The Happy Valley neighborhood is home to 7,059 residents living within 633 acres making it the most densely populated neighborhood in Bellingham, according to the 2010 United States census. The majority of the other 25 neighborhood populations range from about 2,000 to 5,000 people living in similar or larger sized neighborhood boundaries.
Only about 3.1 percent of all reported crimes including theft, traffic offenses, domestic violence and malicious mischief committed in Bellingham since 2007 have occurred in Happy Valley, according to the Bellingham Police crime statistics.
Although the crime rate is low and many residents view Happy Valley as a safe neighborhood, other residents such as Sonja Duncan said the neighborhood has excessive noise and nuisance problems involving large parties.
Duncan was taking a leisurely bath at her home late one evening in May when she heard noise coming from downstairs. Assuming it was her cat knocking things over or her son sleep walking she threw on a T-shirt and underwear and opened the bathroom door to find an unfamiliar young man standing in front of her.
"He swayed backwards and I realized he was blind drunk," she said.
She ran past him, purposefully knocking him over. She grabbed her phone and ran into her sons' room to call the police.
Police found the man on the side of the road and arrested him on suspicion of criminal trespassing, according to the Bellingham daily police report.
Duncan said this incident is a reflection of the problem of "party crimes" in Happy Valley. She said most often the problem is loud noise but occasionally there are nights when "people get mean" and bash in mailboxes or damage property.
"Many of us [in the neighborhood] have a lot of tolerance for behavior, we understand these are college kids," she said. "But this is not okay."
Wendy Borgesen, who has lived in Happy Valley for about 20 years, is also concerned with crimes that take place on the weekends when some students party.
She said there is yelling and screaming Friday and Saturday nights on a regular basis.
"But my biggest concern is when people drive drunk," she said.
Some students have told her to call them if they are too loud and she said she appreciates that.
"It's not that we don't like students," she said. "We just want them to be respectful. I would like for people to be more aware of each other and have peaceful co-existance."
Borgesen said the only other incident of crime she has experienced was in 2002 when her house was broken into and bonds and money were stolen. Although a victim of burglary, Borgesen said she thinks it was an isolated incident and she is more concerned with "party crimes."
Mark Young, Bellingham Police Public Information Officer, said historically the three most reported crimes in Happy Valley are traffic offenses, nuisance and noise complaints.
For general crime prevention, including party nuisance and noise, Young suggests reporting any suspicious persons or situations, keeping porch lights on, doors locked and not keeping valuables in unattended vehicles.
He said, "These are very general tips but very helpful in reducing the risk of being victim of crime."
A source of information about community issues affecting the residents of Happy Valley
Monday, June 27, 2011
Wednesday, June 1, 2011
Padden Creek Daylighting Project in Final Design Phase: City hopes to start construction in 2013
Since 1978 Richard Sullivan has lived in the Happy Valley neighborhood on the corner of 22nd Street about 100 feet from the Padden Creek tunnel. During heavy storms Sullivan said the tunnel gets clogged with debris causing the water to overflow into his property.
“We live in a hole,” he said. “The street level is a couple feet higher than our car port. When it rains we call [our place] Sullivan lake.”
He said he and his neighbors are forced to purchase government flood insurance because the area they live in is considered a flood plain due to the creek running through the tunnel rather than in a natural water flow pattern.
The tunnel, built in the 1890s, created an unnatural flood plain, said Bill Reilly, Storm and Surface Utility manager for the city of Bellingham. He said the city works hard to keep the tunnel free of debris when it storms.
“It’s become a maintenance issue,” he said.
Another problem with the tunnel is that it prevents salmon from swimming up the creek to spawn, Sullivan said.
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The beginning of the tunnel on 22nd Street and Old Fairhaven Parkway. Photo by Erin Nash |
Another problem with the tunnel is that it prevents salmon from swimming up the creek to spawn, Sullivan said.
Padden Creek runs through about 2,300 feet of tunnel from 20th to 22nd Street. In the past, fish have been stacked at the end of the tunnel downstream trying to get up it, Reilly said.
Rachel Vasak, Executive Director of the Nooksak Salmon Enhancement Association, said for years they have helped transport fish from below the tunnel to above the tunnel to help them migrate.
According to NSEA, a decline in the ability of a stream to support the rearing of young salmon indicates a decline in the overall health of the ecosystem. The salmon in Whatcom County have become an endangered resource as the salmon population has declined and several species have been listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, according to NSEA.
Providing access to spawning grounds by opening up Padden Creek would create a healthier population of salmon, Vasak said.
Sullivan said the city wants to daylight the part of the creek that runs underground through the tunnel, which means opening it up by rerouting it above ground to a more natural flow.
In January 2011 the city of Bellingham won a combination of about $2 million in grants and loans from the Department of Ecology for the daylighting project. The city also came up with $1.2 million itself, which so far has been used to conduct a project report and purchase property for project use. The city currently has $700,000 remaining in allocated funds, Reilly said.
The city lobbied the State to participate in the project because Old Fairhaven Parkway, a state highway, is using the existing tunnel for water conveyance under its road.
In 2009, the Washington Department of Transportation informed the city it had $1 million from the state to improve the fish passageway along Old Fairhaven Parkway. This money stimulated the daylighting project into the final design phase after which the city will have more fixed costs for the project, Reilly said.
Reilly said the state plans to start construction in 2013.
“We hope to be with them and have the total [daylighting] project ready to go by the time they are done,” he said. “But we have a long way to go for the designing and permitting process.”
The state plans to re-build the bridge west of 20th Street big enough for water to flow underneath, said Craig Mueller Project Manager Engineer. When that is finished Padden Creek will be routed underneath it after the daylighting project. The bridge will provide animal passage and improve the salmon habitat, he said.
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The end of the tunnel runs under a bridge near Fairhaven Park. Photo by Erin Nash |
“Restoration of salmon to a stream provides a powerful message that we as a community care about the environment” Reilly said.
He said if that were the only thing being achieved with the daylighting project it would be sufficient. But he said he believes the reduction of flood risk to about 130 homes and the potential of saving more than $100,000 per year in federal flood insurance is also important.
The daylighting project was first suggested in 1981 but didn’t get attraction until the early ‘90s when the Padden Creek Alliance formed to advocate for restoration of the creek, he said.
“Throughout the ‘90s everyone was flushing out what the project should look like,” Reilly said. “In 2002 the city had money to conduct the first up-to-date study of the creek and what it would take to make it a viable stream.”
Since then the city has been applying for grants and loans and allocating money toward the project on an annual basis to finance the estimated $4 million project, he said.
Reilly said he would love for the community to be involved when it comes to planting trees along the banks of the creek.
Mueller said he thinks this is an exciting project and that once all is restored, probably in the next two years, the creek is going to look really nice and be great for the neighborhood.
In the next year the city will be working to obtain more grants to ensure there is sufficient money to finish the project and hopefully reduce the need to use the full loan amount, Reilly said. “We are very close to getting started with the program.”
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