Campion Advocacy Fund

Meet our Guests: Tom and Sonya Campion

Tom and Sonya Campion

Founder of Zumiez, Founders of Campion Foundation and Campion Advocacy Fund

Methow Valley, WA

8/28/21

 

Nestled at the base of a 1,500-foot tall wall of granite in the Methow Valley, WA sits a pristine property owned by Tom and Sonya Campion. The property was once under threat of being developed into a ski resort by an out-of-state corporation until concerned locals stepped in to stop development. The Methow Valley Citizens Council reached out to the Campions to see if they would be interested in purchasing the property, and after doing so the Campions placed it under a conservation easement, ensuring that the land will be protected from future habitat destruction and development.

The acquisition of their property is just one example of how Tom and Sonya have used their wealth and resources to support their community and protect the places they love. For Tom, one of those places is the Alaskan Arctic, a location he describes as “wider than any wilderness we have”. Tom founded the clothing company Zumiez in 1978, but in the years after his retirement he has shifted his focus towards building a non-profit and engaging in political lobbying for the protection of public lands. With his support, the Campion Advocacy Fund has successfully lobbied to prevent oil drilling on nearly one million acres of pristine wilderness along the costal planes near Prudhoe Bay, AK.

While protecting pristine wilderness is important to Tom, it is not the only focus of the Campions’ non-profit. Working with Seattle and Washington’s local governments, Sonya has aided in the creation of affordable housing, chaired committees focused on ensure access to mental health care and provided valuable insight to elected officials working across various social service agencies.

Commenting on the importance of engaging with our public lands and governments, Tom remarks, “we all have a stake in management based on how much we want to participate.” It is clear that Tom and Sonya embody this message in all of their work.

 

By Alli Shinn

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