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Real Briefings

Whatcom County Council Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee

WHA-CON-CJS-2026-05-12 May 12, 2026 Public Health & Safety Committee Whatcom County 15 min
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The Whatcom County Council's Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee advanced a significant resolution establishing budget parameters for the county's new jail and behavioral care center project, but only after extensive negotiations with city mayors and internal revisions. The committee voted 5-2 to recommend the revised substitute resolution that sets a $205 million budget cap for the jail and $34 million for the behavioral care center, while outlining governance commitments and providing policy direction to the administration. The meeting also featured a comprehensive report from District Court Administrator Jake Bush highlighting increasing caseloads, security concerns, and potential future capacity needs. Bush reported that jury trials have nearly tripled since pre-COVID levels (from 16 per year to 32-45), while civil protection orders require significantly more processing time due to enhanced procedural requirements. Both District Court judges emphasized urgent security needs, noting they frequently operate without bailiffs present during sensitive cases involving domestic violence and mental health court proceedings. The jail resolution represents weeks of collaborative work between council members and city mayors, with multiple drafts incorporating feedback from various stakeholders. The final version acknowledges existing booking restrictions in the interlocal agreement while directing advisory committees to identify funding sources for the broader Justice Project implementation plan's other 14 projects beyond the jail and behavioral care center.

**AB 2026-340 - Jail Budget Cap Resolution:** RECOMMENDED FOR APPROVAL 5-2 (Boyle, Buchanan, Galloway, Rienstra, Scanlon voted yes; Elenbaas, Stremler voted no) - Establishes $205 million budget cap for jail construction - Sets $34 million budget for behavioral care center ($20 million from sales tax/bonding, $14 million from grants) - A…

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The jail resolution sparked extensive debate about budget authority, long-term planning flexibility, and the balance between facility construction and service investments. Councilmember Elenbaas expressed concerns about constraining future council budget authority over a 7-10 year project timeline, arguing that changing circumstances might require different approaches. He advocated for tabling the resolution to let actions speak rather than detailed policy commitments. Councilmember Scanlon, who led the collaborative revision process, emphasized that the resolution simply affirms decisions already made and provides policy direction without constraining future budget authority. The discussion revealed ongoing tension about how to bal…
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**District Court Leadership (Jake Bush, Judge Anderson, Judge Rands):** Requested consideration for additional judicial capacity (second court commissioner) and enhanced courthouse security. Emphasized current staffing stability (zero turnover in 40-person department) but highlighted growing caseload pressures and security incidents. **City of Bellingham (Mayor Lund):** Provided detailed accounting of current service investments, projecting $10.5 million over five years for jail diversion and behavioral health services directly aligned with Justice Project goals, plus $60 million in 2026 for housing/homelessness/…
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**Jake Bush, on District Court caseload changes:** "What previously was like a six-step process for court staff to get prepared has now become like a 13-step process, at a minimum, about 30 minutes per filing." **Judge Anderson, on security concerns:** "I don't know how you would feel having your hearings without security. We have to on a daily basis and I can sneak out a back door, but not everybody in my courtroom has that ability." **Mayor Lund, on service investments:** "We are balancing…
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- Full County Council consideration of jail budget resolution scheduled for evening of May 12, 2026 - Councilmember Elenbaas indicated potential floor amendment regarding therapeutic benefits of new jail facility - IPRTF directed to provide recommendations on funding sour…

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After this meeting, the jail budget cap resolution advanced to full council with formal parameters established: $205 million for jail, $34 million for behavioral care center. The collaborative revision process with mayors was completed, incorporating city feedback while maintaining core council p…
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# Criminal Justice Committee Tackles Jail Budget Resolution After Emotional District Court Plea for Security ## Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council's Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee convened on May 12, 2026, for what would become a tale of two urgent priorities: the immediate security needs of an overworked district court system and the long-term planning for a multimillion-dollar jail and behavioral care center. The meeting unfolded in a hybrid format with all seven council members present, demonstrating the gravity of the decisions at hand. The agenda carried just two items, but both represented critical inflection points for the county's justice system. District Court administrators and judges painted a stark picture of rising caseloads, security threats, and the need for additional judicial capacity. This was followed by an intensive discussion of the controversial jail budget resolution that has consumed county politics for weeks, with mayors joining the conversation to advocate for their communities' needs. What emerged was a meeting that captured the tension between immediate operational needs and long-term strategic planning, between fiscal restraint and public safety imperatives, and between competing visions of how to address the county's justice challenges. ## District Court's Urgent Appeal for Resources and Security District Court Administrator Jake Bush opened his presentation with what appeared to be routine operational updates but quickly revealed a court system stretched to its breaking point. Standing alongside both Judge Rands and Judge Anderson, Bush methodically detailed how the complexity of court operations has exploded even as filing numbers have remained relatively stable. "What was once more of a finance involved is now something that we are taking on within the court," Bush explained, describing how even jury payments have evolved from simple check-mailing to an eleven-step procedure with debit cards. "It's kind of like looking underneath the hood of a car 30 years ago to today. Yes, very similar components, but it looks a lot different." The statistics Bush presented told a story of a system under strain. Civil protection orders, which averaged 279 cases pre-COVID, jumped to 320 in 2024 and 285 in 2025. But the raw numbers barely captured the reality. What was once a six-step process for court staff had become thirteen steps, requiring about thirty minutes of preparation per filing. Criminal judgment …
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### Meeting Overview The Whatcom County Council Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee met on May 12, 2026, with all seven council members present. The meeting featured two main items: a district court report highlighting operational challenges and growth needs, and continued discussion of a major resolution on jail and behavioral health facility construction budget caps and policy commitments. ### Key Terms and Concepts **District Court Probation:** A supervision program operated by the court for individuals convicted of misdemeanor crimes, providing community-based alternatives to jail time. **Blake Vacate Project:** Administrative effort to overturn approximately 4,000 drug possession convictions deemed unconstitutional by Washington State Supreme Court, completed proactively before state funding expired in 2027. **Court Commissioner:** Judicial officer with similar authority to judges except for jury trials (unless parties agree), who costs less than judges and doesn't run for election. **Protection Orders:** Court orders restraining individuals from contact or proximity to another person, processed in civil court but requiring extensive security protocols. **Justice Project Implementation Plan:** Comprehensive criminal justice reform blueprint with 15 total projects, including the jail/behavioral care center plus 14 service-focused projects. **IPRTF (Implementation Plan Review Task Force):** Advisory body tasked with reviewing progress on Justice Project goals and recommending funding strategies for ongoing reform efforts. **Booking Restrictions:** Current limitations on which crimes result in jail booking, mentioned in 2023 ordinance and interlocal agreements between county and cities. **Interlocal Agreement:** Contract between county and cities governing jail usage, cost-sharing, and operational policies, currently being updated to reflect new facilities and policies. ### Key People at This Meeting | Name | Role / Affiliation | |---|---| | Barry Buchanan | Committee Chair, Council Member | | Jon Scanlon | Council Member, Resolution Co-Author | | Elizabeth Boyle | Council Member, Resolution Co-Author | | Jessica Rienstra | Council Member, Resolution Co-Author | | Jake B. Bush | District Court Administrator | | Judge Anderson | District Court Judge | | Judge Rands | District Court Judge | | Mayor Lund | Bellingham Mayor | | Mayor Courtice | Lynden Mayor | | Rebecca Roberts |…
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