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Groups vie for official recognition
While the
county still hasn’t developed a process for
approving the formation of Rural Advisory Committees (RAC), that
hasn’t stopped several local groups from putting one together.
At least two groups will vie for the job of being Point Roberts
voice in Bellingham.
The proposed
committee will be the primary topic when the Point Roberts
Taxpayers Association holds their annual general meeting June
19. The association is proposing the Point’s RAC be
made up of 11 voting members, including three each from the chamber
of commerce, the taxpayers association and the voters association
and two at large members, one of which would need to be a resident
of the Point. Voting membership would be approved by county council.
Local elected boards and commissions, the county and the port
of Bellingham would hold non-voting seats.
While the
association board itself would meet the county’s
requirements to become the RAC for the Point, president Michael
Rosser said they were not proposing to take up that role, but
wanted public input about how the committee would be structured,
from which they would craft a proposal to submit to the county.
The
Economic Development Committee (EDC), which county planner
Amy de Vera Pederson had tapped as “the most representative
group” on the Point and a potential precursor to the
local RAC does not meet most of the county’s requirements
for those groups – meetings are closed to the public
and the group has no established business rules. Pederson
said she expects that group to decide by June 1 if they wish
to change their policies to put them in the running for RAC
status, which would mean they could access county funds set
aside for such a committee.
Some members
of the community have already submitted applications to the
county for Point Roberts RAC membership, even though such a
group has yet to form or gain county approval: Tom Hollett,
John Lesow and Sam Miller. Hollett said he and Lesow had drafted
a plan for a RAC made up of nine members, six at large and
three representing the chamber, taxpayers association and voters
association. Lesow presented the plan at the May 18 county
council meeting.
Hollett
said they did not envision a public process for choosing the
members of the RAC, but that he and Lesow had been “choosing
people to talk to” potential members and encouraging
them to apply to the county. Hollett said he feels a
RAC organized outside of any organizational umbrella
is the most representative choice. “It’s
a community group – that’s
the whole idea.”
Mike Peters,
who had previously submitted his application with Hollett,
Lesow and Miller, withdrew his application following May discussions
between taxpayers and voters association members about putting
together a joint proposal for a RAC. “The
voters and taxpayers will be coming together and since
they are the most inclusive groups on the Point I don’t
want to get in the way of that process,” he said.
Pederson
said there was no rush to get a committee together,
as the county still did not have a procedure for
developing and selecting one in place. “This issue will
likely be resolved through discussions with the county
executive,” she said.
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