Search toggle
Say hello.
Focus Str. 5th Ave, 98/2 34746 Manhattan, New York
+1 222 44 55
Real Briefings

Whatcom County Council Special Committee of the Whole

WHA-CON-CTW-SPC-2025-09-16 September 16, 2025 Committee of the Whole Whatcom County
← Back to All Briefings
Sep
Month
16
Day
Min
Published
Status

Whatcom County faces a significant structural budget deficit that threatens service delivery and financial stability. Deputy Executive Aly Panucci presented the Executive's preliminary recommendations for the 2025-2026 Mid-Biennium Budget Review, revealing that expenses are outpacing revenues across all county funds. Without intervention, the General Fund would drop below policy targets by 2028, while the Road Fund would go negative in 2026, requiring immediate action. The county is grappling with a perfect storm of factors: inflation has eroded the purchasing power of revenues by $3.6 million in the General Fund alone since 2021, while Washington State's 1% property tax growth cap prevents counties from keeping pace with cost increases. Meanwhile, departments submitted nearly $10 million in new spending requests for critical services, creating an impossible tension between community needs and fiscal reality. The Executive's proposed solution involves painful trade-offs: cutting or freezing 22 positions (13 vacant, 9 frozen), implementing a new public safety sales tax, using one-time funds from the Community Priorities Fund, and pursuing fee increases to achieve full cost recovery. Even with these measures, the structural imbalance persists, requiring ongoing action for several years. This budget crisis reflects broader challenges facing local governments statewide, as jurisdictions struggle with unfunded mandates while revenues fail to keep pace with service costs. The discussion revealed the complexity of modern county operations, where few services can be easily cut without impacting public welfare, from jail health services to mental health programs to road maintenance.

No formal votes were taken during this special committee meeting. This was a discussion-only session focused on the Mid-Biennium Budget Review for AB 2025-509. The Executive's Office presented preliminary recommendations, but final decisions will be made in subsequent meetings leading to the Executive's formal budget transmittal. Key proposals under consideration include: - Cutting 13 vacant full-time positions across departments - Freezing 9 additional positions, primarily in …

About 50% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
The presentation centered on Whatcom County's structural deficit crisis, with detailed analysis showing how inflation and the state's 1% property tax cap have created an unsustainable fiscal trajectory. Deputy Executive Panucci explained that the General Fund has lost $3.6 million in purchasing power since 2021 when adjusted for inflation, while the Road Fund has lost $4.4 million. Discussion revealed the limited options available to counties under Washington State law. The 1% property tax growth cap applies to total county collections, not individual tax bills, meaning annual revenue growth consistently falls below inflation rates that typically run 2-2.5%. This structural limitation, combined with rapid cost increases in areas like jail health services and mandated public defense improvements, creates an impossible fiscal environment. Council members engaged extensively on the proposed public safety sales tax, a new tool authorized by the 2025 …
About 49% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
**Deputy Executive Aly Panucci** emphasized the severity of the budget crisis while advocating for measured approaches to reductions. She highlighted the interconnected nature of county services and warned against cuts that create larger long-term costs. **Deputy Executive Kayla Schott-Bresler** provided technical details on the public safety sales tax, positioning it as a necessary tool to address unfunded mandates from the state legislature, particularly new public defense caseload standards. **Council Chair Kaylee Galloway** called for factual, transparent communication with the public about budget challenges and expressed hope for keeping politics out…
About 50% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
**Aly Panucci, on budget challenges:** "I was hoping to find you know an easy 10 million dollars to reduce. I wasn't optimistic about that but it was as we reviewed it really didn't come to fruition." **Aly Panucci, on service impacts:** "So when cuts happen abruptly it sort of happens in a vacuum where you're not kind of thinking about the long-term implications of those cuts." **Kaylee Galloway, on public engagement:** "My call to action for us as a Council is how can we try to do this in …
About 50% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →

The Executive's Office will continue refining budget recommendations through individual meetings with council members. Upcoming committee discussions will focus on specific areas: - Next week: Deep dive on Road Fund acute issues and required interventions - September 23rd: EMS Fund discussion and potential use of banked capacity - Ongoing: Public Safety sales tax implementation details and compliance requirements - Future sessions: Health Department budget adjustments and fee study results The Execut…

About 49% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
This meeting marked the formal beginning of Whatcom County's 2025-2026 Mid-Biennium Budget Review process, establishing the severity of the fiscal crisis facing the county. Key changes include: The Executive's Office formalized proposals to cut 13 vacant positions and freeze 9 additional positions, representing the largest reduction in county staffing in recent years. This eliminates approximately $2.8 million in spending. For the first time, the county is seriously considering implementing the new state-authorized public safety sales tax, which would generate $7 million annually. This represents a significant shift toward new revenue generation rather than cuts alone. The Community Priorities Fund, previously dedicated …
About 50% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
# Facing the Numbers: Whatcom County Grapples with Structural Budget Crisis The Whatcom County Council convened in special session on Tuesday morning, September 16, 2025, to confront a stark financial reality that has been years in the making. In the sterile chambers of the County Courthouse, Deputy Executive Allie Panucci delivered a sobering presentation that laid bare the county's structural budget deficit—a gap between revenues and expenses that threatens to drain reserves and fundamentally reshape county services. Six of seven council members gathered at 9:03 a.m., with only Tyler Byrd absent, for what would prove to be a technical but consequential discussion about the 2025-26 Mid-Biennium Budget Review. The hybrid meeting format allowed both in-person attendance and remote participation, though the weight of the financial challenges ahead felt heavy in the chamber. ## The Structural Crisis Revealed Deputy Executive Panucci wasted little time in establishing the gravity of the situation. Armed with charts and projections, she painted a picture of a county government caught in an unsustainable trajectory where "our expenses are outpacing our revenues" across virtually all county funds. "The cost to provide these services are outpacing our annual revenues," Panucci explained, noting that this isn't a sudden crisis but rather the culmination of structural imbalances that have been building for years. "So we've been looking for both short-term and long-term actions to try to stabilise the budget, better stabilise our services, and ideally not kind of be in budget crisis every year." The charts she presented told a stark story. Without intervention, the county's…
About 14% shown — sign up free to read the rest Sign up free →
### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council held a Special Committee of the Whole meeting on September 16, 2025, to discuss the county's 2025-26 Mid-Biennium Budget Review. Deputy Executive Aly Pennucci led a comprehensive presentation on the county's structural budget challenges and proposed solutions for addressing increasing costs and revenue shortfalls. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Mid-Biennium Budget Review:** A required mid-cycle review of the county's two-year budget to address unexpected costs and make necessary adjustments for the second year of the biennium. **Structural Deficit:** When a government's ongoing expenses consistently exceed ongoing revenues, creating an unsustainable budget situation that worsens over time. **Fund Balance:** The county's financial reserves, essentially savings accounts for different county services that provide cushions during emergencies or revenue shortfalls. **Banked Capacity:** A provision that allows local governments to "bank" unused portions of their 1% annual property tax increase and use it in later years when needed. **Public Safety Sales Tax:** A new one-tenth of one percent sales tax authorized by the state legislature to help counties fund criminal justice and public safety services. **Unfunded Mandates:** Requirements imposed by state government that counties must implement but for which the state provides no funding. **Full-Time Equivalent (FTE):** A measurement of staffing that represents one full-time position, used in budgeting to track total workforce capacity. **Cost of Living Adjustments (COLAs):** Annual salary increases for employees to keep pace with inflation, currently under negotiation for 2026. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Kaylee Galloway | Council Chair | | Aly Pennucci | Deputy Executive | | Kayla Schott-Bresler | Deputy Executive | | Barry Buchanan | Council Member | | Todd Donovan | Council Member | | Ben Elenbaas | Council Member | | Jon Scanlon | Council Member | | Mark Stremler | Council Member | | Tyler Byrd | Council Member (absent) | ### Background Context Whatcom County, like many local governments across Washington State, is facing a significant budget crisis driven by inflation and state-imposed spendi…
About 50% shown — premium members only Upgrade to premium →

Share This Briefing