Bellingham City Council (Special Meeting)
On August 5, 2024, the Bellingham City Council convened a special meeting at the Public Works Operations Center for an approximately three-hour presentation and workshop on the City's Fiber Network Comprehensive Plan. The session was informational only — no votes were taken and no formal direction was given. Four of the seven council members attended in person; Mayor Kim Lund participated remotely. The meeting drew together council members, city staff, members of the Broadband Advisory Workgroup (BAW), and consultants from Uptown Services of Boulder, Colorado, who have spent the past ten to twelve months developing the plan. The evening's central revelation was both technically detailed and financially sobering: while the City of Bellingham operates a fiber optic network that serves critical municipal functions — traffic signals, the regional 911 system, Whatcom County's Emergency Operations Center, and Bellingham Public Schools — that network was not built to carrier-class standards and is not currently ready to support third-party revenue generation. The physical infrastructure is aging, much of it housed in street-light conduit designed for copper wire, with hundreds of vaults too small or too poorly configured to safely support the fiber already inside them. An estimated $8 million in vault and conduit upgrades is needed regardless of whether the city ever pursues commercial broadband service. Uptown Services evaluated three commercial service scenarios: leasing dark fiber (Scenario 1A), leasing lit fiber to commercial accounts (Scenario 1B), and full last-mile retail broadband to all premises in the city (Scenario 2). The key financial finding: none of the three scenarios is financially self-sustaining. All three would require ongoing city subsidy — from general fund transfers or upfront equity infusions — to remain operational over a twenty-year horizon. The last-mile scenario, which would deliver the greatest community benefit and strongest consumer demand,
This was an information and discussion session. **No formal votes were taken.** The following describes the substantive findings and recommendations presented: **AB 24196 — Presentation and Workshop on City Fiber Network Comprehensive Plan** - **Type:** Information/Discussion - **Vote:** None (workshop format) - **Staff/Consultant Recommendation:** No formal recommendation made; Uptown Services stated explicitly that they do not make normative recommendations on which scenario to pursue — that is a policy decision for the city. - **Key findings presented:** 1. The existing fiber network is functional for mu…
1. **Public Works and Natural Resources Committee presentation:** Staff (Joel Pfundt) stated that a condensed version of the Fiber Network Comprehensive Plan findings will be brought to the PWN Committee for further discussion and direction. No date specified. 2. **OTDR testing RFP:** Uptown Services recommended the city issue an RFP for OTDR testing of all 2,400+ patch panel ports (~$144,000 estimated cost) as the first step in the infrastructure remediation sequence. Timeline: not specified, but framed as the immediate next step before vault upgrades. 3. **Vault upgrade RFP:** Uptown recommended issuing an RFP for up to 845 vault/handhole upgrades (estimated $8 million total) in parallel with OTDR testing to avoid sequential delays. Timeline: as soon as OTDR RFP is issued. 4. **Southwest route fiber augmentation:** Hold fiber…