Ani Pham

Meet our Guests: Neil Kornze

Neil Kornze

CEO of the Campion Foundation and Campion Advocacy Fund, former Director of the Bureau of Land Management

Methow Valley, WA

8/29/21

 

A Nevada Native, Neil Kornze grew up with over 60% of his home state’s land managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). By age 35, Neil was the director of that agency and oversaw that land in his home state and millions of other acres, altogether comprising 10% of the nation’s land area. Neil graduated from Whitman in 2000 and went on to study at the London School of Economics. In 2014, he was confirmed under the Obama administration as the director of the BLM. Neil was an innovative force within the BLM. During his three-year tenure, Neil worked to expand renewable energy generation on BLM lands and protect culturally and ecologically significant areas, all while making them more accessible to the public.

Today, Neil still works with the nation’s public lands in a different capacity as the CEO of the Campion Advocacy Fund (CAF). CAF was started by Tom Campion, co-founder of Zumiez, and his partner Sonya, with the main goals of protecting intact wilderness ecosystems in the U.S. and working to find solutions to homelessness across the nation. At the forefront of CAF’s priorities is permanently protecting the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska. Neil recently led a host of White House officials to this remote region to experience its raw landscape and captivating wildlife.

Neil hopes for a future where government agencies can collaborate more and reduce conflict in land management. A possible starting strategy that he proposes is “being able to walk down the hall and have a conversation with the people making decisions…colocation [of agencies] is a simple but powerful thing.” What could result from such a collaborative structure are what Neil calls the National Trust Lands, “a combination of the forest service, the refuges, the BLM…and some set of the parks…I would like to see us erase those lines.”

By Ani Pham

Meet our Guests: Kathleen Ackley

Kathleen Ackley

Executive Director, Wallowa Land Trust

Wallowa County, Oregon

8/20/21

 

Kathleen Ackley is the Executive Director of Wallowa Land Trust (WLT), a nonprofit focused on conserving land and maintaining its ecological health. In Wallowa County, where private land is tightly woven into the fabric of the valley, the land trust works to conserve parcels of land for myriad purposes, from grazing to recreating, for both people and wildlife. They rely on the voluntary participation of landowners to carry out their work in protecting lands identified as significant in terms of biological diversity, cultural connections, and educational value. Preserving the prominent glacial moraine on the east side of Wallowa Lake is a major project championed by WLT and for good reason: it is a window into our geologic past and keeps the skyline free of imposing mansions.

 

Through Kathleen’s eight years with WLT she has seen a shift in their responsibilities and practices. Maintaining workable land has become more of a central tenet in the land trust sphere, along with movements to return land stolen from indigenous peoples and take action against systemic racism. Kathleen knows that land trusts are not exempt from addressing these societal reckonings. In a statement released on their website, WLT lays bare the inequities they continue to hold central to their work. Kathleen engages with such issues through her efforts with the Oregon Land Justice Project, a group which works to amplify indigenous stewardship knowledge and provide a space to hear from Native American leaders and allies about making land management more equitable. Kathleen made it clear that this work is vital, saying “it is not just about taking their knowledge for our benefit, it is about facilitating reconnections…for people with their land and for people with people. This is the right way to move forward, but it is far from easy.”

 

By Ani Pham