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White Salmon council prioritizes shared utilities in Planning Commission work plan

April 01, 2026 | White Salmon, Klickitat County, Washington


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White Salmon council prioritizes shared utilities in Planning Commission work plan
Mayor Pro Tempore David Lindley and the White Salmon City Council on Feb. 4 approved the Planning Commission's 2026 work plan with shared utilities set as Priority 1.

Planner Rowan Fairfield presented the Commission's draft, summarizing prior feedback that showed strong interest in advancing shared utilities, limited interest in addressing trash-can nuisances and e-bike regulations, and conditional interest in parking only if the Commission returns to Council before beginning work. Fairfield said staff expects the work to be largely Commission-led given a lighter docket.

The decision matters because shared utilities can enable increased housing density by allowing developers and property owners to share trenching and service infrastructure, a point Council Member Doug Rainbolt and others cited when urging the Council to study best practices from other jurisdictions. Rainbolt also pressed for proportionality in any fee or ordinance changes and recommended public engagement and pre-approved building plans to reduce development costs.

Planning Commission Chair Carl Trabant and Planner Fairfield cautioned that informal outreach risks violating the Open Public Meetings Act and ex parte rules, and warned that a full review of multiple municipal code titles (Titles 16') would present a significant workload for staff. Council Member Patty Fink urged clarifying code language rather than undertaking a full rewrite and supported structured, staff-supported engagement.

After discussion, Council reached consensus to remove Activities 2, 3 and 6 from the Commission list and to retain Activities 1 (shared utilities), 4, 5 and 7, with Activity 1 designated Priority 1. Council moved to approve the work plan and the motion passed 4-0 (Ben Giant, Patty Fink, Doug Rainbolt and David Lindley voting Aye).

The Council and staff said the work plan is intended to be a living document, with a suggested mid-year check-in and advance Council input on downtown parking before the Commission proceeds.

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