About

Overview

Founded in 1993, Bellingham City Club is a non-partisan civic organization that fosters dialogue and debate on important issues facing our community. Bellingham City Club has over 450 members — citizens from diverse backgrounds cooperating to promote informed and civil discussion.

Programs

City Club meets for lunch on the fourth Wednesday of the month at the Bellingham Yacht Club, 2625 S. Harbor Loop Dr.

  • 11:30 a.m.:  Doors open
  • 11:45 a.m.:  Buffet lunch is served
  • 12:00 p.m.: Program start
  • 1:30 p.m.: Program end

Lunch costs $25 for members, $30 for non-members, $10 for youth under 25, and $10 for coffee and a cookie only (no meal).  A limited number of tickets may be available at the door. The program is open to the public.

MissionCity Hall

Our mission is to inform, connect, and engage our community to strengthen the civic health of our region.

Bellingham City Club provides a regular non-partisan forum for local citizens — both members and guests — who desire to explore topics of current interest.

We intend programs to enlighten, to advance thoughtful deliberation and, on occasion, to simply entertain.

By charter, we focus on our mission and choose not to overlap with or participate in the many fundraising and volunteer service opportunities delivered so effectively by other organizations

Objectives

  • Provide a forum for discussion
  • Analyze community issues
  • Discover common ground
  • Encourage responsible citizenship
  • Foster constructive problem solving

History

City Clubs have enhanced civil dialogue on important issues for decades. There are scores of City Clubs throughout the United States. The Chicago City Club boasts that it has influenced the occupants of the Illinois statehouse and the Chicago Mayor’s mansion since 1903. When President Bush sought to defend his Iraq strategy in politically important Ohio, he chose the Cleveland City Club for his speech and agreed to the Club’s insistence that questions from its members must be unvetted. On the West Coast, there are 11 City Clubs from Bellingham to San Diego that provide their members with thought-provoking programs and discussions of community issues.

The first general meeting of Bellingham City Club was held on a December 1993 evening downtown at The Leopold, then an operating hotel. The speaker was Superior Court Judge Marshall Forrest and the subject was sentencing guidelines.

At Bellingham City Club meetings you will notice that name tags include the year that a member joined the Club. For those that joined during our first year the term “Charter Member” is used. Charter members are a good source of information about our history.

Today there are more than 450 members who support Bellingham City Club and its mission, and participate in a vibrant and informed discussion at each program.

Founding Board

Throughout 1993 this hardworking group of community-minded citizens developed our charter, staffed out first committees and invited the public to join in our mission.

Dick Beardsley
Steve Brinn
Katy Casey
Patricia Decker
Bruce Disend
Bill Gorman
Jacqui MacConnell
Jeff McClure
Bill Palmer
Chuck Robinson
Phil Sharpe
Orphalee Smith
Kitty Stimpson

Organization

The organization documents below are pdf files, and require the free Adobe Reader to open.

BCC Bylaws Amended as of 5-26-21
06-22-22 BCC Annual Meeting Minutes