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Real Briefings

Public Works and Natural Resources Committee, Bellingham City Council

BEL-CON-PWN-2026-05-11 May 11, 2026 Public Works Committee City of Bellingham 25 min
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The Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee convened on May 11, 2026, with Council Member Michael Lilliquist presiding, joined by Council Members Lisa Anderson and Dan Hammill. Council Member Jace Cotton was excused. The committee moved efficiently through five substantive items after a sixth — an ordinance amending the municipal code regarding electric vehicle charging stations — was removed from the agenda prior to the meeting. The most significant item on the afternoon's agenda was the Lake Whatcom Watershed Forest Management Plan, a joint resolution with the Whatcom County Council that, if adopted by the full councils, would formally establish a new ecological forest management framework for approximately 12,250 acres of city- and county-owned land within the Lake Whatcom watershed. Public Works Director Joel Font framed the plan as a milestone in the city's long-running effort to protect the lake — the drinking water source for over 120,000 people — and noted that draft reassessment data suggests Bellingham is approaching compliance with its phosphorus reduction obligations under the Lake Whatcom TMDL. The committee also approved forwarding two stormwater infrastructure contract awards: a $527,276 contract to Trio Companies LLC for Lake Whatcom Vault Retrofits Phase 1, and a $2,446,733 contract to Premium Services for Little Squalicum Water Quality Retrofits Phase 2 Re-bid. Both projects advance water quality goals and are partially funded by state Department of Ecology grants. A noise variance for Ziply Fiber to conduct nighttime directional boring under Alabama Street was approved, along with an agreement to extend city sewer service to a residence at 2863 Seaview Circle whose septic system had failed and was leaching into the bank above Bellingham Bay. All five items received positive committee recommendations for forwarding to the full Council. Discussion was brisk and collegial, with minimal disagreement. Council Member An

**1. AB 24922 — Sewer Service Extension to 2863 Seaview Circle** - **Action:** Committee voted to recommend authorization for the Mayor to enter into an agreement to extend sewer service outside city limits. - **Vote:** Unanimous (3-0, voices; no opposition recorded) - **Staff Recommendation:** Approval - **Key Details:** Residence at 2863 Seaview Circle (near Marine Drive and Bellingham Bay) notified by Whatcom County Health Department of failed septic system leaching sewage from a bank above the railroad tracks toward Bellingham Bay. Septic repair or replacement deemed infeasible due to limited available locations. Property is within the city's Urban Growth Area, is already a city water customer, and abuts an existing sewer main. The resident is pursuing an easement from a neighboring property to the east to run a lateral to the main. Authorized under Bellingham Municipal Code Section 15.36. - **Practical Significance:** This is an exception to the city's general policy against o…

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**Lake Whatcom Watershed Forest Management Plan (AB 24928)** This was the most substantive policy item of the afternoon. The plan represents a formal framework for managing approximately 12,250 acres of city- and county-owned forested land within the Lake Whatcom watershed — land that serves as the primary buffer protecting the drinking water supply for over 120,000 Whatcom County residents. Public Works Director Joel Font opened with context, noting that while progress on the lake can sometimes feel slow, the city is actively working on multiple fronts simultaneously. Citing draft reassessment data, Font stated that the city is "close to achieving its phosphorus reduction obligations under the Lake Whatcom TMDL" — a significant and notable disclosure. He also outlined a broader suite of ongoing efforts: a climate vulnerability study for the watershed, enhancements to the Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) ordinance related to private boat launches (discussed with the Water Resources Advisory Board), summer maintenance projects on watershed properties, and the Homeowner Incentive Program (HIPP) for working with private landowners. Superintendent Mike Pilskin then presented the plan's substance. The Forest Management Plan is a product of a 2024 interlocal agreement between the City of Bellingham and Whatcom County Parks and Recreation, jointly contracting consultant Northwest Natural Resources Group. The plan applies exclusively to city- and county-owned lands and does not impose requirements on private property. Combined, the two jurisdictions' land holdings within the watershed span approximately one-third of the total 36,000-acre watershed. The plan grew out of the 2025–2029 Lake Whatcom Management Program five-year work plan — the first such plan to include forest management as a standalone program area. The planning process involved multiple community engagement phases: online comment collection via the Engage Bellingham platform, stakeholder meetings with forestry and recreation interests, two public forest tours, a BTV video, a presentation to the Lake Whatcom Policy Group (attended by city and county council members and water/sewer district commissioners), and public comment on the draft plan. In Phase 2 engagement, 84% of survey respondents supported the plan's six objectives and vision. There was mixed …
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**Council Member Michael Lilliquist (Committee Chair)** Presented summaries of items 2 through 5, moved the sewer extension item, and conducted votes throughout. Asked Paul Reid specifically about noise impacts and neighbor notification for the Ziply Fiber work. Framed the sewer extension within the city's general policy context. Noted the Department of Ecology grant contribution to the vault retrofits project. **Council Member Lisa Anderson** Moved approval of the Little Squalicum Phase 2 contract, expressing support for water quality investments reaching "Salish Sea" and noting appreciation for state partnership funding. Asked the technically practical question about on-call water crew availability during the Ziply Fiber work, demonstrating operational familiarity with utility work. Described the sewer extension as "a little bit routine" given that options had been exhausted. **Council Member Dan Hammill** Moved approval of the Lake Whatcom Vault Retrofits contract. Expressed satisfaction that the Ziply Fiber variance was limited to two nights. Otherwise a limited presence in the transcript. **Paul Reid, Public Works Development Manager** Presented both the sewer extension and noise variance items. Provided technical detail on the Ziply Fiber bore pit approach, existing utility conflicts, potholing requirements, and resident notification requirements. Committed to following up with the water department regarding on-call readiness for the night work. **Jessica Bennett, Capital Group, Engineering Division** Presented the Lake…
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**Council Member Lisa Anderson, on the Little Squalicum Water Quality Retrofits project:** "Glad to see this going through every time we move forward with um water quality improvements that go out to Sailor Sea. I think it's money well spent and glad to see we're getting some partnership funding for this." *(Note: "Sailor Sea" is a transcription artifact; Anderson appears to have said "Salish Sea.")* **Council Member Michael Lilliquist, on the sewer extension:** "Our previous action on this …
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- **Ziply Fiber Night Work (AB 24925):** Scheduled for May 18–19, 2026 (two nights). Ziply Fiber must notify residents within approximately 500-foot radius at least 5 days prior. Paul Reid to alert water department on-call crew in advance. - **All approved committee items (AB 24922, 24923, 24924, 24925, 24928):** Forward to full City Council for action at a regular Council meeting (date not specified in source documents). - **Lake Whatcom Vault Retrofits Phase 1 (AB 24923):** Phase 2 contract anticipated in future. - **Little Squalicum Water Quality Retrofits Phase 2 (AB 24924):** Construction to…

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After this meeting, compared to before: 1. **Committee recommended full Council authorization** for the Mayor to enter into a sewer service extension agreement for 2863 Seaview Circle — a property previously without a pathway to city sewer service despite a failed septic system creating an active environmental hazard. 2. **Committee recommended award of two infrastructure contracts** totaling approximately $2.97 million: $527,276 to Trio Companies LLC for Lake Whatcom Vault Retrofits Phase 1, and $2,446,733 to Premium Services for Little Squalicum Water Quality Retrofits Phase 2. 3. **Committee recommended approval of a noise variance** for Ziply Fiber to conduct nighttime directional boring under Alabama Street on May 18–19, 2026 — work that had not yet bee…
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--- ## Meeting Overview The Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee convened on the afternoon of May 11, 2026, in Council Chambers at City Hall. Council Member Michael Lilliquist presided as chair, joined by committee members Lisa Anderson and Dan Hammill. Council Member Jace Cotton was noted as having an excused absence, though Lilliquist indicated Cotton would arrive later in the day. The committee had originally been scheduled to take up six items, but one — an ordinance amending Bellingham Municipal Code Chapter 11.37 regarding electric vehicle charging stations — had been pulled from the agenda in the days before the meeting. That left five substantive items, ranging from a routine sewer service extension for a homeowner with a failed septic system, to two construction contract awards tied to stormwater and water quality infrastructure, to a noise variance for fiber optic installation work, to the most substantial matter of the afternoon: formal committee action on a joint resolution with Whatcom County adopting a new Lake Whatcom Watershed Forest Management Plan. The meeting moved efficiently, with staff presentations kept brief and council discussion focused. No public testimony was taken — consistent with the committee format, in which standing members receive information, ask questions, and vote on recommendations to carry forward to the full Council. The mood was collegial and procedurally smooth, with the afternoon's most substantive conversation reserved for the forest management plan, where Public Works Director Joel Font offered an unusually candid reflection on the slow, complex work of protecting the region's drinking water source. --- ## Sewer Service Extension to 2863 Seaview Circle The first item to come before the committee was a request to extend city sewer service outside Bellingham's city limits to a single-family residence at 2863 Seaview Circle, located near Marine Drive and Bellingham Bay. The situation was, as Lilliquist put it, an exception to the city's general posture on such requests. Lilliquist summarized the background before turning it over to staff: "Our previous action on this is basically to repeal all outside extensions of water and sewer service unless there's exceptions needed. This is one of those cases." The exception was warranted by a public health emergency. The existing residence had been notified by the Whatcom County Health Department that its septic system had failed a…
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--- ### Meeting Overview The Bellingham City Council's Public Works and Natural Resources Committee met on May 11, 2026, chaired by Council Member Michael Lilliquist, with members Lisa Anderson and Dan Hammill (sitting in for Jace Cotton). The committee worked through five action items — one had been removed from the agenda before the meeting — covering utility service extensions, two stormwater construction contracts, a noise variance for a telecom project, and a landmark joint resolution to formally adopt the Lake Whatcom Watershed Forest Management Plan. --- ### Key Terms and Concepts **Septic system failure:** A breakdown of an on-site wastewater treatment system — typically a tank and drain field — that processes sewage from a property not connected to a municipal sewer. When a septic system fails, untreated sewage can leak into the ground or surface water, creating a public health and environmental hazard. **Urban Growth Area (UGA):** A boundary established under Washington State's Growth Management Act designating land where urban development is expected or planned. Properties within a UGA but outside city limits may be eligible to connect to city utilities under specific conditions. **Stormwater vault retrofit:** The process of upgrading existing underground structures that capture and filter stormwater runoff before it enters waterways. Retrofits can add or replace filtering media to improve pollutant removal, including phosphorus, without fully replacing the structure. **Phosphorus:** A nutrient that, when present in excess amounts in a lake, triggers algae blooms and reduces water quality — a particular concern for Lake Whatcom, Bellingham's primary drinking water source. Reducing phosphorus loading is a central goal of the city's watershed management efforts. **TMDL (Total Maximum Daily Load):** A regulatory calculation, established under the federal Clean Water Act, that sets the maximum amount of a specific pollutant a water body can receive while still meeting water quality standards. Lake Whatcom has a phosphorus TMDL that the city is legally obligated to meet. **Noise variance:** A formal exemption from a local noise ordinance allowing a contractor or entity to conduct work during restricted hours (typically nighttime) for a defined period. The City Council must vote to grant such variances. **Directional boring:** A trenchless construction method in which a machine drills horizontally underground to install conduit or pipe without cutting open the full surface of a road. It requires small entry and exit pits on either side of the obstacle being crossed. **Forest management plan / Ecological forest management:** A planning document that guides how forested land owned by a public agency is managed to achieve multiple goals — in this case, water quality protection, wildfire resilience, wildlife habitat, and climate adaptation. "Ecological" forest management means decisions are based on mimicking natural forest processes rather than imposing a uniform prescription. **Late-succession forest:** A mature forest ecosystem that has developed over a long period without major disturbance, typically characterized by large trees, diverse structure, standing dead wood, and ecological complexity — sometimes referred to as "old-growth characteristics." **Apprenticeship program requirement:** A provision in Bellingham's Municipal Code that requires contractors on larger public works projects to use a certain number of app…
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