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City of Bellingham · Transparency

Bellingham Affordable Housing — three streams, one label

$7-9M/yr split across three voter-approved revenue streams, two funds, two RCW chapters

Bellingham's affordable-housing program is funded by three separately-authorized revenue streams (BHAH13 property tax + BELLINGHAM-AH property tax + 0.1% sales tax under RCW 82.14.530) totaling roughly $7-9M annually, depositing into two different funds (#181 + #182) — without a combined annual production report.

Active Transparency City of Bellingham

When a Bellingham council member says "the affordable housing levy," voters tend to picture one revenue stream. In fact there are three, approved at three different elections, governed by two different state statutes, and depositing into two different city funds. Combined annual revenue is roughly $7-9 million; combined annual unit production is not publicly aggregated.

The Finding

Bellingham collects roughly $7-9 million per year for "affordable housing" through three separately-authorized revenue streams that voters approved at three different elections, depositing into two different funds, governed by two different state statutes. The streams are usually labeled the same way ("Affordable Housing"), but the legal mandates and accounting treatments differ.

Stream A — Affordable Housing property-tax levy (BHAH13 district)

Stream B — Affordable Housing property-tax levy (BELLINGHAM-AH district)

Stream C — Affordable Housing 0.1% sales tax

Why this matters

When a city says "we have an affordable-housing levy," voters and journalists tend to think of one revenue stream. In Bellingham's case there are three streams approved across three elections, with combined annual revenue likely in the $7-9M range. The fragmentation has consequences:

  • Aggregate accountability is hard. Each stream's accounting lives in different schedules; combined annual production (units financed, projects funded) requires manual aggregation.
  • Each stream's authorization is independent. Voters approving Stream C in 2015 may not have known about Streams A and B; voters approving Stream A in 2012 didn't know what would come later.
  • Fund routing is split. Streams A and B go to Fund 181; Stream C goes to Fund 182. Each fund has its own balance, transfer pattern, and capital-plan line.

The structural pattern

This is the Affordable Housing example of a broader pattern at City of Bellingham: programs funded by 3+ separately-authorized revenue streams labeled the same way. From the project memory:

  • Greenways: 3 voter levies (Greenway II, III, V) + endowment
  • Public Safety: general fund + Levy 120 + EMS + pensions + bonds
  • Parks: general fund + Greenway portion + impact fees + REET

What we'd want to know

  • Combined annual production: how many units of affordable housing have been financed by all three streams together, year by year?
  • Combined cumulative revenue 2012-2025: rough estimate is $50-100M; what's the actual?
  • Per-stream allocation: of each year's $7-9M, how much goes to (a) loan/grant capital, (b) operating support, (c) administrative overhead, (d) reserves?
  • Coordination between Funds 181 and 182: do projects ever receive funding from both? Is the program run as one or two?

Connected on Real Record

The funds, revenue sources, and levies this investigation analyzes — with live cumulative figures from the Real Record database. Click any to see year-by-year detail.

Public records requests to file

If you want to push this further, here are the documents that should be requested under WA Public Records Act (RCW 42.56).
  1. Combined Affordable Housing program annual report 2012-2025 — units produced, projects funded, dollars granted vs. loaned, by year and by stream.
  2. Audit reports for Fund 181 and Fund 182 — annual schedules of revenues, expenditures, and transfers.
  3. Bellingham 2015 voter pamphlet for Proposition (Affordable Housing Sales Tax) — what voters were told the money would do.
  4. Whatcom Housing Alliance loan portfolio summary — projects funded, loan terms, repayment status.
  5. Bellingham staff report comparing Stream A, Stream B, Stream C accountability — if one exists internally.

Discussed in meetings

Real Briefings that touch on this investigation's subject.
The Bellingham City Council held its regular meeting on June 15, 2026, completing a moderately active agenda that included one public hearing, several actions emerging from ...
The Bellingham City Council's Community and Economic Development Committee met on June 15, 2026 for a single-item informational session: a presentation on the newly launched ...
The Bellingham City Council's Budget and Finance Committee convened on June 1, 2026, for a single informational item: the formal kickoff of the city's 2027 budget development ...
The Bellingham City Council held its regular meeting on Monday, June 1, 2026, with Council President Hannah Stone excused and Council Member Hollie Huthman presiding as Council ...
The Bellingham City Planning Commission met on May 21, 2026, for a work session focused on residential zoning strategy. The meeting had no formal action items and no public ...
The Bellingham City Council's May 18, 2026 regular meeting was anchored by a substantive and emotionally resonant presentation from the Keep Washington Working Act (KWW) Advisory ...
The Whatcom County Council held a significant meeting on May 12, 2026, dominated by extensive public testimony and debate over the proposed Lummi Island ferry taxing district. The ...
The Bellingham City Council held a compact regular meeting on May 11, 2026, completing business in under an hour. The meeting's most consequential action was the adoption of ...

Methodology & sources

Levy revenues from tax_district_levies (Whatcom County Annual Tax Books). Sales-tax increment per RCW 82.14.530; per-year actuals not yet ingested into our system. The fund routing comes from the City's Chart of Accounts. The structural pattern (multiple separately-authorized streams labeled the same way) is documented in the Affordable Housing topic page.

How Real Record investigations work: we render the documented spending pattern as published in primary sources (PRR data, CAFRs, capital plans, meeting records). Where the structural pattern is consistent with a finding, we describe it in plain language without editorializing the policy outcome. Public records cited here are available to all; this page is research, not legal opinion.