News

Bellingham City Council to vote on grant award for police dept

Bellingham City Council to vote on grant award for police dept

Photo: Saga Communications/Sam Kristofferson


BELLINGHAM, WA (MyBellinghamNow.com) – The Bellingham Police Department is about to get a boost to its budget.

The city council will vote on Monday, May 18 to accept a grant award funded by the Washington Criminal Justice Training Commission.

A state public safety bill signed into law last year created a $100 million grant program designed to help law enforcement agencies add more positions.

BPD has been awarded $3.7 million, most of which will be used to support the department’s Alternative Response Team and offer additional training to current officers.

Three officer positions that were frozen as part of the city’s 2026 budget cuts will be partially reinstated with the grant funding. Two new full-time roles will also be added and supported through the grant.

Latest Headlines

1 day ago in Trending, World

SpaceX stock soars in debut and makes Elon Musk the first trillionaire

Elon Musk became the world's first trillionaire after shares of his rocket company SpaceX soared in Wall Street's biggest initial public offering of stock.

2 days ago in Entertainment, Music, Trending

Taylor Swift becomes the youngest woman inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame at age 36

Taylor Swift became the youngest woman ever inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame Thursday night at age 36. "It was instinctual. No one taught me how to do it," she said of songwriting through a raspy voice she attributed to screaming along to the night's performances and Wednesday night's historic NBA game between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs.

2 days ago in National

Man pleads guilty to killing a top Minnesota Democrat and her husband while posing as an officer

A Minnesota man who pounded on Democratic lawmakers' doors in the middle of the night while posing as a police officer, killing the state House speaker and her husband and wounding a state senator and his wife, pleaded guilty to murder Thursday so that federal prosecutors would not seek the death penalty.