Junelle Lewis is running for Monroe City Council, Position 5 to make Monroe a more inclusive and welcoming place. Lewis has worked as a case manager for Snohomish County, an office manager at Maltby Elementary, and a family support specialist with Everett Public Schools. She also serves on the Monroe Planning Commission and on the board of Take the First Step, which serves low-income community members and people facing homelessness.
Lewis' top priority is making housing more affordable, as Monroe's population has doubled since 2000. She wants to build more multifamily, affordable homes, enact protections for tenants, and provide assistance for people who are unhoused. Lewis is also passionate about empowering small business owners, as she and her husband own a local food truck. If elected, she would create mentorship programs for new business owners and make business processes more accessible.
As a member of the Monroe Equity Council and the chair of the Juneteenth Committee, Lewis has organized marches and events for the Black community to celebrate and educate. As a parent of eight children in the public school system, Lewis has also been an outspoken advocate for racial justice in our schools. After several hate crimes and reports of racism in Monroe schools made headlines, Lewis and her children testified to the school board to call for change. If elected, she would go out into neighborhoods and host town halls to engage more directly with communities.
Lewis is running against Republican Jacob Walker, an insurance broker and planning commissioner who has previously run twice before and lost each time.
Walker's top priority is to preserve the "small-town feel" he remembers from his childhood in Monroe, which doesn't reflect the city's rapid growth. Unlike Lewis, he opposes policy changes that would make housing more affordable in Monroe. Without these long overdue reforms, spiraling housing costs will continue to displace our seniors and prevent young people from buying their first homes. Walker is endorsed by many Republican electeds because of his conservative platform.
Lewis is by far the most progressive choice for Monroe City Council and deserves your vote for Position 5.
Junelle Lewis is running for Monroe City Council, Position 5 to make Monroe a more inclusive and welcoming place. Lewis has worked as a case manager for Snohomish County, an office manager at Maltby Elementary, and a family support specialist with Everett Public Schools. She also serves on the Monroe Planning Commission and on the board of Take the First Step, which serves low-income community members and people facing homelessness.
Lewis' top priority is making housing more affordable, as Monroe's population has doubled since 2000. She wants to build more multifamily, affordable homes, enact protections for tenants, and provide assistance for people who are unhoused. Lewis is also passionate about empowering small business owners, as she and her husband own a local food truck. If elected, she would create mentorship programs for new business owners and make business processes more accessible.
As a member of the Monroe Equity Council and the chair of the Juneteenth Committee, Lewis has organized marches and events for the Black community to celebrate and educate. As a parent of eight children in the public school system, Lewis has also been an outspoken advocate for racial justice in our schools. After several hate crimes and reports of racism in Monroe schools made headlines, Lewis and her children testified to the school board to call for change. If elected, she would go out into neighborhoods and host town halls to engage more directly with communities.
Lewis is running against Republican Jacob Walker, an insurance broker and planning commissioner who has previously run twice before and lost each time.
Walker's top priority is to preserve the "small-town feel" he remembers from his childhood in Monroe, which doesn't reflect the city's rapid growth. Unlike Lewis, he opposes policy changes that would make housing more affordable in Monroe. Without these long overdue reforms, spiraling housing costs will continue to displace our seniors and prevent young people from buying their first homes. Walker is endorsed by many Republican electeds because of his conservative platform.
Lewis is by far the most progressive choice for Monroe City Council and deserves your vote for Position 5.