
The Parking Advisory Committee advises the city on parking policy and program implementation
VANCOUVER – The city of Vancouver is now seeking applicants to fill four openings on the Parking Advisory Committee. Applications are due by Friday, Feb. 7.
The Parking Advisory Committee advises the city on parking policy and program implementation.
Membership eligibility and requirements
- Must be a City resident
- Candidates who represent either residential or business interests in Vancouver’s downtown core
- Current openings are for one mid-term position beginning Feb. 27, 2025 and expiring July 1, 2027, and three full-term positions beginning April 19, 2025 and expiring April 18, 2029
For full board details, including meeting times, visit http://www.cityofvancouver.us/boards.
How to apply
Visit www.cityofvancouver.us/boards to apply online. For questions or to request the application in other languages or formats, please contact the City’s Boards and Commissions Coordinator by mail at Vancouver City Hall, P.O. Box 1995, Vancouver, WA 98668-1995, by phone at (360) 487-8600 (WA Relay 711), or by email at bc_coordinator@cityofvancouver.us.
Information provided by the city of Vancouver.
Also read:
- Judge rejects lawsuit against rewrite of WA parental rights lawThurston County Superior Court Judge John Skinder upheld House Bill 1296, a contested 2025 parental rights law expected to face appeal.
- Future 42 releases 2026 Clark County Legislative ScorecardFuture 42’s 2026 scorecard grades Clark County’s 17th, 18th, 20th, and 49th District legislators on 12–15 key votes.
- Letter: Climate Commitment Act critique rests on fossil-funded denialAnthony Teso argues CCA repeal would transfer savings to Chevron and BP, not working families.
- Letter: Why Petition IP26-645 is a stand for the people, not a political partyIP26-645 needs 400,000 signatures by July 2 to repeal Washington’s new income-based tax.
- Opinion: An important reason to keep the I-5 freeway system toll-freeSharon Nasset argues fuel tax sends 100% to transportation, while tolling sends only 60% of net funds.
- Letter: Camas Voters – Keep your strong mayorGary Perman argues Camas insiders behind the government shift review helped craft a bond voters rejected by nearly 90%.
- Mount St. Helens 46 Years Later: Scenic Stops, History and Recovery Across the Blast ZoneColdwater Lake didn’t exist before 1980 — the eruption’s mudflows created it, and it’s now open for swimming and boating.








