John McKibbin helped launch Identity Clark County as a community leader two decades ago, and he’s remained interested and active. A former schoolteacher who’s served both as a state representative and a Clark County commissioner, McKibbin now returns to center stage as Identity Clark County’s president. In that role, he’s on a mission to help Clark County move past the bridge-induced pain of recent years to move its economy forward.
McKibbin is polished in appearance and positive in presentations about the county, and he takes the big view you’d expect from someone who frequently has a bird’s-eye view of the county from the private plane based at Pearson Field. His background in politics and businesses makes him a natural for building bridges to replace those that collapsed in the bitter fight over the Columbia River Crossing. He longs for a return to the cordial, collaborative relationships between business, politics, and citizenry that moved this county in the past two decades from bedroom community into a place with its own business and social identity, a branch Washington State University campus, and an opening up of 192nd Avenue to a flood of housing and commercial development.
There is, McKibbin believes, a strong appetite for consensus and progress that characterized the days before the Columbia River Crossing created community indigestion. The county is comfortable in its skin these days, he says, with great schools, an appealing tax structure, and a fine quality of life.
Finding a new path to the old ways of problem-solving won’t be easy. The traffic congestion between Clark County and the job-rich Oregon side of the Portland metropolitan area didn’t disappear with the Columbia River Crossing’s demise to the trash bin of failed transportation projects. And the feuding that boiled out of the debate over light rail has spread to the county commission, prompting a countywide examination of the structure of county government.