Current Events

Document Actions
Whatcom County Current Events

Transit-Oriented Communities Come to Bellingham

Thanks to a small grant from the Community Food Co-op’s Member Affairs Committee, Futurewise Whatcom worked throughout the summer months to bring a new smart growth principle called ‘Transit-Oriented Communities’ to Bellingham for local policy makers and the community to learn about and employ. The grant covered a two-pronged effort, including a community forum called the “Transportation Tailgate” in July, and an informational exhibit that will be on display in Bellingham’s City Hall throughout August and September.

The principles of Transit Oriented Communities help us to think about land use and development in a manner that’s good for both people and the planet, envisioning urban growth patterns that give people choices in housing and transportation by creating more mixed-use and mixed-income neighborhoods with excellent pedestrian, bicycle and transit connectivity.

Transit Oriented Communities allow more people to access homes, jobs, and community services without relying on personal vehicles, thereby reducing household transportation expenses and promoting better physical health. Additionally, they help us ensure long-term environmental sustainability and prevent the conservation of natural resources by directing development away from working farms and forestlands, helping to protect food and fiber production, wildlife habitat, and water quality.

The community forum, ‘Transportation Tailgate,’ held in partnership with Sustainable Connections’ Green Building and Smart Growth Program, took place on a mild Saturday evening in July at Bellingham’s Parkade parking garage. About 150 folks packed in their camp chairs on the top floor to view 6 short film clips on transportation issues and solutions like physically separated bike lanes, increased parking turnover, downtown economic development, increased transit services, reduced parking incentives, and more. Panelists Ken Bothman (La Fiamma/Fiamma Burger), Bob Hall (Daylight Properties), Susan Horst (Smart Trips), Kyle Morris (The Hub Community Bike Shop) and Frank Ordway (Bellingham Transportation Commission) provided insights pertinent to local Bellingham issues for the audience in between films, and Mallard Ice Cream and Boundary Bay Brewery’s root beer floats capped the evening’s festivities for folks to enjoy with their sunset over Bellingham Bay.

Additionally, a traveling visual exhibit consisting of more than 10 color panels on the details of Transit Oriented Communities will hang in Bellingham’s City Hall through the end of September. We hope as many citizens and policy makers as possible will stop by for a visit and check out the principles comprising TOC, which are set up visually for the exhibit like a transit map as the viewer follows details on the context for planning, evidence of benefits, types of areas that could benefit, how to measure the benefits, and more.

The exhibit was created by Futurewise, the architecture firm of GGLO, and Transportation Choices Coalition and was made possible through the generous funding of the Bullitt Foundation, the Northwest Fund for the Environment and the Boeing Charitable Fund.  It has been in Seattle and Spokane most recently and will travel throughout the state during the next year. It is a companion piece to our publication Transit-Oriented Communities: A Blueprint for Washington State which can be downloaded here.

Thank you so much to the Community Food Co-op and their members for supporting innovating solutions like Transit Oriented Communities in OUR community! If we can utilize TOC principles for planning the next phase of our city’s development, quite possibly our future in Bellingham will be even better than the current place we all enjoy. 

You are here: Home » Futurewise Whatcom » Current Events
Breaking News
Whatcom County required to improve protections for drinking water and rural Whatcom County

On January 9, 2012, the Growth Management Hearings Board issued a 177 page opinion concluding that Whatcom County’s updated comprehensive plan policies and development regulations for the rural area failed to meet the minimum standards in the Growth Management Act. The appeal was brought by Futurewise, the City of Bellingham, and concerned community residents in response to a developer that wanted to build an intense urban style development at Governors Point on Puget Sound.

Jan 30, 2012
December Futurewire Now Online!

Our December electronic newsletter can now be found online. Read how we ended the year and what we're doing to gear up for 2012.

Dec 30, 2011
Futurewise achieves big legal wins in 2011

In 2011, Futurewise won cases in every forum from the Growth Management Hearings Board to the Washington State Supreme Court. One of Futurewise’s wins was even appealed to the United States Supreme Court, but as of the end of 2011, the Supreme Court had not decided to review the decision. Futurewise won 82 percent of the substantive decisions in which we participated in 2011.

Dec 26, 2011
Huge Victory for Spokane!

For over three years, Futurewise worked with the City of Spokane to create an effective Complete Street Policy, writing the policy, educating the community and policy makers, and building a wide coalition of supporters from health care workers, unions, educators, and local businesses. Last week, the City of Spokane adopted the Complete Street Policy by a vote of 5-2.

Dec 28, 2011
Futurewise, Stevens County negotiate deal to protect lynx, other habitat

Stevens County had been refusing to adopt common sense protections for the lynx and other habitats shown as polygons on Washington State Fish and Wildlife GIS databases for five years.

Dec 26, 2011

powered by Plone | site by Groundwire