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Real Briefings

Planning Commission

BEL-PLN-2026-04-23 April 23, 2026 Planning Commission Meeting City of Bellingham
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The Bellingham Planning Commission held an informational meeting to review the draft 2026 Parks, Recreation & Open Space (PROS) Plan, which will guide the Parks Department's development over the next 20 years. Parks staff presented the significantly rewritten plan that shifts focus from aggressive expansion to improving existing facilities and addressing service gaps. The plan proposes $225 million in projects, including a community recreation center, new aquatic facilities, 30 additional trail miles, and enhanced amenities across the park system. The presentation revealed Bellingham's exceptional parkland ratio—30 acres per 1,000 residents compared to the national average of 9 acres—but highlighted deficiencies in recreational amenities, particularly year-round indoor facilities. Commission members provided feedback on key priorities including indoor aquatics, skate park improvements, multilingual signage, lighting for safety, and managing homelessness impacts in parks. The plan emphasizes equity-based project prioritization, with particular attention to underserved areas in north Bellingham and the Samish Crest area. After Parks and Recreation Advisory Board approval on April 8, the plan will proceed to City Council consideration on May 11, then return to Planning Commission for formal adoption as part of the comprehensive plan through the Type VI process.

This was an informational meeting with no formal votes taken. The primary action was receiving staff presentation and Planning Commission feedback on the draft 2026 PROS Plan. The Parks and Recreation Advisory Bo…

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**Parks System Evolution**: Peter Gil outlined Bellingham's parks history from 1884 to present, showing dramatic growth spurts during the New Deal era and after the 1990s greenways levy implementation. Recent growth includes four new parks, significant acreage additions like Galbreath Mountain (2,000 acres in 2018), and 30% staffing increases over five years. **Service Standards Analysis**: The plan compares Bellingham to peer Northwest cities and national averages across four criteria: quantity, distribution, condition, and amenities. While Bellingham excels in parkland acres (30 per 1,000 residents vs. 9 nationally) and trail miles (85 vs. 15 for similar cities), it la…
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**Planning Commission Members**: - **Jed Ballew** emphasized indoor amenities for year-round use, citing aquatics and skate park deficiencies compared to British Columbia facilities. Raised concerns about restroom design for homelessness management and potential school district partnerships for aquatic facilities. - **Daniel Bloemker** sought clarification on greenways funding use, particularly distinguishing between Lake Whatcom watershed acquisitions (funded by stormwater fees) and parks development (greenways levy). - **Lisa Marx** praised the presentation and community engagement efforts, …
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**Nicole Oliver, on plan development:** "This has been a really significant rewrite of the pros plan. It's modified quite substantially in the framework and format. We kind of were inspired by the work that was done by the planning department on the Bellingham plan." **Peter Gil, on service standards:** "We have almost 30 acres per thousand people in Bellingham. I think nationally for cities our size it's nine acres. So we're like three times at least. We have 85 miles of trails. Similar citi…
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- **May 11, 2026**: City Council consideration of PROS Plan adoption - **May 21, 2026**: Planning Commission meeting on residential zoning updates, discussing low-density zoning replacement and final middle housing regulations - **June 2026**: First meeting to address parking ordinance discussion, includin…

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- **Plan framework**: Significant rewrite from previous format, inspired by Bellingham Plan structure with thematic chapters and integrated public engagement results - **Growth strategy**: Shift from aggressive expansion to moderate growth focused on improving existing facilities rather than building new - **Public engagement process**: First PROS Plan update without traditional public hearing, relying instead on robust community…
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## Meeting Overview The Bellingham Planning Commission convened on April 23, 2026, at 6:00 PM for a special meeting focused on reviewing the draft 2026 Parks, Recreation, and Open Space Plan. This presentation-style meeting was designed specifically for the Planning Commission to provide feedback on the plan before it proceeds to City Council consideration on May 11, 2026. Planning staff Elizabeth and Parks Department coordinator Peter Gil, along with Parks Director Nicole Oliver participating virtually, led the presentation of what represents a significant rewrite of Bellingham's parks planning document. The meeting was part of the broader process of implementing functional plans under the new Bellingham comprehensive plan framework adopted in December 2025. Unlike previous years, this plan update did not include a formal public hearing before the Planning Commission, as the department had conducted extensive public engagement throughout the planning process. The plan had already received approval from the Parks and Recreation Advisory Board on April 8, 2026. ## The Parks and Recreation System Today Peter Gil opened with a historical perspective that underscored Bellingham's long-standing commitment to parks and recreation. "Bellingham has long taken pride in its parks. As far back as 1935, the Bellingham Herald wrote that no city of its size in the Northwest had a finer system of public playgrounds, and that legacy has only grown since," Gil noted, tracing the system's evolution from the 1884 donation of Elizabeth Park by the Rotor family through the transformative greenways levies that began in 1990. The data Gil presented painted a picture of a system in significant expansion. The city now maintains 3,180 acres across 57 parks and open space properties, with particularly dramatic growth in recent years. "Really in the last five years we've done quite a bit of growth," Gil explained. "We've added four new parks from Storybrook, Cordata Park. We've added Little Squallicum Pier. We've enhanced existing parks like Sunset Pond Trail Loop was just put in. New trails at 100 Acre Wood. We've done restoration projects, 100 acre wood as well as Boulevard Park beach enhancement. Staffing has also grown especially on th…
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### Meeting Overview The Bellingham Planning Commission held a discussion meeting on April 23, 2026, to review the draft 2026 Parks, Recreation, & Open Space Plan (PROS Plan). Peter Gil from the Parks Department, along with Director Nicole Oliver (participating remotely), presented the updated 20-year plan before it goes to City Council for consideration on May 11th. ### Key Terms and Concepts **PROS Plan:** The Parks, Recreation & Open Space Plan - a 20-year functional plan that guides the growth and development of Bellingham's parks system, updated every six years to maintain eligibility for state and federal grants. **Greenways Levy:** A voter-approved funding mechanism that makes up about 40% of the parks department's funding, used for capital projects and operating costs including staff salaries. **Service Standards:** Four criteria used to evaluate the parks system: quantity (acres per person, trail miles), distribution (how well spread throughout city), condition (safety and maintenance), and amenities (recreational facilities). **10-minute walk shed:** A planning metric showing that 70% of Bellingham residents can walk to a park or trail within 10 minutes of their home. **Type VI process:** A formal adoption process where functional plans like the PROS Plan are incorporated into the comprehensive plan after City Council approval. **Lake Whatcom Watershed Acquisition Fund:** A separate funding source (not greenways) from stormwater bills used specifically for purchasing land to protect the city's drinking water watershed. **Portland Loos:** Indoor-outdoor restroom facilities designed to stay open more of the year and address public restroom needs while managing inappropriate usage. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Peter Gil | Parks Planning & Development Coordinator | | Nicole Oliver | Parks & Recreation Director (remote) | | Elizabeth (surname not given) | City Planning Department staff | | Jed Ballew | Planning Commission member | | Daniel Bloemker | Planning Commission member | | Lisa Marx | Planning Commission member | | Dean (surname not given) | Planning Commission member | ##…
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