|

Newsletter - Building Community
Awards & Recognition
Contact Us
|
|
A conversation with
SHA's
new
Executive director Tom Tierney
by Bob Royer, Director of
Communications for Seattle City Light |
SEATTLE--May 27, 2004--Tom Tierney
recalls a conversation with his father, Tom senior, then a
healthcare executive in
Colorado. The younger Tom was
all the hippie – full of himself, hair to his shoulders, in active
rebellion. Tom remembers his
dad shaking an angry finger at him.
|
“It wasn’t
about my hair or my dress,” says Tom.
“He was mad because he thought I was blowing off my
responsibility to public service. In my family, public service was
everyone’s mission.”
So, when the
Seattle Housing Authority board pointed at Tom, he heeded his father’s
lesson, carefully weighing the public service values of his Port
of
Seattle position and those associated with serving as the leader of Seattle
Housing.
|
|
|
Tom Tierney and
Andrew Lofton, deputy executive director |
I loved my
job at the port, but the ability to affect directly thousands of
lives at SHA is pretty powerful stuff. It’s the only job I would
have left the port for,” he says.
Now, on the
job for a month, Tierney is settling in for the hard part of his new
public service – filling the very big shoes of Harry Thomas,
preparing for the federal government’s not-so-gradual withdrawal
from its traditional public housing role, and properly finishing the
projects that have been started.
“We have
$150 million in federal funds leveraging almost one billion in
private investment. Our vision
is to remake the heart and soul of our housing stock.” he says.
“I take note that today about 100 acres of that vision are
mud – where houses used to be. I intend for houses to be there
again in two years. We’ve
got a lot of construction to get through.”
In fact, the hardware of the SHA makeover is falling into
place.
New Holly is in its last phase. High Point
now has its first building
complete and Tierney is looking forward to the start of housing
construction at Rainier Vista very soon.
|
|
|
|
While new to
SHA leadership, Tierney is an old hand at New Holly. As the head of
Seattle Mayor Norm Rice’s Office of Management and Planning,
Tierney was given the job of managing the City’s relationship with
this complex project. Even
though the buildings at NewHolly are now nearly complete, Tierney
says there is a lot to do yet.
“We’re not
just building houses there, as nice as they are. Until we know that we’ve truly created community, we won’t
be done.”
|
|
Tom Tierney and Jennifer Potter, SHA Board Chair at Harry
Thomas' retirement party
|
|
|
|
|
Tierney
recently got a hint of what it will take to fill Harry Thomas’
shoes. He accompanied
him to
Washington,
D.C.
so he could begin meeting Harry’s
connections in the capitol.
“They held a
retirement reception for Harry while we were there. Two Senators active in housing issues spoke at the event and
you could just sense the respect, even affection, they had for
Harry. One called him a
titan of federal housing,” he said. “No one has ever called me a titan.”
“I later
learned something telling about Harry from his daughter, who I told
what important people in
Washington
were saying about her dad,” Tom
said. “’Oh,” she
said, ‘he never tells us about that kind of stuff.’”
“Harry’s
famous about being low profile and quiet and was very effective with
his style,” says Tierney. “I’ll
be a little different. Some
of the things we’ve got coming at us may require a different
style. It’s not only the fact that the federal government is
reducing its commitment to housing, but the effects of Sound Transit
development on the Housing Authority are a significant opportunity
that we must seize. We’ve got a lot of players to talk to.”
Tierney may
need his strongest voice to use in the coming financial crunch.
|
|
|
|
“The federal
government is working on a new approach that will result in
significant cuts to our operating subsidies here in
Seattle
and across the country,” he
says. “There will be very little money for future rebuilding
projects such as we’ve undertaken.
And, our operating subsidies will go down significantly. For an organization that maintains as many structures as we
do, this is a tremendous problem.”
|
|
|
|
Tom Tierney visiting with the community and
residents
|
|
|
|
“Affordable
housing is no longer the Washington,
D.C.
game it once was,” Tierney
says. “Now, affordable housing gets built and maintained through
the creation of partnerships at local and state levels.
Actually, that plays to our strengths.
We have a terrific private non-profit community here to go
with some of the best for-profit affordable housing developers in
the country.”
Tom carries on
the belief in public service his dad emphasized so strongly. The senior Tom Tierney ’s innovative health care ideas for
the elderly were noticed by the Kennedy’s. He was called to Washington
and went on to serve in the
Kennedy and Johnson administrations and is one of the people
credited with the founding of the Medicare program.
Ultimately,
Tom cut his hair and began his own journey, heading west into a
public service career that caused people to notice him and call him
to the Housing Authority at an historic time.
“This is
where my mission is,” says Tom, “and it is one that I relish.
I can’t wait to meet more of the people who live in SHA
housing. I know
from my past work, that the strongest satisfaction from the job
comes from getting to know the people you serve."
|
|
About the author: Bob
Royer is Director of Communications for Seattle City Light. He has a
background as a journalist and also serviced as Deputy Mayor under
Charles Royer.
|
|