Sequim’s 2026 budget is about 11 percent less than this year with fewer capital projects and a new cap on municipal funding. Staffing will increase by 1.1 full-time-equivalent employees following retirements, position changes and new hires. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim’s 2026 budget is about 11 percent less than this year with fewer capital projects and a new cap on municipal funding. Staffing will increase by 1.1 full-time-equivalent employees following retirements, position changes and new hires. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)

Sequim approves $51.6M budget

Utility increases to continue for five years

SEQUIM — Sequim’s 2026 budget is balanced at $51.6 million with utility rate increases set for the next five years, municipal funding capped, and project costs and loads set to account for inflation, tariffs and other fluctuating variables.

City council members approved the budget 5-0 on Nov. 24 with council members Dan Butler and Nicole Hartman excused.

Following public hearings on Nov. 10 and 24, no budgetary numbers changed, city Finance Director Sue Hagener said. However, council members agreed in another 5-0 vote to use Rainy Day Funds to fully fund a pair of two-year contracts they previously reduced.

Municipal funding

In the summer, council members voted for a new policy that limits Sequim’s Municipal Funding Program to 1.5 percent of the city’s general fund. For next year, that total for six agencies is $207,700 in contracts, about $200,000 less than total requests from eight agencies.

The Shipley Center and YMCA of the Olympic Peninsula were under two-year contracts going through 2026, with Sequim’s senior center set to receive $10,000 of a $15,000 contract to offer low-cost educational classes and seminars, and the YMCA $28,750 of $42,500 to continue the YMCA Youth & Family Resource Navigator within the Sequim School District to help students and families with housing, food and financial insecurity to access basic community resources.

On Nov. 10, Michael Smith, the Shipley Center’s executive director, asked the city to fulfill its obligations to both nonprofits for 2026 to finish the contracts and then move forward with the policy decision the following year.

Most council members agreed, including Mayor Brandon Janisse, who said reducing those contracts after agreeing to them the previous year “makes us look bad.”

Council member Kelly Burger agreed, saying if they were to fully fund the Shipley Center request, then they should honor the YMCA’s second year as well.

City Manager Matt Huish and City Attorney Kristina Nelson Gross told council members that contract applicants were alerted to the municipal cap and reduction in funds, and that contracts stated monies were contingent on availability and council approval.

Janisse said on Nov. 24 that he agreed with the municipal funding cap, but he reiterated the city needs to honor the two-year contracts. Council members Burger, Harmony Rutter and Vicki Lowe verbally agreed.

Deputy Mayor Rachel Anderson disagreed, saying she knew during the difficult process of determining who gets what in the summer with a new municipal cap, it would null the second-year contracts. She recommended keeping the determined amounts from the summer.

Ultimately, council members agreed to fund the remainder of the two contracts — $18,750 — using the city’s Rainy Day Funds with about $900,000 available. Council members agreed last year to fund the YMCA’s original contract for year one with the same funds ($42,500).

Financial changes

As part of the budget process on Nov. 10, council members unanimously approved revised rates and fees for 2026, including higher utility rates.

City council members decided in the summer to follow a five-year plan following a utility rate study to increase rates each year through 2030 with water rates going up by 5.5 percent, sewer rates by 4.5 percent, and general facility charges, a one-time charge for new developments to connect to city utilities, by 3 percent.

City staff said most households using up to 500 cubic feet of water and sewer services will see about a $5 increase per month starting in February 2026, while it will cost a new single-family development to connect to the city’s water and sewer in 2026 about $473 more than this year.

Staff wrote in budget materials that the increases in part avoid major periodic cost increases, reflect actual costs of services and follow quantitative data while helping pay down utility debt service and support major repair, replacement and expansion projects.

Sequim continues to offer a Low Income Utility Discount that reduces base charges by half. For more information, visit sequimwa.gov/440/Low-Income-Utility-Discount.

Along with updated utility charges, council members voted 6-1 with Janisse opposed on Nov. 10 to increase the city’s allowable property tax levy by 1 percent. Hagener said it will add about $19,000 to the city’s general fund to support general services, and those funds could be used, as an example, to help pay for a seasonal parks worker.

She also noted that the city hit a milestone with an estimated assessed value beyond $2 billion. She said as the city’s assessed value grows, it takes some taxing pressures off other homeowners.

More budget info

Next year’s budget is about 11 percent less than the 2025 budget with sales tax revenue anticipated to come in at about 4 percent more in 2026 than this year ($4.7 million).

Salaries and benefits will cost Sequim $13.2 million, about 5 percent more than 2025, with three new bargaining unit contracts, cost-of-living, market adjustments and comparative data for non-represented staff.

Staffing will go up to 101.60 full-time-equivalent employees next year, an increase of 1.1 FTEs, following the retirement of a public works continuity adviser for the Simdars Interchange project, and an FTE being reduced to part time (0.2) while adding an Asset Analyst 1 and two street seasonal employees (0.66).

Staff budgeted $17.4 million in capital projects next year with many dependent on grants, low-interest loans and/or bonds. The city’s 2026-2031 Capital Improvement Plan includes 133 projects worth $190 million with more than half unfunded.

One of the city’s largest projects, Flaura’s Acres ($6.3 million), continues to make traction as city staff work toward permanent sewer and water repairs through securing grants to replace the neighborhood’s septic system and connect to the city’s utilities.

A few other notable projects include $1.84 million to start construction on the multiyear, $4.83 million Silberhorn Deep Well No. 4 that adds a new water supply well and control center to increase water capacity, and about $2.2 million in water and sewer improvements along West Sequim Bay Road over multiple years to expand water and sewer services on a portion of the road to anticipated residential developments and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL-Sequim).

One grant worth $949,000 is set to help improve multiple traffic and pedestrian signals, while a $546,000 grant will go toward designing and constructing a multi-use path on Keeler Road between West Sequim Bay Road and the Olympic Discovery Trail.

A third grant worth $435,000 will help Sequim conduct a feasibility study and design of a sidewalk and multi-use trail along East Washington Street from Blake Avenue to Simdars Road.

City staff also budgeted $410,000 to help begin playground improvements at Margaret Kirner Park, and $77,000 to develop a master plan for the 16.6-acre McCord Park at 764 W. Hendrickson Road.

For more about the 2026 budget, visit https://www.sequimwa.gov/1327/2026-Proposed-Budget.

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Matthew Nash is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. He can be reached by email at matthew.nash@sequimgazette.com.

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