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About TCA

The larger the group, the greater the voice for a healthier watershed.
— February 7th, 2019
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Thornton Creek Alliance (TCA) is an all-volunteer grassroots, nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving and restoring an ecological balance throughout the Thornton Creek watershed.

Our goal is to benefit the watershed by encouraging individuals, groups, schools, businesses, and government to work together in addressing the environmental restoration of the creek system including: water quality, stabilization of water flow, flood prevention, and habitat improvement through education, collaboration, and community involvement.

September 16, 2024

It’s with huge sorrow that the Thornton Creek Alliance announces the sudden passing of longtime board member and past President John Lombard on August 28, 2024.  He was key to TCA, leaving behind a track record of success for our watershed and for the greater community.

He leaves behind his siblings; two young-adult children, Forrest and Summer; and his former wife, Jenny Haykin.  We grieve with them.  

John always strove to be well-informed and was keen on networking and outreach.  As his 2006  book, Saving Puget Sound, amply demonstrated, he understood not only the technical aspects of conservation, but also its policy and legislative frameworks.  This combination of traits made him quite effective as he worked with public officials and community leaders.

To highlight a few of John’s community accomplishments:

  • He helped launch a Seattle Department of Neighborhoods grant effort to gather public input to begin addressing a suite of issues along 8th Ave. NE in Seattle’s Northgate neighborhood, including Beaver Pond Natural Area and the south fork of Thornton Creek.  To implement the grant, he co-chaired the dedicated nonprofit Beaver Pond Friends and Neighbors, managing the public outreach alongside the consultant hired for this task. 
  • John spearheaded and helped manage the Noxious Weeds Knockout partnership for the Thornton Creek watershed, comprising King County, the City of Seattle, the City of Shoreline, TCA, Forterra, and EarthCorps.  This began a very active knotweed eradication effort along Thornton Creek and tributaries.
  • He helped spark the Seattle Parks Department’s purchase of Lake City Floodplain Park on NE 125th St., with the intent of adding public land to restore floodplain and upland area along Thornton Creek’s north fork.  He worked with Indigenous representatives to seek a name based in native heritage that the Parks Department might permanently give to the park.
  • He served as Green Seattle Partnership Forest Steward for Beaver Pond Natural Area near Northgate.
  • He worked with the Seattle Parks Department to finally name several Thornton Creek natural areas which for decades had been known only as Park One, Park Six, etc., the names used when they were purchased. That helped raise those natural areas in the consciousness of the public, which in turn helps their stewardship.

John worked in the office of the mayor of St. Louis, Missouri, before returning to his hometown of Seattle.  He then served as a legislative analyst for the Metropolitan King County Council on utility issues.  Following that, he served as King County’s Lake Washington Watershed Coordinator.  He was senior policy analyst in the director’s office of the King County Department of Natural Resources and Parks. He worked as a senior policy analyst at AMEC Earth & Environmental/Steward and Associates/Sustainable Fisheries Foundation, and helped local governments develop conservation-related policy and legislation.  It was during his tenure with Steward that he wrote his book.  At the University of Washington School of Oceanography, he acted as liaison for user groups of the Puget Sound Regional Synthesis Model, and taught a course on the Puget Sound ecosystem.  He also had his own consulting business, Lombard Consulting LLC, to serve local governments and other clients on environmental issues related to land use.  Later he became a real estate broker at Windermere Real Estate in Seattle, where he specialized in creekside properties.  His professional newsletters always included information about the Thornton Creek watershed and how residents could best take care of it.  In 2019 he ran unsuccessfully for Seattle City Council.  

John’s energy and dedication to conservation, and his drive to help shape how it gets done, will serve as lasting examples.  We recognize the progress he spurred and will continue the work on his unfinished projects.  We valued his ideas and advice because we respected his abilities and insights, and he has left large shoes for us to fill.  He was a good human being, friend, and colleague.  We will miss him tremendously.  

John’s family has posted a page for people to share reminiscences and pictures:

https://neptunesociety.com/obituaries/lynnwood-wa/john-lombard-11983839.

Membership

The Thornton Creek Alliance is a member driven association. New members are always welcome. The larger the group, the greater the voice for a healthier watershed!

PUBLIC MEETINGS

The Thornton Creek Alliance’s public meetings are held approximately quarterly in Northeast Seattle. Admission is free and everyone is welcome to attend and participate!

In The Community

We like to reach out to our community! Look for TCA at events throughout the watershed and say hello!

New members are always welcome!

The larger the group, the greater the voice for a healthier watershed.
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  Meet the Board

The following individuals comprise the Thornton Creek Alliance Board of Directors as of April 25th, 2023.

BOARD OFFICERS

Ruth Williams

President

thorntoncreekalliance@gmail.com

Roseann Barnhill

First Vice President

Richard Newman

VP: Membership

Judy Olson

VP: Programs

Jessica Yellin

Secretary

Gary Olson

Treasurer

BOARD MEMBERS AT LARGE

Heather Ferguson

Jonathan Frodge

Janet Heineck

Muriel Lawty

Bill Meyers

Rick Swing

BOARD MEMBERS EMERITUS

Frank Backus

Year Alliance Formed

Anniversary

Members & Growing

Events per Year

Land Acknowledgment Statement

Thornton Creek Alliance acknowledges the ancestral land of the Lushootseed-speaking people of this region, who have stewarded this land since time immemorial and who are very much alive and present as good stewards of the land to this day. It is with gratitude to and because of them that we have the honor of co-tending the lands and waters with the hope of restoring the watershed to a healthy ecosystem where life can be sustained and thrive for generations to come.

Bylaws

Thornton Creek Alliance (TCA) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. We have developed a set of bylaws over the years that guides us and informs our membership.

TCA Bylaws

by admin | Jan 20, 2011 | Bylaws

View TCA Bylaws  approved as of January 20, 2011Download


Thornton Creek Alliance (TCA) is a grassroots, nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving and restoring an ecological balance in the Thornton Creek watershed, a drainage of approximately 11.6 square miles in northeast Seattle and Shoreline.

Contact Info

Thornton Creek Alliance
P.O. Box 25690
Seattle, WA 98165-1190

  thorntoncreekalliance@gmail.com

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