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May 3, 2007

The new Northcoast Environmental Center --
fresh-faced and ready to rumble
story and photos by HEIDI WALTERS
Above: Susan Penn, Greg King, Alisha Clompus and Erica
Terence on the porch of the Northcoast Environmental Center's
soon-to-be-digs (once the permitting hurdles are cleared). Greg
King's dog Wilder appears on the cover.
ON A SUNNY, NEARLY HOT SPRING
AFTERNOON IN EARLY APRIL, Susan Penn was setting up easels inside
the Northcoast Environmental Center's headquarters and placing
paintings on them. The office was chaotic -- boxes everywhere,
some with giant stuffed salmon swimming atop them. How much of
this stuff would make it to the new headquarters, up the road,
was anyone's guess. For now, there were more immediate concerns.
Soon, the auctioneer and film crew would arrive to record a commercial
for the NEC's annual art auction. Erica Terence, meanwhile, was
talking on the phone to Petey Brucker's mom, who was the first
person to mail in a bid for one of the artworks. They're both
mid-Klamath folks, ardent activists.
Through the door came a slender young man with
large brown eyes. "Hello, Ryan," said Penn. "Hi,"
he said. A tiny white flower on a long green stem peeked out
of his curly brown hair. "I have another one, too,"
he said, bending down to show off the little purple bloom on
top. "I had a whole crown of them, but took it off."
He's one of the NEC's work-study students -- although, he admitted,
he skipped out on the "student" part today on account
of the sudden sunshine, which needed to be loafed in. "My
skin still feels charged from it," he said, rubbing his
left arm.
But he did show up for duty at the NEC. And, reeking
as he did of sunshine and idealism, he could have been a kid
walking in straight from the 1970s. Or from last spring, even.
But some might call it remarkable that he, or any of the others,
showed up on this day in April 2007.

Last July when Tim McKay
died , you could see in many locals' eyes, behind the shock and
sorrow, the unspeakable prediction: "There goes the NEC."
They hated themselves for thinking it, but there it was. How
could the NEC go on? McKay had been the executive director of
the Northcoast Environmental Center for 35 years, all but a year
since he and Wes Chesbro (the first executive director, and recently
termed-out state senator) started it in 1971, along with a handful
of other environmentally conscious, scrappy college students
knocking about a rather conservative Arcata at that time.
"Tim -- he was the NEC, and the NEC was him,"
said Erica Terence, who joined the NEC staff in January 2006.
Led by McKay, the NEC shed light on numerous issues,
starting with recycling but soon moving to the federal landscape:
pesticides, timber harvest plans, the plight of the northern
spotted owl, ill-conceived roads through pristine forests, off-shore
oil drilling, a plan to fill Butler Valley up with water, wilderness
preservation and PacifiCorp's dams on the Klamath River. Certain
closer-to-town issues did catch its attention, such as the proposed
liquid natural gas plant on Humboldt Bay. But its forte was watchdogging
policies on the four national forests in the Klamath-Siskiyou
region -- a "seed bank" zone of incredible biological
diversity, with complicated, remote mountains whose creeks and
small rivers form the watersheds of the Klamath and Trinity rivers,
stretching from Northern California to southern Oregon.
McKay also was the NEC's obsessive archivist, storing
massive amounts of information on paper and filing equally massive
amounts directly into his brain cells. One of his greatest attributes,
colleagues and friends say, was his readiness to share this vast
knowledge with anyone who walked in the door, and to send them
back out the door with the tools to wage their own battle. After
the NEC office burned to the ground in 2001, taking with it 30
years of saved news clippings and an impressive, one-of-a-kind
environmental and political library collection, McKay's "institutional
memory" became indispensable.
The NEC drew scads of volunteers, a steady feed
of work-study students, and grew to 4,000 members. It achieved
a $250,000-plus annual budget, 90 percent derived from donations,
according to former staffer Connie Stewart (who went on to the
Arcata City Council and now works for Assemblymember Patty Berg).
Over the years, many people worked just as passionately and tirelessly
as McKay at the NEC. But McKay drove the thing. And his staff
and board of directors went along for the ride -- or got off
the bus.
OK, we'll just say it: McKay was a micromanager.
It's no secret. Friends and colleagues say, with admiration and
frustration, that his passion -- his devotion -- drove
him such that he had to have a hand in everything the NEC did.
"I've known him forever, and I miss him a lot," said
conservation ecologist and planner Chad Roberts, one of McKay's
long-time friends and a 20-year member of the NEC. But that doesn't
hold him back from an honest critique: "I think the NEC
... was Tim's playground to [pursue] issues he cared about. He
controlled the agenda. Tim was a very forceful individual."
That could be a good thing. Or, bad.
"Before Tim died, the board had been struggling
to make changes," said Claire Courtney, who's been on the
NEC Board of Directors since 1994 and is going on her fourth
year as president. "Administration was not Tim's passion,
the environment was his passion, and being out there. And he
was good at it. ... But the board was very interested in strengthening
the financial position of the organization and involving more
people in the community."
Also, the NEC still didn't have a permanent home
-- the board and McKay had wrangled over this problem ever since
the fire. Some board members had quit in recent years, frustrated
by the various impasses. That question of how the NEC should
operate, and where, was still being hashed out even as McKay
was watching a Cooper's hawk soar over Stone Lagoon that Sunday
last July when his heart burst.
McKay
made no provisions for a successor. The staff he left behind
was almost brand-new. Not Susan Penn -- she'd been hired two
years prior to run the campaign to raise funds for a new building.
But she was now the senior staff member. Terence had only been
on the job as editor of NEC's Econews, Northern California's
longest-running conservation newspaper, for six months. She was
painfully new to the post, relative to the publication's former
long-time editor, Sid Dominitz, who retired at the end of 2005
after 30 years as the organization's grammatical conscience and,
as he describes it, McKay's "ghost writer." And the
morning after McKay died was Alisha Clompus' first day on the
job as the new office manager.
NEC member Roberts said he wrote a long letter
to the board after McKay died, saying they needed to split the
director's position into three: someone to find the money, and
two program managers -- one to keep up the important federal
lands issues, and another to follow more local issues. "I
thought the NEC could become the local flagship environmental
organization," Roberts said. "It was already, on the
federal landscape." The board also, he said, should pursue
an endowment.
The board called a community powwow at the local
grange to ponder these and other suggestions. Penn, meantime,
stepped up as temporary director -- and she and the rest of the
staff dug their heels into the whistling void and hung on.
Now, nine months later, things are settling down.
The community has spoken -- yes, the NEC must go on. Donations
have poured in since McKay's death, an affirmation of his legacy.
The board decided to scuttle, for now, the new building plans,
and is buying a house that the staff likely will move into by
the end of summer. The organization just held its annual art
auction last Saturday. And the board hired a new executive director,
Greg King, who barely three months into the job is exhibiting
all the whirlwind multitasking abilities one expects from a nonprofit
leader.
Inevitably, the NEC will be different. Will its
mission -- as coined by Dominitz years ago, "to educate,
agitate and if necessary litigate" -- remain intact? Dominitz
doesn't seem worried. "It's a change in personnel, it's
not a change in direction. We've expanded and contracted before.
It's the citizens that drive the NEC."
True, but still -- what about these new staffers?
Who are they? How will they shape the "new" NEC? Who's
cutting out newspaper articles and squirreling away history?
And minding the idealism?
Above:The NEC's new executive director, Greg
King, left, and rancher Dean Hunt discuss carving out a wedge
of garden space, for students at the nearby Jacoby Creek School
to grow their own lunch food, in the pasture Hunt leases from
the City of Arcata. "It sounds like a neat deal," Hunt
says. "If the city's in favor of it, I'm in favor of it.
As long as we can all work together and get it all fenced off
and [the kids] aren't running around chasing the cows."

Well, first of all, not
all of the "institutional memory" has fled the NEC.
Dominitz, editor emeritus now, still has a spot at a desk when
he wants it. Other people close to the organization have been
filing through since last summer, sharing what they know and
helping out. The volunteers remain loyal. And, capital funds
campaign manager-turned-temporary-director, Susan Penn, 57, has
24 years of history in Humboldt County. She's been at the NEC
nearly three years, and most recently organized the art auction
and dinner. Now she moves into a new position, as the development
director.
Actually, Penn is rather frustrated at the outcome
of the new-building campaign. The site where the NEC planned
to rebuild turned out to have contaminated soil; there went more
money and energy, into cleanup. And the cost to actually build
the new structure soared -- last estimate, $3.2 million. Nobody
could agree on how to proceed: McKay, Penn said, had insisted
on keeping the basement in the design, which made the project
more expensive; others thought the new building might be doable
if they eliminated the basement and scaled things back; and some
wanted to chuck the plans and just buy something already standing
so they could get out of the rent sump ($36,000 a year) -- which
is what finally happened.
"Personally," said Penn, "I'm really
disappointed that, after Tim died, the board didn't revisit the
plans. Instead, they went and bought that house."
The house they bought, for $550,000 -- amount due
in a year -- is a pretty, white, historic home on North G Street.
Previous tenants planted a lush flower garden and renovated the
inside. It's charming, and small. It's also a missed opportunity,
says Penn, in two regards. One, it could be a home. "We
have a housing shortage in this county, and we're taking a house
out of circulation." And two, the new building would have
been not only a progressive example of green design and efficiency,
but made specifically for the NEC. "The idea was, we could
expand and grow."
Though it sounds like bitterness, Penn's skepticism
and concern for community issues seem just right for the NEC.
She exudes citizenry -- a pattern that shows up in the other
staffers, as well.
Yes, two of them are very young. Erica Terence
is 23, Alisha Clompus is 27. But as Terence points out, how different,
really, are they from a young Sid or a young Tim or a young Connie
Stewart?
"Tim always encouraged, and Greg does it too:
'Learn it by doing,'" said Terence, sitting at a table inside
Café Mokka a couple weeks ago. She had to take that advice
literally last summer. "When Tim died, it felt like a giant
question mark. The style of the NEC was to keep all the balls
in the air. ... Tim had been working diligently, for years, on
restoring the Klamath River, from the upper basin to the lower,
dealing with the small farmer and the fisherman and everyone
in between. When he hired me, Tim knew I had a really strong
connection to the [Klamath region]. So, I decided, rather than
see one of those balls drop, I would keep at least that one in
the air."
So in addition to putting out Econews, Terence
threw herself into the Klamath quagmire. "Part of it was
getting to know the people involved, everyone from who does the
fish counts to the lawyers sitting in rooms haggling over details
of dam removal," she said. "It's tons of people."
She's traveled hither and yon -- Sacramento, Portland, Redding
-- to attend hearings and participated in negotiation sessions
with the numerous stakeholders. "There will be 28 parties
in a room, and definitely I'm the youngest one there. And I'm
always wishing for my lawyer and my hydrologist and my fish biologist."
McKay asked Terence to apply for the editor job
when he heard she was graduating from college with an environmental
journalism degree, in 2005. Her parents were activist friends
of his; he knew what had shaped her. Terence grew up on the Salmon
River -- "at this big river bend, on Butler Flat right next
to Butler Creek," she said. "The Salmon River is very
pristine, very deep and gorgeous." Her dad had moved there
from Los Angeles many years earlier to live, initially, at the
Black Bear Ranch commune. Her mom and dad met in the Bay Area
-- they both worked for "Ents," a tree-planting co-op.
Terence grew up surrounded by nature with no television
or telephone, the only electricity they did consume created by
a small flow-through dam on Butler Creek. She went to Forks of
Salmon School with 30 other students; there were three people
in her 7th grade graduating class. At age 12, she lobbied her
parents to take her far away from there so she could attend a
high school somewhere other than in rough Happy Camp. They moved
to Haiti for a year, where her parents taught at an international
school and she was exposed to concepts of poverty, crowding,
deforestation and erosion. They moved, then, to the populous
Santa Cruz, where Terence went to high school -- and had a telephone
for the first time. She chose Seattle University because of its
social justice program. "I knew I wanted to preserve places
like where I grew up. And living in Haiti and Santa Cruz reinforced
that."
Living on a creek with a dam, she says, balanced
her perspective. "It's not just, 'hydropower is bad,'"
she said. "That's too much of a blanket statement. Hydropower
makes sense in some places." Her family's dam, which dropped
creek water into a Pelton wheel, "isn't blocking fish passage,
isn't diverting a huge amount of water, and is not warming the
water up -- which is part of the problem with the Klamath dams.
So we need to be careful when we criticize. We're not saying
'take every dam out.'"
Alisha Clompus' background is a little trickier,
at first, to fit into the NEC puzzle. You could be thrown, for
instance, by her tale about how a Beanie Baby is responsible
for her leaving Philadelphia and moving to Humboldt County and,
hence, being in the right place when the NEC was looking for
an office manager last summer. You'll have to ask her for the
details. Suffice to say, the Beanie Baby was but one in a pile
of stuffed toy monkeys, too many to de-tag, really, that she
had on account of her fixation with primates, and one day she
and her little sister discovered that it was worth $4,000. "My
mom went on eBay and a lady in Michigan bought it for $3,000."
Clompus, fresh out of high school, took the money and went on
a road trip to Berkeley and San Francisco. Really liked it. And
came back to Humboldt State in 1998 to get a dual degree in anthropology
and art; she also studied facial reconstruction. She traveled
to the West Indies to study primates. Then, back in Humboldt,
she ended up volunteering at the Humboldt County Coroner's office,
making facial reconstruction sculptures to help solve cases.
But she needed a real job. "I was a struggling artist,"
she said. "I saw the ad in the paper for an office manager
in June or July, and that morning I was like, 'I need that job.'"
After other travails -- McKay going to the emergency
room (the warning visit) the day he was supposed to interview
her, her dad having a brain aneurysm three hours later and her
rushing off to Florida to be with him, and doing a rescheduled
interview by phone -- she was hired. "Tim had asked me how
anthropology tied in with the NEC, and I said, well, that's obvious.
Human rights and social justice always tie in with environmental
justice."
There, now that's NEC. But even more important?
Clompus takes to administrative work like a monkey takes to trees,
whipping the office into shape, fielding calls, doing outreach,
contributing articles and artwork to Econews. "I
never wanted to work in an office," she said. "But
it turns out I'm good at it. And I love my job. I love who I
work with, and I love what we do. I believe in it ethically.
And I figure Tim picked me for a reason -- I'd better stick with
it."

And then there's the new
executive director, 45-year-old Greg King. Yes, that Greg King,
the journalist who, with Darryl Cherney, co-founded -- or revived
-- the Humboldt County chapter of Earth First! in 1986 to fight
to save old growth forests. The same King who, in 1987, discovered
the wildest, biggest unprotected grove of ancient redwood trees
on the planet -- bordered by clearcuts and doomed under the heightened
timber harvest regime of the recently Maxxam-acquired Pacific
Lumber Co. He named the vast grove, whose ridges spilled streams,
Headwaters Forest. Perhaps you've heard of it. He quit his newspaper
job and moved to Humboldt County to be a full-time forest activist.
A little radical, you say, for the new director
of the moderate-mannered NEC? King would counter that not only
was that 20 years ago, but it also was valid work. "The
Earth First! stuff, I'm really proud of that," he said.
"I was working 40 to 60 hours a week on research on the
Headwaters. I would go to meetings. I wrote about it. We mapped
it. Earth First! in the '80s was mostly college students and
professionals. It was an activist community of very intelligent
and committed people doing quite rational and important work.
I'm proud of it -- Headwaters Forest would not exist had we not
done that work. ... I risked my life to save something.
"I do think [Earth First!] had devolved by
the 1990s -- it became highly anarchistic, and it was impossible
to tell whether the leadership was viable, whether good decisions
were being made. And it was highly infiltrated by the FBI."
So King moved on. "I needed something reliable
and solid, with a professional orientation," he said. "Something
everyone could relate to." Eventually he ended up in Del
Norte County, where he founded the Smith River Project -- which
cast a light on pesticide use at the mouth of the Smith River
-- and the Siskiyou Land Conservancy. And now he's that blur
at the NEC. "He's very quick," says Terence. "And
he wants us to be efficient."
If there's one key similarity between McKay and
King, it's an ability to connect people. "The one thing
Tim was really good at -- he was able to plug people into other
people," said Dominitz. "He was like a grand switchboard.
He was on the phone all the time. He was the giant link."
King says NEC must remain that link. "It's
important to me to provide that connectivity," he said.
"For example, when I met with Mike [Thompson] yesterday
[about a proposed timber harvest near Orleans], I was able to
say here's some people to talk to. It's a pollination that goes
on."
It's a good term: Picture pollination, in a fierce
spring wind. In an e-mail from King in early April, he wrote:
"My week gives an insight into my new post, and the NEC's
activities: Erica and I are currently researching a farm bill
that reportedly has a Klamath River element, and yesterday we
were on a conference call with the Conservation Coalition involved
in Klamath settlement talks. On Tuesday I attended a half-day
meeting with Scott Greacen of EPIC and Stephanie Tidwell of KS
Wild [The Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands Center] to discuss how our
groups might better coordinate. Today the NEC received 1600 posters
for our annual auction, and the TV ad for that auction will be
filmed at the NEC at 2:30 today (with Phil Record of Wildberries,
who will also be our auctioneer). Last night I spoke from 7 until
8 p.m. with a potential major donor from Sonoma County, and I'll
meet with another Sonoma County supporter next week, just before
attending Mike Thompson's wilderness celebration in San Francisco.
Yesterday I got a surprise visit from Roger Rodoni, and tomorrow
I have a meeting with Jill Geist. Also tomorrow, I am the moderator
for Climate Night at the HSU Natural History Museum. Today I
spoke with Michael Fay, the National Geographic reporter who
recently moved to Humboldt County and is studying the redwood
ecosystem. On Monday I will meet with Friends of Del Norte to
discuss protecting Lake Earl from illegal breeching. Tuesday
I write and record the Econews radio show. Stuff like
that, plus the minutiae."
King plans to boost the NEC's $300,000 budget by
$150,000. He wants to attract more grant funding. The new cash
will enable him to hire a program director and expand the NEC's
scope in ways that represent significant departures from past
NEC work. Four key new initiatives, he says, will be to foster
community and educational gardens -- something he's already pursuing
at Jacoby Creek School; promote alternative transportation; look
at local communities' energy usage and contribution to global
climate change; and scrutinize proposed developments.
"There's no central organization with as strong
of a community presence [as the NEC] that's looking at the big
picture of development as a whole, and that's willing to do it
while working with multiple entities," King said. Already
he's examining the Cutten development in Eureka, and the O, Q
and Foster streets developments in Arcata. He's on guard for
future battles: "What are we looking at, 'Headwaters Estates'?"
he says. "Pacific Lumber lands -- that's what's coming.
... We're not going to be accommodating developers at the expense
of habitat and neighborhoods. But we will work with them -- it
behooves us to work with the developer [when] these developments
are already on the books. There are people who don't want development
at all. We can't take that position of zero development. I think
it's too extreme. And we can't take the no growth position. We
can take 'slow' growth and 'smart' growth."
Lest you fear he's gone milquetoast, note this
comment by King in the April Econews regarding Robin Arkley
Jr.'s Humboldt Sunshine lawsuit: "The family that has made
many generous contributions to North Coast life has all but negated
the positive value of these efforts with a bullying agenda apparently
aimed at making Humboldt
and Orange counties indistinguishable. [The Sunshine] lawsuit
against the county's planning process is a bitter salvo on behalf
of tract homes and strip malls, freeways and unchecked growth.
..."
King is also diving straight into private forest
land issues -- a sharp departure from the NEC's traditional federal
forest lands focus. First in his sights: Simpson/Green Diamond,
which has applied for a permit to "take" (kill) eight
pairs of Northern spotted owls -- after having already taken
45 pairs since 1994, King notes. "The NEC is opposing the
granting of this permit."
But federal lands haven't been forgotten: Among
the battles, King is trying to stop the Six Rivers National Forest
from conducting a 3,000-acre timber harvest in the Orleans area
that purports to reduce potential fire hazard. King says the
plan targets old growth forests (and owl habitat) and will do
nothing to protect the area from fires but serves as an excuse
for the Bush administration to log old growth trees. In comments
on the planned timber sale, King wrote that the NEC "would
not support any attempt to cut 14 miles of new road and 21 stream
crossings to remove" the timber.
Right: Northern spotted owl. Photo courtesy
of John and Karen Hollingsworth/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
He and Scott Greacen, of the Environmental Protection
Information Center, have been working closely on these issues.
That collaboration, itself, marks a hefty change in the NEC persona.
(McKay and EPIC didn't get along.) Greacen, a relative newcomer
to EPIC, is philosophical about it. "The relationships between
organizations are the same as the relationships between human
beings," Greacen said. "They can fall in love. Or they
can have friction."
The NEC will continue its other traditional programs,
King says: coastal habitat and cleanup; river restoration; the
push for Klamath dams removal, of course. It'll remain a grand
clearinghouse, a "conduit, initiator and motivator for action."
As part of that, the NEC's building an electronic library. And,
says King, at some point he hopes to revisit the new building
plans, which they've already paid an architect $125,000 to design.
"We own that land, and our vision for a green building there
is very much alive."
Man. The NEC could have more balls than ever dancing
in the air. But King says the way he'll manage it all is by having
"a highly independent staff" that will take on many
of these projects.

"Well, it's an ambitious
agenda," said Chad Roberts, the ecologist and 20-year member
of NEC. "I think the NEC should continue to exist. But the
opportunity to fail is pretty great. Here's this institution,
it's been part of the North Coast for a long time ... and that
creates an expectation in people's minds that the NEC will always
be there. But it will only be there if it fills a need for society."
The NEC's been good at following federal lands issues, and at
coordinating group efforts -- he hopes that focus remains strong,
he said.
King's agenda actually has a ring of the old NEC
-- before the fire, before McKay's health declined. "The
beauty of the NEC was its ability to see what the community wanted,
and to change its focus on a dime," said Connie Stewart,
who worked for the NEC for 14 years. "Tim did that with
the LNG." And King's development focus, for one, might be
just the thing. "Land use is going to be a big issue."
McKay and the NEC were already deeply involved in the county
general plan process. "So it doesn't surprise me Greg wants
to take on planning. Greg has this incredible opportunity to
create his own niche. And he's going to need it."
Dominitz, meanwhile, said he hopes the NEC remains
open to students. "To me, the important issue is bringing
more and more young people into the NEC. Aren't young people
the ones who are going to inherit global warming? You need that
young energy, that source of idealism."

An example of a clearcut in an area containing northern spotted
owls. Clearcut photo courtesy of Steve Hillebrand/U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.

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