Talauna Reed has dedicated herself to racial justice in Olympia. She is the founder of Justice for Yvonne, and an organizer with Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) and Black Leaders in Action and Solidarity in Thurston County (BLAST). She states that if elected, she would be the first Black woman serving on the Olympia City Council in over 30 years.
Her platform focuses on authentic engagement with marginalized Olympians. She wants to see the city defund the police department, create a citizen oversight committee, and reallocate the money to solutions such as crisis response teams, addiction health programs, and mental health programs. Reed also wants the city to institute rental discrimination protections, focus on dense growth, and support a housing authority to address the housing crisis. She emphasizes an urgent desire to see the city be more responsive and transparent to residents.
The two leading candidates in this race represent a philosophical divide in local and national politics on the left. Reed feels a serious urgency to shake up the council and address issues like police violence immediately that some leaders have called unrealistic. On the other side, Parshley has led a steady response to community demands that some activists have decried as incrementalism.
Talauna Reed has dedicated herself to racial justice in Olympia. She is the founder of Justice for Yvonne, and an organizer with Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) and Black Leaders in Action and Solidarity in Thurston County (BLAST). She states that if elected, she would be the first Black woman serving on the Olympia City Council in over 30 years.
Her platform focuses on authentic engagement with marginalized Olympians. She wants to see the city defund the police department, create a citizen oversight committee, and reallocate the money to solutions such as crisis response teams, addiction health programs, and mental health programs. Reed also wants the city to institute rental discrimination protections, focus on dense growth, and support a housing authority to address the housing crisis. She emphasizes an urgent desire to see the city be more responsive and transparent to residents.
The two leading candidates in this race represent a philosophical divide in local and national politics on the left. Reed feels a serious urgency to shake up the council and address issues like police violence immediately that some leaders have called unrealistic. On the other side, Parshley has led a steady response to community demands that some activists have decried as incrementalism.
There are two good candidates running for Port of Olympia in District 3: Joel Hansen and Delissa Denton. We lean toward Hansen because of his strong support from local progressive leaders and organizations.