Who's Running for Seattle School Board?

Update 3:

It does appear that in D4, Nadia F. Goforth is running. 

She is currently Communications and Advocacy Director at the Legal Foundation of Washington, heading the Equal Justice Coalition and a fellow at the WA Institute for a Democratic Future.

She has served as an intern for both Rep. Suzan DelBene and Rep Adam Smith. 
She has served as an Education Specialist at Treehouse, a non-profit for foster children. It appears that Ms. Goforth was a foster child and this is a special interest of hers. 

end of update

Update 2

One candidate has dropped out and that's Kimberly Early in District 7. That leaves two candidates who  will sail through the primary to the general election, Carol Rava and Jennifer LaVallee. Both appear to be white.

I still need to confirm but by my current research, this will be the first time in at least 36 years that District Seven's rep will not be a person of color. 

end of update


Update: I misspelled Mr. Feeny's name a couple of times. My apologies. 

end of update


Per the PDC as of 5:05 pm. My understanding is that candidates MUST be registered with the King County Elections by 5 pm today. I think you can register with PDC within two weeks of notice of candidacy. The last day to withdraw is Monday, May 12th. 


Who's Running?

District 2

- Sarah Clark, current director. She was appointed to the position, not elected.

- Eric Feeny

- Kathleen Smith 


District 4

- Joe Mizrahi, current director. He was appointed to the position, not elected.

- Gloria Suella Menchaca

- Laura Marie Rivera

- Nadia F. Goforth  

- William Campbell


District 5

- Michelle Sarju, current director. She has repeatedly stated that she was leaving so it's unclear why her name is there. I did check and it appears she has spent campaign money in 2025. My take is that she is getting pressure to stay put to keep the 4-person majority for SOFG. But she seems very frustrated and unhappy in this role. 

- Janis White

- Allycea Weil

- Julissa Sanchez

- Landon Labosky

- Vivian Song. Former director who left because she was not transparent about having moved out of her district. 

- Vivian Van Gelder


District 7

- Jennifer LaVallee
- Kimberly Early
- Carol Rava

Let's talk about the newcomer candidates.

District 2 

- Eric Feeny

Mr. Feeny has a background in tech start-ups in process consulting and business development. He is a past president of the Cascadia Elementary PTA. Eric Feeny tried to get Rivera's seat. He also applied for the open Seattle City Council seat for position 8 in January 2024. 

- Kathleen Smith   Because she didn't add an initial, I cannot be sure who she is. I do not find a website with someone with that name running for the Board. 


District 4

- Gloria Suella Menchaca

No webpage yet. Could not find anything on her. Anyone?

- Laura Marie Rivera 

Some of you may recall that Rivera applied to fill Song's empty seat; Joe Mizrahi got the nod. She ran for school board in 2021. She is an SPS parent, working on her PhD at Seattle University looking at "the intersection of Motherhood and Leadership." 

She is the political director for LD 36th and serves on the board for Seattle Special Education PTSA. She is deeply interested in the arts and has championed them during her previous runs. 

I'll just go out on a limb at this juncture and tell you that there are few people running - in any of the races - who know as much as Rivera about SPS. 

- Nadia F. Goforth  

She's registered at the PDC but not King County Elections. Unclear to me if she is running so once I get clarity on that, I'll try to find out more.

- Harsimran Kaur  

Despite what I see as an unusual name, there are five people with Seattle region ties. One played football at Nathan Hale High in 2022. Another is a counselor working towards her Master's at City University of Seattle. Another is a dentist in Bothell. Another person works in immigration in Kent. Another person is a tech in phlebotomist at Swedish Hospital.  

 I will attempt to narrow it down. Anyone?

- Bill Campbell 

His webpage is still under construction so I don't know much. 


District 5

- Julissa Sanchez, registered at both PDC and KC elections 

Sanchez is on the board at the Tenants Union of Washington State as a "Housing Justice Advocate and Community Organizer." 

She works for the group, Choose 180, as a Director of Advocacy. 

A fierce mujer, mother, community organizer, educator, youth, decolonizing, housing and racial justice advocate, xicana feminist and writer. 

She has served on the City Council's Renters' Commission. 

She has a 15-year old son. 

- Vivian Song, registered at both PDC and KC elections 

Song is a known quantity for Seattle School Board having been elected to the Board in 2021. She resigned the seat in 2024 after moving to a new address without telling the Board. (I note this is not illegal and, in fact, if she had reported it to the other directors, would have remained on the Board until her term ended. At that time, she would have had to run from again from her new address. It never made a lot of sense to me that she resigned but I do think there was some bullying going on within the Board.)

Song is a data wonk in the model of former director Eden Mack. She's smart and calm and seemed to be a team player. 

- Landon Labosky

He has a Master's in Public Administration. He is a Fellow at the Washington Institute for a Democratic Future; he also works as the Aquatics Manager for the City of Covington.  He is a member of the LGBTQ+ Commission for the City of Seattle. He attended public schools. 

- Vivian van Gelder

An Australian native, Van Gelder is a former lawyer and currently the Director of Policy and Research at the Southeast Seattle Education Coalition. She recently wrote (or co-wrote) a paper on the history of Seattle Schools. I'll have a separate post on that document but I have mixed feelings about it. She has been active in PTSA and served on the SCPTSA as a past president. 

She actually has more of a paper trail on her feelings about Seattle public education than other candidates. We can examine that later on. 

- Janis White

She is a lawyer and "senior trial counsel" at the Fidelity National Law Group. She has been an extremely active Seattle Schools parent and the former president of the Seattle Special Education PTSA. She has also been active in PTSA. She is the founding president of All Youth Belong, "a non-profit organization dedicated to increasing inclusion and belonging for disabled youth in community life."

- Allycea Weil

She works in the creative fields of screenwriting and direction. She is the owner of Space Misfits Productions. She helped to create an app called Seattle's Infamous Redline Guide, which is a walking tour of the Central District. She has/had children in SPS at Licton Springs K-8. 



Director 7

LaVallee works at Amazon as a UX designer. She serves on the board of the National Women's Political Caucus and volunteers at Seattle Children's Hospital. 

She helped launch the Billion Dollar Bake Sale that organized hundreds of parents and students to go to Olympia to advocate for better public education funding. 

She already has some endorsements including Emily Wicks in LD 38. 

- Kimberly Early 
Early is president of a parent hotline to help families navigate public school issues especially for Black parents. She works as a coach in the City's Seattle Preschool Program and has 28 years teaching experience. She is a part-time faculty member at Highland College. She has one grown son. 

- Carol Rava  
Rava has high-level skills in operations and strategy with "expertise in education." She works as a VP for Operations and External Affairs at the Postsecondary Commission, a non-profit that works to accredit colleges. 

She also works at Spring Strategy and Communications as a consultant. 

She wrote this op-ed for The Seattle Times in June 2024 on school safety. Her children attended SPS and she actually worked for the district quite a long time ago after having worked for the Gates Foundation. She worked on community partnerships for SPS. 
 

Comments

Anonymous said…
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Again, post anonymously and I will not approve your post.
Anonymous said…
I just hope that whoever is running — and wins — actually wants to be a school board director. It has been really dispiriting as an SPS parent to see Michelle Sarju, for example, proudly show off the countdown clock app she has on her phone that says how many days left she has until her term is over.

Evan Briggs is even worse. She has boasted that she doesn't read her board director email. And then at the Daniel Bagley community meeting last week, she said, "I was forced — against my will — to run for school board director." She looks miserable at every meeting. Honestly, I don't want a leader who has been browbeaten into it. She had two opponents — Christie Robertson and Ben Gitenstein — both of whom are still engaged in SPS politics and would have cared about being a representative of the people. Instead, we have Evan, who I guess is too scared of whoever it is who forced her to run (Chandra Hampson?) instead of living her own happy life. I hope she just steps down and lets someone else represent her district.

— Sand Point parent
Anonymous said…
I agree we need people that actually want to lead, and for the right reasons. Case in point: Sarah Clark is barely ever around, and I have seen most of the time if she is remote, her camera is off. That is not the way I want my school board director to show up. I have heard she had some health challenges prior to seeking her appointment so maybe REALLY reflect on wether or not you can do justice to such critical position.
Then we have or should I say HAD Brandon Hersey. He used to meet with community and reply to emails. Now he is there just to make apologies for Jones. I am sure they have some kind of personal connection or friendship but really? Do your job Brandon.
Regarding the candidates, I will vote for those that are in the race FOR THE KIDS. People that have gone through the trouble to fake their addresses or have other political aspirations are a rotund NO for me. I plan to do my research and ask the hard questions because there is so much at stake.

Fed Up
Anonymous said…
No more political consultants or Seattle Council PTSA members. The board desperately needs someone with actual skill. Anyone connected to the SCPTSA is most likely connected to Chandra Hampson, Liza Rankin and Briggs.

I am glad to see a few good candidates.

~ Onward
Anonymous said…
Carol Rava is a known quantity in SPS circles, but under her prior name of Carol Rava Treat. In 2008, she came to SPS from the Gates foundation to do strategic plan implementation and partnerships under Maria Goodloe-Johnson. She was also formerly married to Noel Treat, twice the general counsel of SPS, once a deputy superintendent, and once the executive director of HR.

-SWWS
Albert J Wong said…
To be fair, Clark has had a spate of health issues that have affected the ability to be physically present.

Clark, along with Topp and Mizrahi are the three board members who've followed up for more info after I sent various data write ups since fall of last year.

Agreed though that we want folks who are for the kids.

Other one is Vivian Song who basically pointed me at the right direction to dig. If you've liked my financial analyses, credit must go to her.

At this point I want track record of understanding finances and structure the rest of the concerns are secondary or lower.
Anonymous said…
Clark actually represents her community. She was the one that spoke out against closing a K-8 school in Magnolia. The school was positioned to be the center of town only for the social justice activists wanting to close the school leaving Magnolia without a middle school.

Clark appears to be a voice of reason representing her community. Thanks for the information, Albert.

- Clark has my vote
Seattle is Lost said…
Clark also understood that the Option School that the district wanted to close in Magnolia was adjacent to a community center. She also understood that there were play fields for sports. Yes, this was the school that the district and board majority wanted to close.

~ Voting for Clark

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