BREAKING NEWS: New Olympic National Park superintendent named

  • Thursday, August 23, 2012 2:38pm
  • News
Sarah Creachbaum

Sarah Creachbaum

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — The head of Haleakala National Park in Hawaii was announced today as the new superintendent of Olympic National Park.

Sarah Creachbaum, superintendent at the national park on Maui since 2009, replaces Karen Gustin, who retired in March.

Prior to her arrival in Hawaii, she was superintendent at War in the Pacific National Historical Park on the island of Guam and American Memorial Park on the island of Saipan. She was the 2004 National Park Service Bevinetto Fellow, and served in Washington, D.C., as a staff member for the Senate Subcommittee on National Parks.

“Sarah is a proven leader and team builder, with strong wilderness management expertise. She is known for her creativity and inclusive management style,” said Pacific West Regional Director Chris Lehnertz.

“Sarah’s ability to listen and collaborate within cultures and communities and then to create a shared vision, will be an asset to Olympic National Park.”

Creachbaum began her professional career as a recreation and wilderness manager for the Shoshone National Forest in Cody, Wyo., in 1990. During the course of her career, she has worked at many national parks in the western United States, including Grand Canyon National Park, Yellowstone National Park and Grand Teton National Park.

Creachbaum currently serves as co-chair of the National Park Service Wilderness Leadership Council. She received a master’s degree in landscape architecture and environmental planning from Utah State University in 1994.

“I am absolutely thrilled to work at Olympic,” Creachbaum said in a statement issued by the National Park Service.

“It has always been a dream. I look forward to working with the park staff and the community to protect the outstanding resources of the park.”

Creachbaum’s duties as superintendent will begin this fall when she moves to the Olympic Peninsula with her husband, Bob, and their border collie Jimmy.

Olympic’s deputy superintendent, Todd Suess, 46, has been acting superintendent since Gustin’s retirement.

More in News

Five rescued from tug off coast of La Push

Concrete barge waiting to be towed to shore

Lt. Cmdr. Lyndsay P. Evans.
Two Navy crew members who went missing after crash identified

Two U.S. Navy crew members who were missing after their aircraft crashed… Continue reading

Sales of fireworks will be prohibited in Sequim city limits effective late October 2025 after Sequim city council members voted to restrict the sale. The decision comes seven years after former city council members voted to ban the discharge of fireworks in city limits. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
Sequim to ban fireworks sales

Ordinance to go into effect next fall

The West Sequim Bay Corridor Project, including a lift station at Forrest Road, is the largest project for the city of Sequim in 2025. Nick Dostie, Sequim’s city engineer and deputy director of public works, previously said the city plans to go to bid in the second or third quarter of 2025, with construction possibly starting in the first quarter of 2026, and pipeline and lift station construction complete in the third or fourth quarter of 2028. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim’s $58M budget largest in history

Utility rate increase continues three-year plan

Karyn Bocko of Port Angeles, front, looks at mushroom merchandise at the annual Fungi Festival on Saturday at the Clallam County Fairgrounds. Looking on at right is Freya Gereke of Portland-based Odd Fox & Fern. The two-day event brought together mushroom fans for a weekend of fungus appreciation, along with food, merchandise and workshops. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Fungi Festival at Fairgrounds

Karyn Bocko of Port Angeles, front, looks at mushroom merchandise at the… Continue reading

Pat Boyd of Port Angeles picks out a tree during Saturday’s tree giveaway in the Port Angeles City Hall parking lot. The event, part of the City Shade Tree program, offered a selection of scarlet oaks/American red oaks, Garry oaks/Oregon white oaks and Katsura trees to be planted along city rights-of-way. The city handed out about 140 trees last year, the first year of the program. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Tree selection in Port Angeles

Pat Boyd of Port Angeles picks out a tree during Saturday’s tree… Continue reading

Woman injured in rollover collision south of Brinnon

A 74-year-old woman was transported to Jefferson Healthcare hospital following… Continue reading

Jefferson Healthcare considers its 2025 budget

About 60 percent of costs comes from labor, CFO says

About two dozen took part in a community cold plunge in the 48-degree waters of Port Townsend Bay on Thursday to celebrate the biggest super moon of the year. Although the moon wasn’t due to rise for at least another hour, that didn’t dampen the participants’ entry into the bay next to the Port Townsend Marine Science Center aquarium. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Taking the plunge

About two dozen took part in a community cold plunge in the… Continue reading

Beeler Van Orman of Port Angeles tosses a glass bottle into a recycling bin on Thursday at the Regional Transfer Station in Port Angeles. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Clallam, Jefferson counties no longer able to recycle glass

City of Sequim able to continue with different processor

Peninsula College produces $44M in economic impact

Economic influence grows by 15 percent