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Whatcom County Council Special Committee of the Whole

WHA-CON-CTW-SPC-2025-12-02 December 02, 2025 Committee of the Whole Whatcom County 54 min
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The Whatcom County Council's Special Committee of the Whole convened for 54 minutes to tackle complex comprehensive plan issues, focusing primarily on agricultural lands policy in Chapter 8 of the county's comprehensive plan update. The meeting revealed significant tensions between stated agricultural preservation goals and practical farming realities, with Council Member Ben Elenbaas delivering pointed criticism of county policies he argued undermine the very agricultural economy they claim to protect. The session centered on Planning Commission recommendations for Chapter 8 Resource Lands, including a new policy requiring mitigation when agricultural lands are converted to urban growth areas (UGAs). Three small cities—Everson, Nooksack, and Sumas—would be affected by this acre-for-acre mitigation requirement, paying fees into a Conservation Futures Fund when they annex designated agricultural lands. Elenbaas, speaking as both a council member and active farmer, delivered an extended critique of what he characterized as contradictory county policies. He argued that while the county talks about preserving 100,000 acres of agricultural land, its own policies systematically remove farmland from production through restrictive definitions of "ongoing agriculture," mandatory buffers that expand over time, and drainage restrictions that prevent farmers from maintaining productive fields. The discussion also touched on controversial proposals for small cities to expand into agricultural lands and floodplains, with Council Member Todd Donovan expressing concerns about legal vulnerability at hearings boards. Planning Director Mark Personius provided updates on ongoing negotiations with affected cities, noting movement toward extinguishing development rights in flood-prone areas and implementing mitigation measures.

No formal votes were taken at this committee meeting. All items were designated for discussion only: - **AB2025-843** (Chapter 8 Resource Lands): **DISCUSSED** - Planning Commission recommendations on resource lands policies, including new agricultural mitigation requirements - **AB2025-513** (UGA EIS alternatives): **DISCUSSED** - Urban growth area expansi…

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**Agricultural Lands Mitigation (Policy 8A-15):** Staff introduced a new policy requiring acre-for-acre mitigation when agricultural lands are converted to urban growth areas. The three affected cities—Everson, Nooksack, and Sumas—have been working with county staff to develop a process involving restrictive covenants and fees paid at annexation. The fees would flow to the Conservation Futures Fund to purchase agricultural development rights on other properties. Personius explained this represents the first time mitigation has been required for agricultural land conversion, acknowledging the challenge facing north county cities that are "mostly surrounded by ag lands" and would "have to grow into ag lands" if they expand. **Small Lot Agriculture (Policy 8A-16):** The policy would create additional agricultural lands through a "small lot ag zone" allowing development on parcels of 10-20 acres or larger in rural areas. This initiative aims to help achieve the county's 100,000-acre agricultural preservation goal. **Ongoing Agriculture Definition:** Elenbaas raised fundamental concerns about the county's definition of o…
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**Ben Elenbaas (Council Member/Farmer):** Delivered the most extensive commentary as both an elected official and active farmer. Argued that county policies pose a greater threat to agriculture than small city expansions, stating: "Whatcom county policy is a bigger threat to agriculture than the growth of our small cities." Promised to submit amendments similar to his Chapter 7 proposals, emphasizing the need to preserve "the ability to farm" alongside land preservation. **Todd Donovan (Council Member):** Expressed concerns about legal exposure if the county approves urban growth area expansions into agricultural lands and floodplains. Questioned whether proposed mitigation measures would protect the county from hearings board challenges, asking "How quick do you want this to get to the hearings board?" **Mark Personius (PDS Director):** Provid…
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**Ben Elenbaas, on policy contradictions:** "We make this whole chapter is about preserving land and then we fool ourselves about talking about how we're, we're going to do so well at it that we're going to bring. We're going to convert other land and land and then we literally have. A plan to flood the planes." **Ben Elenbaas, on drainage restrictions:** "I find that language, just that word existing drainage system. Problematic because that's not enabling language. That's actually the langu…
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- **December 4, 2025:** Planning Commission public hearing on final two UGA proposals for Blaine and Birch Bay, plus Chapter 2 land use chapter review - **December 9, 2025:** Continued Committee of the Whole discussion with one hour allocated for comprehensive plan issues - **December 11, 2025:** Planning Commission meeting to complete glossaries and environment chapter comments - **December 18, 2025:** Targ…

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The meeting advanced understanding of agricultural land conversion policies without making formal decisions. Key developments included clarification that the three small cities have agreed to participate in the new mitigation framework for agricultural land conversion. The discussion also revealed specific concerns about policy language that may need revision, particularly around drainage systems and ongoing agriculture definitions. Staff confirmed that Marine Resource Committee recomme…
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# A Morning of Competing Visions: Whatcom County Grapples with Agricultural Land Protection The special Committee of the Whole meeting on December 2, 2025, began like many others in Whatcom County's comprehensive planning process — with technical presentations and policy discussions. But it quickly evolved into a revealing window into fundamentally different philosophies about how to protect agricultural lands in one of Washington's most productive farming regions. ## Meeting Overview The hybrid meeting convened at 9:02 AM in the County Courthouse council chambers, with Chair Kaylee Galloway presiding over six of seven council members (Tyler Byrd was absent). Despite an ambitious agenda with three major comprehensive plan items, the discussion centered almost entirely on Chapter 8 of the county's comprehensive plan update — the section dealing with resource lands, particularly agricultural preservation. What emerged was not just a debate about policy language, but a profound disagreement about whether regulatory frameworks help or harm the very agricultural economy they're designed to protect. ## Chapter 8 Resource Lands: The Technical Framework Lucas Clark from Planning and Development Services opened with a straightforward presentation of Chapter 8, describing it as "divided into 4 sections, agricultural lands, forest resource lands, marine resource lands and mineral resources." The chapter's purpose, he explained, is "to provide a clear set of guidelines that preserves the agricultural base in Whatcom county to prioritise the human need for food, fibre, shelter and energy and ensure both the agricultural industry and the cultural heritage thrive in the years to come." The presentation highlighted 18 recommended changes from the Planning…
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A structured study guide helping readers understand the meeting's content and context. ### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council's special Committee of the Whole met on December 2, 2025 at 9:03 AM for a hybrid meeting that lasted 54 minutes and 27 seconds. The focus was primarily on discussing preliminary Planning Commission recommendations for Chapter 8 (Resource Lands) of the county's 2025 Comprehensive Plan update. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Growth Management Act (GMA):** Washington state law requiring comprehensive planning to manage urban growth while protecting agricultural and forest lands. The GMA requires counties to designate and protect resource lands of long-term commercial significance. **Urban Growth Area (UGA):** Designated areas where cities can expand their boundaries and concentrate urban development. Expanding UGAs into agricultural lands requires special procedures and potentially mitigation. **Agricultural Land Designation:** The formal process of identifying and protecting farmland for long-term commercial agricultural use. Some lands can be "de-designated" under certain circumstances with changed conditions. **Prime Farmland:** The highest quality agricultural soils as classified by the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Some are prime only "if drained and protected from flooding," requiring infrastructure investment. **Ongoing Agriculture:** A policy definition requiring land to be actively farmed 3 out of the last 5 years to maintain certain agricultural exemptions under critical areas regulations. This is a local Whatcom County definition. **Conservation Futures Fund:** A county program that collects fees to purchase development rights or conservation easements on important lands. Proposed mitigation fees for agricultural land conversion would go into this fund. **Draft FEMA Maps:** Preliminary flood maps that represent the "best available science" for floodplain boundaries, replacing older "effective" maps. These newer maps show expanded flood risk areas due to improved modeling. **Critical Areas Ordinance:** Local regulations protecting wetlands, streams, steep slopes, and other environmentally sensitive areas. The county must update this ordinance in 2026 following the comprehensive plan update. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Kaylee Galloway | Council Chair | | Lucas Clark | PDS Planning Staff | | Mark Personius | Planning and Development Services Director | | Todd Donovan | Council Member | | Ben Elenbaas | Council Member (farmer) | | Jon Scanlon | Council Member | | Mark Stremler | Council Member | | Barry Buchanan | Council Member | | Dan Dunne | Planning Commission Member | | Rollin Harper | City Planner…
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