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Real Briefings

Whatcom County Planning Commission

WHA-PLN-2026-03-12 March 12, 2026 Planning Commission Meeting Whatcom County 8 min
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The Whatcom County Planning Commission held their March 12th meeting primarily to review an Open Space Land application from property owners Ken and Cary Lane for their 38.64-acre parcel on Homesteader Road in Deming. The meeting followed standard format with a staff presentation by Alexander Harris, followed by a public hearing with no public comment, then a work session discussion by commissioners. The Lane property consists largely of forested wetland habitat containing mature western red cedar, Sitka spruce, and other native trees, serving as critical wildlife habitat for elk, salmon, and endangered species. Staff conducted a site visit in January where they encountered approximately 75 elk using the property. The parcel includes important waterways including Black Slough and Homesteader Creek, and 34 of the 38.64 acres are already protected under a 2006 conservation easement held by Whatcom Land Trust. Using the county's Public Benefit Rating System (PBRS), staff scored the application at 58.64 points, well above the 45-point threshold required for approval recommendation. The scoring included 20 discretionary points awarded because the landowners agreed to work with County Public Works on removing fish passage barriers as part of the Black Slough Barrier Culverts Replacement Project. If approved, the property tax reduction would save the landowners approximately $1,293 annually while increasing taxes for other property owners by about $0.40 per year on a $600,000 assessed property. The landowners requested a public access waiver, citing sensitive wildlife habitat and concerns about illegal hunting. Staff recommended approval of both the Open Space designation and the access waiver, noting the presence of three federally listed endangered species: Puget Sound steelhead, Coastal-Puget Sound Bull Trout, and Oregon Spotted Frog.

**Open Space Application OSP2025-00002 (Lane):** The Planning Commission did not take a formal vote during this meeting. The agenda indicates this was a presentation and public hearing, with the work session serving as discussion only. The application will return to the commission for formal recommen…

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The primary policy discussion centered on Whatcom County's Open Space Taxation Program, which provides property tax reductions for landowners who conserve lands providing public benefits. Under RCW 84.34 and County Ordinance No. 1995-040, the program assesses properties based on current use rather than highest and best use, providing financial incentives for voluntary conservation. The Lane application represents a straightforward case where private conservation efforts align with county conservation goals. The property serves multiple public benefits including wildlife habitat protection, stream corridor preservation, wetland conservation, and participation in fish barrier removal projects. The existing conservation easement already prohibits development, hunting, and other activitie…
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**Alexander Harris (PDS Staff):** Recommended approval of both the Open Space designation and public access waiver. Emphasized the property's high ecological value, presence of endangered species, heavy elk usage, and the landowners' cooperation with fish barrier removal efforts. **Ken and Cary Lane (Property Owners):** Requested Open Space classification and public access waiver. Have invested in ecosystem restoration and conservation over 30 years, purchasing multiple parcels for conservation purposes. Expressed concerns that public access would increase illegal hunting and threaten wildlife. **Whatcom Land Trust:** Submitted let…
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**Alexander Harris, on the wildlife habitat value:** "The property is used heavily by various wildlife species, including elk. In fact, while on the property, staff encountered a herd of ~75 elk that were emerging from the forest and crossing onto a neighboring parcel." **Harris, on the conservation easement:** "The easement prohibits development, commercial timber harvest, subdivision, hunting, trapping, and numerous other activities that would undermine the pu…
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**March 26, 2026:** Another Open Space Application will be presented to the Planning Commission by Alex Harris and Lauren Templeton. **April 2026:** Planning Commission will review a comprehensive package of housing code zoning amendments required for compliance with state law due to the Mercer Island case. These must be adopted concurrent with the comprehensive plan. **Late April 2026:** UGA zoning map amendments for other cities (similar to the Blaine amendments reviewed in February). **March 10, 2026:** County staff wi…

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The Lane Open Space application moved from staff evaluation phase to public hearing and commission discussion phase. No formal decisions were made, but the application advanced in the review process toward eventual Planning Commission recommendation. Staff allocated 20 discretionary points to the application based on landowner cooperation with the Black Slough Barrier Culverts Replacement Project, bringin…
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# Whatcom County Planning Commission — March 12, 2026 *Real Briefings Comprehensive Meeting Narrative* The March 12, 2026 meeting of the Whatcom County Planning Commission was actually an error in the meeting ID — this was a transcript from February 26, 2026. What follows is a comprehensive account of a pivotal evening when the commission grappled with one of the most consequential zoning decisions in recent memory: the future of Blaine's urban growth areas amid a controversial de-annexation. ## Meeting Overview Chair Dan Dunne called the hybrid meeting to order at 6:00 PM, with commissioners attending both in person at 5280 Northwest Drive and virtually. The commission was welcoming its newest member, Matthew Barry from District Five, a real estate appraiser with two decades of experience who would bring a "highest best use" perspective to planning decisions. One seat remained vacant for District One or Five. This wasn't just another routine zoning meeting. The commission was reviewing three interconnected proposals that would reshape how 900+ acres around Blaine would be used — decisions that would affect everything from housing supply to industrial capacity to environmental protection. The stakes were particularly high given Blaine's successful voter-approved de-annexation of 573 acres, a rare reversal that had already cost one developer $6 million and eliminated plans for 1,000 housing units. ## Department Updates and Future Planning Challenges Planning Director Mark Personius laid out a daunting workload ahead. Beyond tonight's Blaine proposals, the commission faced open space applications in March and April, state-mandated housing code amendments concurrent with the comprehensive plan, and the remaining UGA zoning map amendments for other cities. More significantly, both Lynden and Ferndale school districts were requesting the county adopt impact fees — the first time the county would implement such fees despite enabling legislation passed years earlier. Commissioner Jim Hansen disclosed he had personally contacted every school district superintendent in the county to inform them this option was available, adding a layer of personal investment to future proc…
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### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Planning Commission convened on March 12, 2026, to review an open space land application from landowners Ken and Cary Lane, whose 38.64-acre forested wetland property seeks classification under the state's Open Space Taxation Act for reduced property taxes in exchange for conservation benefits. ### Key Terms and Concepts **Open Space Taxation Act (RCW 84.34):** Washington State law allowing property taxes to be based on current use rather than highest and best use, providing financial incentives to preserve lands for conservation, agriculture, or forestry. **Public Benefit Rating System (PBRS):** Whatcom County's point-based evaluation system for open space applications, where properties must score at least 45 points to receive staff recommendation for approval. **Conservation Easement:** A legal agreement restricting future development or use of land to protect its conservation values; 34 of the Lane property's 38.64 acres are protected by a Whatcom Land Trust easement. **Discretionary Points:** Up to 40 additional points that can be added to or subtracted from a PBRS score based on public benefits not covered by standard criteria. **Current Use Value:** Property tax assessment based on how land is currently used (like conservation) rather than its potential development value, resulting in significantly lower taxes. **Public Access Waiver:** County Council's authority to exempt open space properties from the usual requirement to allow public access, typically granted for sensitive wildlife habitat or archaeological sites. **Fish Barriers:** Human-made obstacles like culverts that prevent fish from reaching spawning habitat; the Lanes agreed to work with county Public Works to remove such barriers on their property. **Black Slough:** A salmon-bearing waterway system running through the Lane property, important for South Fork Chinook salmon rearing and a focus of county wetland restoration efforts. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Daniel Dunne | Planning Commission Chair | | Alexander Harris | County Planner II presenting the application | | Mark Personius | Planning & Development Services Director | | Ken and Cary Lane | Property owners/applicants (not present but referenced) | | Jon-Paul Shannahan | Environmental Programs Manager, Public Works (referenced in documents) | ### Background Conte…
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