Bellingham trail to close months-long for fish ladder project
A portion of Interurban Trail in Bellingham will close for several months while the city removes two fish passage barriers along Padden Creek.
The city says removing these barriers will make the crossings 100% passable for fish, including Chinook, coho, and chum salmon, steelhead, and sea-run cutthroat trout, as well as resident fish species.
The closure will be between 12th and 14th streets south of Old Fairhaven Parkway.
Trail users will likely be detoured around the trail between 10th Street and Fairhaven Park during construction.
City Council members unanimously approved a construction contract on May 19 for the $4.3 million project.
According to the Public Works Department, a grant from the state Department of Fish and Wildlife is paying for a good portion of the design and construction.
The construction is expected to begin in late June and wrap up in February of 2026.
City officials are planning an informational open house to discuss the project on June 9 at Happy Valley Elementary School. It will take place from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.
This project is part of Bellingham's overarching Fish Passage Improvement Program – something that began in 2003.
'Improving these structures is an important way to increase habitat for fish and improve overall stream function,' a memo from the city states.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
NYC Mayor Eric Adams helps save Trump-linked Bally's casino bid with show of support
Mayor Eric Adams put his chips on the table for Bally's. The City Council voted to advance legislation Wednesday that would allow gaming operator Bally's to convert part of President Trump's former Bronx golf course into a casino — after the mayor intervened to help secure its passage. The proposal — referred to as a home rule message — requires 34 votes from the council for passage without the mayor's backing. But only 26 votes are needed — a simple majority, if the mayor declares his support. At the 11th hour on Wednesday, Adams issued a formal message of support to the council, and the measure passed 32-12, with seven abstaining. It means the bill can now be take up by the state Legislature. If approved, it would allow the golf course property, currently designated as state parkland, to be repurposed as a casino complex. Bally's will then be able to submit a bid for one of three covered downstate state casino licenses later this month. The firm hopes to build a 500,000-square-foot casino on the Bronx site by its golf course — now called Bally's Golf Links at Ferry Point — along with a 500-room hotel with a spa and meeting space, retail shops, a 2,000-seat event center and two parking garages with capacity for up to 4,660 vehicles. The City Council and Albany lawmakers recently approved such land use legislation allowing Mets owner Steve Cohen and Hard Rock to repurpose some of the lots around Citi Field for a casino complex. Cohen's bill got little to no resistance from the council — but Bally's, with its Trump connection, did. As part of the deal to acquire the golf course at Ferry Point in 2023, Bally's agreed to provide the Trump Organization an additional $115 million if it wins a casino license. As The Post previously reported, a council vote on Bally's proposal was postponed two weeks ago — provoking criticism from its CEO Soo Kim, who also fumed that lobbyists for rival bidder Cohen were allegedly whipping up votes against him. Bronx Democrats back the project. But Councilwoman Kristy Marmarato, a Republican whose district includes Bally's Golf Link at Ferry Point, opposes it. Her opposition triggered five of her GOP colleagues — including Council Minority Leader Joanne Ariola — to vote against the project that could benefit the president and his company. During the vote, Marmarato said her constituents opposed the proposed casino and blasted 'outside interference' and 'special interests' lobbying. City Hall insisted the mayor pushed for Bally's to get a fair hearing from the state Gaming Commission with its casino bid, and wasn't putting his thumb on the scale for the gaming operator or Trump. 'Mayor Adams supports a fair process with as many competitive casino bids in New York City as possible, each of which would bring good-paying union jobs and an economic boost to the community,' an Adams spokesman said. 'It does not matter which proposal is selected by the state so long as it's in New York City. We would be supportive of more than one selection in New York City, but that requires more than one competitive proposal.' Bally's applauded the Council's action. 'We appreciate the City Council, including the Speaker and Bronx Delegation in particular, for recognizing the opportunity that this project can afford to the Bronx and the City as a whole. Their actions today allow us to move forward to the next step of making this happen for NYC,' said Christopher Jewett, Bally's senior vice president of corporate development. He said Bally's has been a 'good neighbor' and will continue to work closely with elected officials and residents. Cohen's team declined to comment.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
NYC council signs off on bid to grant lifetime pensions for slain NYPD cop's kids: ‘Honoring her today'
The City Council voted unanimously Wednesday to back a proposed tweak in state law that will allow the children of a slain NYPD cop to collect her pension — the final hurdle for the bill to go to a vote in Albany. 'My mom embodied the American dream,' said Genesis Villella, who adopted her two younger siblings after her mom, Miosotis Familia, was gunned down execution-style in the Bronx in 2017. 'For years, the city that she grew up in, loved and protected, didn't love her back,' Villella, 28, said before the vote. 'In fact, they tried to erase her and me, but I want to make it known that my mom is a hero and will always be the hero of my lifetime and today, that erasure and discrimination ended.' The family's dilemma stemmed from an overlooked and outdated state law that awards lifetime pensions to the spouses and parents of law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty — but makes no mention of their children, a significant oversight for single parents like Familia. The state proposal would amend the law so that it 'provides for children who were under the age of 25 when the death of the member occurred to receive an accidental death benefit for their lifetimes.' But before legislators in Albany can consider the move, New York City officials have to sign off because state law requires support from the local entity affected by the change. 'Young people like Genesis shouldn't have to take on the impossible and then be told they're invisible by the law,' Council Majority Leader Amanda Farias (D-Bronx) said during a press briefing. 'So, what we've done here was actually replicate what's already within the pension system for spouses and other family members of our officers for her children,' Farias said. 'And so this will, going forward, help other families in the NYPD.' For Villella, Wednesday's vote brings her one step closer to what has been a grueling fight. 'When I was 17, my mom made me promise her that I would take care of my brother and sister if anything were to happen because of the job,' she said. 'Because there was a target on her back and every other cop's back for years. 'I kept my promise to my mom by adopting and raising my brother and sister, Peter and Delilah, and raising them on my own as a mom and a dad when I was barely an adult.' Villella was a young college student when her mom, a 12-year department veteran, was sitting in a mobile command post on July 5, 2017, when deranged gunman Alexander Bonds walked up and shot her. Bonds was later shot dead by police. The tragedy forced Villella to abandon school and focus on raising her twin siblings — both of whom are now enrolled at Marist College, she said. Villella struggled financially to make ends meet because under the existing law, her brother and sister only qualified for benefits until they turned 21. Villella herself would have earned benefits until she turned 23 had she stayed in college, but she had to drop out to care for her younger siblings. After Wednesday's council vote, she is one step away from fulfilling her promise to her mom. 'Now the orphaned children who had no one are going to be receiving the death benefits for the rest of our lifetimes, just like the surviving spouses and the surviving parents,' she said. 'Orphan children, the children who have nobody, are going to be taken care of just the way they should.'

Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Poll shows low-profile New York City comptroller race narrowing in the home stretch
NEW YORK — A new poll shows the race for New York City comptroller tightening, with Justin Brannan narrowing the gap in a contest still led by Mark Levine. And with less than two weeks until the Democratic primary, nearly half of New Yorkers remain undecided in the race to be the city's top fiscal watchdog, according to the poll Brannan's team commissioned and shared in full with POLITICO. It was conducted by Public Policy Polling, and queried 573 likely primary voters between June 6 and 7, with a 4.1 percent margin of error. Levine, the Manhattan borough president, led Brannan — the City Council finance committee chair — 30 percent to 19 percent among likely Democratic voters, according to the poll. That same survey showed state Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani leapfrogging Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic mayoral primary. The 11-point gap was smaller than a May 27 survey from Honan Strategy Group that had Levine at 38 percent and Brannan at 13 percent, a shift that left the Brooklyn lawmaker's team feeling bullish. Both surveys found 44 percent of likely voters undecided. 'A race that was once considered locked up is now anything but,' Brannan campaign adviser Alyssa Cass wrote in a campaign memo shared with POLITICO. 'As nearly half the electorate remains undecided, Brannan is the candidate with the most room to grow and the clearest path to an upset.' Brannan's team believes the tides will continue to shift in his favor. They cited the smaller gap that came after 10 days of going on air with a television ad along with a niche stat from their poll: Of voters who had seen Brannan's ads, they preferred him 40 percent to 37 percent. Those viewers, however, made up a small slice of the electorate at 23 percent. And it was unclear how many of those people knew of Levine or his campaign. Levine's camp countered that the polls have consistently shown him ahead of Brannan by double digits. And they touted the endorsement Wednesday night of a major municipal labor group. 'Mark has all the momentum in this race. We just earned the endorsement of the United Federation of Teachers, representing hundreds of thousands of NYC public school educators — adding to the 180-plus elected officials, faith leaders, labor unions and community groups backing our campaign,' Campaign Manager Matt Rubin said in a statement. 'Right now, we're focused on connecting with New Yorkers where they are — on the streets, at subway stops and at their doors.' A person on Levine's team also took issue with the survey methodology, suggesting it over sampled Brannan's home borough of Brooklyn — especially with affluent voters — and under sampled Black voters Levine is doing better with. The Public Policy Polling showed few New Yorkers have barely tuned into the contest: More than half of those surveyed had no opinion about the favorability of the two candidates, and around half of the likely Democratic primary voters had not seen an ad for either. Brannan and Levine were the only two comptroller candidates to qualify for a pair of televised debates, which mainly showcased how little they differ on policy. During their first meeting, they engaged in several back-and-forths over President Donald Trump and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, but had a conspicuous aversion to talking about Andrew Cuomo, who at the time had been leading the mayoral Democratic primary in every poll.