The Housing Chapter provides a comprehensive framework for ensuring a diverse, adequate, and affordable housing supply across all income levels and household types. It addresses housing choices and supply, affordability tools including the Housing Levy and incentive programs, neighborhood vitality, and special needs populations including the homeless and seniors. The chapter acknowledges that 20% of households are severely cost-burdened and commits the City to a range of regulatory and financial strategies to close the affordability gap.
“Only 4 of 55 Housing Chapter policies (7%) include a concrete, measurable commitment.” Real Record SAY vs DO analysis · Bellingham Comprehensive Plan
Real Record applies the SAY vs DO accountability framework to every chapter of every Washington comprehensive plan we publish. Each policy in the chapter is read individually and scored into one of four buckets:
The accountability score shown in the sidebar is the share of policies in the chapter that landed in the “Measurable” bucket. A score of 0–19 (red) indicates most policies use aspirational language without concrete accountability; 20–49 (orange) is mixed; 50 or higher (green) means the chapter is dominated by measurable commitments.
The underlying text comes from the official adopted comprehensive plan published by the Bellingham planning department. Scoring is performed by Real Record analysts using a structured rubric; the raw policy text and bucket assignments are archived in the Real Record civic data warehouse.
Read the full methodology, sources, and rubric at Real Record · About.
Real Record has not yet indexed any Bellingham briefings tagged to this chapter’s topics. Browse all Bellingham council and planning briefings to see related discussions in context.
View Bellingham Briefings →Departments related to Housing Chapter in Bellingham — what the city actually funds, year over year.