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Whatcom County Council

WHA-CON-2026-02-24 February 24, 2026 Whatcom County Council Regular Whatcom County
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The February 24, 2026 Whatcom County Council meeting was dominated by urgent calls for flood action from Sumas residents and broader discussions about public safety infrastructure. Council processed routine business including budget amendments and advisory committee appointments, but the evening's most significant moments came during the 56-minute public comment period where flood victims, business owners, and residents demanded immediate flood mitigation efforts. The meeting's formal business included passing a $319,393 budget amendment (reduced from the original $1.8 million due to new charter requirements), postponing three additional budget items pending quarterly financial reports, and approving various interlocal agreements. Council also appointed members to multiple advisory committees and confirmed executive appointments. However, the emotional weight of the evening centered on repeated testimony from Sumas flood survivors describing their community's devastation. Jessica Kohler corrected the record on displacement numbers, noting that Public Works had understated the scale—20 people are currently in hotels, but the actual displacement count is much higher. Nicole Sandoval, a small business owner, painted a picture of economic collapse: "Without immediate and intentional interventions, our historic town risks becoming a literal ghost town." Council members appeared moved by the testimony, with several speakers thanking them for their strong pushback during earlier flood presentations demanding more immediate action. Stacey Daly noted that 56 days had passed since Council approved $750,000 from the Healthy Children's Fund for flood victims with children, yet none of that money had reached families despite Whatcom Long-Term Recovery being ready to distribute it. The meeting also featured debate over infrastructure priorities, jail capacity issues, and concerns about planning department corruption. Multiple speakers linked inadequate jail capacity to consti

**Budget and Financial Items (All passed):** - AB 2026-145: Approved substitute budget amendment for $319,393 (7-0) - reduced from original $1.8 million due to new charter requirements requiring quarterly financial reports - Three budget items postponed to March 24th: Strawberry Point stormwater ($1M+), Ferndale Senior Center improvements, and Courthouse building envelope repairs **Consent Agenda (All passed 7-0):** - AB 2026-137: Collective bargaining agreement with Professional and Technical Employees Local 17 - Six interlocal agreements including $1.5M FEMA grant match, fire investigation services, and flood mitigation projects **Advisory Committee Appointments:** - Appointed Troy Lautenbach to Solid Waste Advisory Committee (7-0) - Appointe…

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**Flood Mitigation Crisis** The meeting's most substantive policy discussion occurred during public comment around flood response inadequacy. Multiple Sumas residents, including business owners and displaced families, testified that recent flood studies and presentations lacked immediate actionable steps. Brian Dexter called for "shovel-ready" actions rather than continued planning, stating that decades and millions have been spent on studies without tangible results. The urgency was underscored by economic devastation testimony. Nicole Sandoval reported that Sumas has lost its doctor's office, nail salon, and pizza shop since 2021, with 50% of residents displaced and businesses facing layoffs due to vanished customer base. The community is literally planning around future floods—residents repair homes "in preparation for the next flood already." Council members were praised for their pushback during morning flood presentations, with Stacey Daly noting the presentations provided "concepts, ideas, things" but nothing shovel-ready. She specifically highlighted a 56-day delay in distributing $750,000 approved for flood families with children despite the distribution system being ready. **Charter Amendment Implementation** A significant procedural discussion emerged around new charter requirements limiti…
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**Flood Victims and Sumas Community:** - Jessica Kohler corrected displacement numbers, noting Public Works understated the crisis scale - Nicole Sandoval detailed economic collapse: "our shops and our restaurants sit empty" - Stacey Daly demanded immediate sediment removal as emergency action - Samantha Doering described residents making repair plans anticipating the next flood - Dale Sandstrom spoke about children's trauma: "My daughter cries when they see hard rain" **County Staff:** - Finance Director Randy Riddell praised for catching new charter certification requirements - Parks Director Ben Knox explained South Fork Park structure decisions based on RCO grant requirements - Public Works staff acknowledged for flood presentation, though residents criticized lack of immediate action **Infrastructure and Safety Advocates:** - Lyle Sorensen provided histor…
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**Stacey Daly, on flood emergency:** "Because we're sitting ducks right now in Sumas... The capacity of the river, isn't that an emergency? Because that has filled in. That, I would deem that as an emergency that needs to be removed." **Nicole Sandoval, on economic devastation:** "Without immediate and intentional interventions, our historic town risks becoming a literal ghost town. This is not an exaggeration. I'm not being dramatic. It is our daily reality that this could be true." **Dale …
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**Immediate Follow-Up Required:** - March 24th Finance Committee meeting: Three postponed budget items (Strawberry Point stormwater, Ferndale Senior Center, Courthouse envelope) - Workgroup on Performance Audits Ordinance (Scanlon, Rienstra, Elenbaas) to meet before May consideration - Planning Commission appointments: Deadline March 3rd, 10:00 a.m. for four applicants - Child and Family Well-Being Task Force application deadline March 3rd **Ongoing Flood Response:** - Distribution of $750,000 Healthy Children's Fund money to 287 eligible flood families - Executive to identify immediate flood mitigation actions …

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**Financial Process:** New charter amendment now requires quarterly financial reports before non-grant spending approvals, fundamentally changing budget amendment procedures. Three items worth over $1.5 million postponed as result. **Committee Appointments:** Late application acceptance policy shift—council voted 6-1 to accept applications after deadlines for advisory positions, reversing previous strict deadline enforcement. **Flood Response Urgency:** Council position shifted from process-oriented to action-demanding, with members being pr…
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--- # Whatcom County Council February 24, 2026 ## Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council convened on February 24, 2026, for what would become a three-hour marathon meeting dominated by urgent calls for action on multiple fronts. All seven council members were present: Elizabeth Boyle, Barry Buchanan, Ben Elenbaas, Kaylee Galloway, Jessica Rienstra, Jon Scanlon, and Mark Stremler. What began as routine business quickly transformed into a community forum where residents from flood-ravaged Sumas, frustrated farmers, and concerned citizens demanded accountability from their government. The meeting was notable for the raw emotion and urgency expressed during public comment, particularly from Sumas residents still displaced from recent flooding. Council members would later demonstrate their own frustration with bureaucratic delays, delivering an unprecedented 0-7 vote that underscored their collective impatience with the status quo. ## Floods, Failures, and Desperate Pleas for Action The evening's most powerful testimony came from flood victims whose lives remain in limbo. Jessica Kohler of Sumas corrected a misstatement from earlier committee testimony, clarifying that far more than 20 people remain displaced from their homes after recent flooding. "I know 20 people personally, just in SUMAS, that are displaced," she said, emphasizing that the number was much higher when including Nooksack and Everson residents. Stacey Daly, who had listened to the morning's flood presentation, expressed the community's growing desperation: "We do…
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A structured study guide helping readers understand the meeting's content and context. Written for a general civic audience — assume no prior knowledge of the issues. ## Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council met for their regular meeting on February 24, 2026, lasting just over 3 hours. The main focus was on budget amendments, flood recovery issues, and various appointments to advisory committees. ## Key Terms and Concepts **Consent Agenda:** Items that have been reviewed in committee and are considered routine, allowing the council to approve multiple items with a single vote rather than debating each one individually. **Budget Amendment/Supplemental:** A formal change to the county's approved annual budget, adding or reallocating funds for specific purposes. These require council approval and must follow charter requirements. **Charter Amendment:** A change to the county's governing document that was recently passed, requiring the county executive to provide quarterly financial reports before the council can approve new spending not covered by grants. **UGA (Urban Growth Area):** Designated areas where urban development is planned and encouraged, particularly important for housing development in places like Birch Bay. **Designated Crisis Responder (DCR):** Mental health professionals who evaluate individuals in crisis situations, including those who have overdosed, to determine if involuntary treatment is needed. **Involuntary Treatment Act (ITA):** Washington State law that governs how people in mental health or substance abuse crisis can be held for treatment against their will. **Flood Control Zone District:** A special district that manages flood control projects and funding, with the county council serving as its board of supervisors. **Advisory Committees:** Citizen volunteer groups that provide advice to the county on specific topics like solid waste, business development, or parks and recreation. ## Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Mark Stremler | Council Chair | | Elizabeth Boyle | Council Member | | Barry Buchanan | Council Member | | Ben Elenbaas | Council Member | | Kaylee Galloway | Council Member | | Jessica Rienstra | Council Member | | John Scanlon | Council Member, Finance Committee Chair | | Adam Bellinger | Public Speaker - Crisis Response Advocate | | Jessica Kohler | Public Speaker - Sumas Resident | | Carl Kraus | Public Speaker - Nooksack Resident | | Nicole Sandoval | Public Speaker - Sumas Business Owner | | Stacey Daly…
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