Annual Joint Meeting of Lake Whatcom Management Program (Whatcom County Council, Bellingham City Council, Lake Whatcom Water & Sewer District)
The 2025 annual joint meeting of the Lake Whatcom Management Program brought together three governing bodies to review five years of collaborative water quality protection efforts and preview the next phase of work. The meeting highlighted both progress and ongoing challenges in protecting Lake Whatcom, the sole source of drinking water for over 120,000 people in Whatcom County. Dr. Angela Strecker from Western Washington University's Institute for Watershed Studies delivered a comprehensive water quality monitoring report showing mixed results. While surface phosphorus levels have stabilized after decades of increases, dissolved oxygen continues declining at critical depths, and concerning spikes in bottom-water phosphorus from internal loading were observed in 2024. The six-year water residence time means improvements will be slow to materialize. Staff reported significant accomplishments under the concluded 2020-2024 work plan, including 40 land acquisitions by Bellingham totaling 607 acres, over 100 stormwater treatment facilities installed citywide, and development of innovative, cost-saving phosphorus treatment technology. The city is approaching its waste load allocation targets under the federal Clean Water Act, while the county has made progress but faces greater challenges given that 92% of the watershed lies in its jurisdiction. Public commenters praised city efforts while calling for enhanced county action, particularly in stormwater system maintenance and development code consistency. The newly approved 2025-2029 work plan adds climate action and forest management as distinct program areas, reflecting evolving threats and collaborative forest management planning between city and county. Council members expressed frustration with the meeting format, requesting more time for policy discussion among elected officials rather than primarily listening to staff presentations. Concerns were raised about financial sustainability as water treatment costs cont
No formal votes were taken during this joint meeting, which served as an informational session rather than a decision-making body. The meeting focused on receiving reports on completed and ongoing work under the Lake Whatcom Management Program. Key updates included: - 2020-2024 work plan completion with accomplishments across 10 program areas - 2025-2029 work…
- Department of Ecology review of updated phosphorus loading models (approximately one year timeline) - Continued implementation of 2025-2029 work plan across 12 program areas - Completion of climate vulnerability assessment (targeted for 2025) - Joint forest management plan development between city and cou…


