated settlement funding language to state legislative priorities - Staff recommendation: Not specified - Council action: Rejected the amendment; approved base legislative priorities 4-3 **2026 State Legislative Session Priorities** - Approved 4-3 - Staff recommendation: Approve revised draft priorities - Council action: Approved as recommended, rejecting water mediation amendment **Five-Year Homeless Housing Plan** - Approved 7-0 - Staff recommendation: Approve final plan - Council action: Approved as recommended despite concerns about shifting resources from families **Early Childhood Education Facility Funding** - Approve…

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**Water Adjudication Mediation Strategy** Council Member Elenbaas made an impassioned case for proactive mediation funding, arguing that Whatcom County faces a potentially decades-long adjudication process involving up to 40,000 parties. Drawing parallels to Yakima's 42-year water battle, he warned that continued litigation would stymie economic development, agriculture, and housing growth. County Executive Sidhu countered that the Legislature lacks authority to mandate mediation and that parties must first agree to negotiate. The debate revealed fundamental disagreements about tribal relations, with Elenbaas suggesting the county needs to change its approach to tribal engagement, while others argued for letting the adjudication process proceed. **Homeless Housing Resource Allocation** The five-year homeless housing plan sparked discussion about prioritizing single adults versus families with children. Lydia Place representatives testified about concerns over shifting resources away from families, arguing that preventing childhood homelessness has generational benefits. Council m…
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**John Westerfield** (Whatcom County resident): Criticized the prolonged closure and delays at the Plantation Range shooting facility, calling for county action to expedite the $1.7 million upgrade project. **David Foreman** (District 5, Opportunity Council CFO): Thanked council for supporting early childhood education funding, connecting it to long-term crime reduction and arguing that investment in children reduces future incarceration needs. **April Hicks** (Acme resident): Pleaded for traffic safety improvements at Mount Baker High School intersection after her daughter's car accident, describing the area as dangerous with inadequate lighting and signage. **Helena Pierce** (Mount Baker High School junior): Delivered powerful testimony about her involvement in the November 12 crash, demanding immediate safety improvements and arguing that funding should not be an obstacle to protecting children's lives. **Victoria Anderson** (Maple Falls resident): Spoke as mother of crash victim Crystal, emphasizing the preventable nature of the accident and comparing Mount Baker's dangerous intersection to safer school zones in other Whatcom County districts. **Dave Chase**: Advocated for opioid intervention programs throu…
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**Helena Pierce, on traffic safety:** "This is not a suggestion. This is a demand. We must have a safer intersection at the school. We must have lights to see, a reduced speed limit, and especially a roundabout and a crosswalk." **Ben Elenbaas, on water adjudication:** "I'm here to stand for the people and with the people of Whatcom County in this process, and I'm waiting for somebody to stand with me." **Victoria Anderson, on her daughter's accident:** "My beautiful baby girl, my only daugh…
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**December 2, 2025**: Deadline for additional applications to Justice Project Oversight and Planning Committee youth position **December 9, 2025**: Planning and Development Committee discussion of agricultural zoning amendments (AB2025-810) **December 9, 2025**: Full council consideration of Justice Project committee appointment and potential legislative priority amendments **Legislative Session 2026**: Council will advocate for approved state priorities including technical assi…

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The county established formal legislative priorities for 2026 but rejected expanded water adjudication mediation language, maintaining the status quo approach to the complex water rights proceedings. The council committed to sending a letter advocating for traffic safety improvements at Mount Baker High School, representing the first formal county action on this intersection's safety concerns since Courtney Cadle's death in 2010. A five-year homeless housing plan was adopted that shifts some resources from families toward single adult ser…
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# A Night of Passionate Advocacy and Political Fractures ## Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council convened on a cold Tuesday evening, November 18, 2025, for what would become one of their most emotionally charged and politically divisive meetings in recent memory. All seven councilmembers were present despite technical difficulties that plagued the evening, with Vice Chair Jon Scanlon presiding over a hybrid meeting that stretched past 9 p.m. The agenda carried routine business alongside contentious issues, but it was the public testimony and heated debate over water adjudication that would define this gathering. What began as a standard meeting with flood control property leases and consent agenda items quickly transformed into a forum for raw human emotion and political philosophy. Parents and teenage accident survivors delivered tear-filled pleas for traffic safety. Housing advocates pressed for continued support. A water rights battle that has simmered for years finally erupted into open council debate, revealing deep philosophical divisions among elected officials about how to confront one of the region's most complex challenges. The evening showcased both the best and most frustrating aspects of local government: citizens courageously advocating for their communities, elected officials wrestling with genuinely difficult policy choices, and the messy reality of democracy when competing values collide. ## Property Leases and Technical Troubles The meeting opened with routine business—approving minutes and conducting two public hearings on flood control district property leases. Both properties, totaling about 24 acres on River Road and East Main Street, will be leased for agricultural use while the county develops long-term flood control projects. "This is approximately just under 21 acres," Public Works Director Andrew Hester explained about the River Road property, which carries a minimum lease bid of $4,180 annually. Councilmember Ben Elenbaas questioned whether water rights accompany the lease, noting "it would be hard to justify $4,100 to lease that for a year without the ability to put the waters of the state to beneficial use." The East Main Street property, located just inside Everson city limits near where Nooksack River flows split, represents a more recent acquisition. Hester described it as strategically important for future flood projects: "We're still obviously in planning stages for whatever flood project we're doing, so it…
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### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council met on November 18, 2025, for a regular session lasting over three hours. The meeting featured significant public comment from families affected by a recent car accident near Mount Baker High School, extensive debate over water adjudication mediation funding, and approval of several major housing and homelessness plans. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Flood Control Zone District:** A special district that manages flood control infrastructure and property. The county council acts as the Board of Supervisors for this district when making decisions about leasing district-owned properties. **Opioid Settlement Fund:** A dedicated fund established to receive money from legal settlements with opioid manufacturers and distributors, specifically earmarked for substance abuse treatment and prevention programs. **Five-Year Homelessness and Housing Plan:** A comprehensive strategic plan that guides how the county will allocate homeless housing program funds over the next five years, including controversial shifts in priorities between families and single individuals. **Legislative Priorities:** The county's formal agenda of issues it will advocate for during the state legislative session, including requests for funding and policy changes. **Water Adjudication:** A legal process where a court determines water rights in a specific watershed. The WRIA 1 (Water Resource Inventory Area 1) adjudication could involve up to 40,000 parties and potentially take decades to complete. **Mediated Settlement:** An alternative dispute resolution process that could run parallel to court proceedings, allowing parties to negotiate water rights agreements outside of litigation. **Agricultural Protection Overlay:** Zoning designation designed to preserve agricultural land by requiring that development include "reserve tracts" dedicated to continued farming. **Healthy Children's Fund:** A county program funded by a property tax levy that provides services to children and families, separate from but complementary to homeless housing programs. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Jon Scanlon | Council Vice Chair, presiding over meeting | | Satpal Sidhu | County Executive | | Ben Elenbaas | Council Member, District 5, proposed water adjudication amendment | | Tyler Byrd | Council Member, District 1 | | Kaylee Galloway | Council Member, District 2 | | Todd Donovan | Council Member, District 3 | | Barry Buchanan | Council Member, District 4 | | Mark Stremler | Council Member, District 6 | | April Hicks | Acme resident, mother of car accident victim | | Helena Pierce | Mount Baker High School student, car accident victim | | Vi…
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