February 2 - 8, 2017
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Congressman Rick Larsen Blaine 6th grader makes Birch Bay, meet your new neighborhood deputy, page 10 talks healthcare, page 5 national news, page 7
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Passion, pleas Travel ban provokes Peace Arch Park protest prevail as water-access remedies sought B y M at t S paw , W N PA O ly m p i a News Bureau
(See Water, page 3)
s Peace Arch Park was the site of a protest on January 29 held in response to an executive order signed by President Donald Trump Photo by Jack Kintner concerning immigration. For more photos, see page 15.
Demonstrations break out after rollout of new immigration order B y S t e fa n i e D o n a h u e The words “May these gates never be closed” inscribed on the Peace Arch monument echoed the sentiment of weekend demonstrators on January 29. A crowd estimated to be between 500 and 1,000 people flocked to Peace Arch Park for a rally held from 3:30 p.m. to dusk in response to an executive order issued by President Donald Trump. The order halts all refugee admission for 120 days, indefinitely bans Syrian refugees from admission and prohibits individuals from seven Muslim-majority countries – Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen – from en-
tering the country for 90 days. The action spurred nationwide protests after travelers were detained at airports across the U.S. Representatives from Washington, including congresswoman Suzan DelBene (WA-01), U.S. senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Patty Murray (D-WA) all spoke out against the orders. Washington State Attorney General Bob Ferguson initiated a lawsuit against the President, the Department of Homeland Security and other high-ranking officials. “I was feeling really saddened by the orders that were signed last week,” said Bellingham resident Jenn Mason. She helped
Blaine business owner to open wine bar and event space B y S t e fa n i e D o n a h u e With more than 20 years of experience owning a business in Blaine, one local entrepreneur is looking to expand. Alan Finston, owner of Blaine-based Whatcom Physical Therapy, purchased the former Bank of America building, located at 277 G Street, for $372,500 in an online auction in October 2016. Since then, he’s set his aim at opening a wine bar and event space this spring.
Project plans hinge on approval from Blaine City Council, which will soon be tasked with considering a text amendment to the city’s zoning code to, in part, allow eating and drinking establishments and food trucks within the Town Portal District. Finston’s new property falls within that district’s bounds, which span around Interstate-5, F Street and midway between 3rd and G street. Dubbed a “code scrub” by city staff, the amendment proposal also includes
a variety of changes to the city code to correct consequences of previously approved amendments – all requests were combined due to their relatively minor impact, according to a recent staff report. On January 26, Finston, his business associate and a representative from the Washington Hospitality Association spoke during a Blaine Planning Commission public hearing held to discuss the
organizer Jesse Stanton get the word out using Facebook. Nearly 5,000 were invited to join on the event page. Mason said she’s been a vocal proponent of social justice issues in the past, but the Peace Arch rally was something new. Bellingham City councilmember April Barker and Whatcom County councilmember Todd Donovan attended the event, Mason said. Another Facebook page, “No Ban, No Wall – U.S.,” announces another Peace Arch demonstration slated for 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Sunday, February 5. At press time, about 450 people had been invited to participate.
INSIDE
Some Whatcom County landowners appeared in Olympia last Tuesday to voice opinions on two bills aimed to relieve water access issues in rural Washington. The bills, SB 5024 and SB 5239, are a response to the Whatcom County v. Hirst Washington State Supreme Court decision, which ruled that counties must determine whether water is legally available before issuing a building permit for properties requiring private wells. The decision means counties must assess the effects water usage would have on aquifers and streams for fish and other uses. Counties previously relied on what the Department of Ecology (DOE) determined was available water, but the court ruling ruled against that method. The ruling resulted in temporary permit moratoriums in Whatcom and other counties, and an impassioned plea from one Whatcom County landowner displayed the intensity of the issue for those now affected by the court’s edict. As he was ending his remarks to the Senate Agriculture, Trade, Water and Economic Development Committee, Zach Nutting rose from his chair, stepped aside, then dropped to his knees to seek the committee’s support in resolving the issues. For Nutting that meant restoring his ability to get a building permit so he could construct his family home on 5 acres near Kendall. He told the committee he had sold his former house and moved onto the acreage to build his new home. After obtaining permits for electricity and other elements related to construction, he was denied a building permit. “We are technically homeless because we are thousands and thousands (of dollars) into this project. We have septic and electric, but we can’t have our building permit,” Nutting said. “I’m going to get on my knees and beg you to fix this.” Whatcom County Council passed the
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