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In all aspects of her work, Kimberly draws on an extensive history of leadership and community experience, including as:

  • Member, Washington State Governor's Subcabinet on Business Diversity

  • Vice President for Programs, Metropolitan Seattle Urban League

  • Executive Director, Legal Voice (formerly Northwest Women's Law Center)

  • Chair, Minority Executive Directors Coalition

  • Chair, Mayor’s Commission on Children and Youth

  • Board member, United Way of King County

  • Board member, The Northwest Coalition for Human Dignity (formerly The Northwest Coalition Against Malicious Harassment)

  • Member, International Women's Forum - Washington State Chapter

  • Member, Technology Access Foundation

  • Member, Mukai Farm & Garden, WWII historical Japanese-American homestead

  • Program Director, Boys & Girls Clubs of King County, Rotary branch

  • Area Director, Camp Fire Central Puget Sound

  • Program Manager, Northwest Center Industries Office Skills Training Program, a federally-funded job training for women transitioning off of public assistance, displaced workers, and workers with disabilities

  • Speaker and outreach volunteer, People of Color Against Network and Lifelong AIDS Alliance

  • PR intern, National Women's Political Caucus, Washington, D.C.

  • Diversity training consultant, InnoVision, Inc.

  •  KNKX NPR Radio, Member, Community Advisory Council

  • Volunteer mentor, Camp Fire’s Teen Mother Program

  • Paramedic aide, Amigos de las Americas, El Sauce, Nicaragua

  • Film Jurist, Seattle Black Film Festival

  • Strategic Communications, Onyx Fine Arts Collective

  • Fair Fight Action

  • Belltown Neighborhood Block Watch

Kimberly remains active on the Washington State Governor’s Subcabinet on Business Diversity and KNKX Public Radio’s Community Advisory Council. As a former member of the International Women’s Forum, Washington State chapter, Kimberly served on the DEI Committee to co-create a career mentor linking program for young women of color. During the pandemic, she founded the North Belltown Block Watch, a neighborhood group dedicated to engaging residents in co-creating equitable, inclusive solutions for building safe and welcoming communities.

Kimberly has also served as a strategic communications volunteer for Onyx Fine Arts Collective, film jurist for the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute's annual Seattle Black Film Festival, and voting rights volunteer for Fair Fight Action. She is a member of the historic Mukai Farm & Garden on Vashon Island, Washington, a reclaimed and restored Japanese homestead that provides cultural awareness, education, and social justice programs on the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. Kimberly is a graduate of Seattle Chamber of Commerce’s Leadership Tomorrow and was recognized by Ebony magazine as a leader of tomorrow in its 50th Anniversary issue.

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