THANK YOU for visiting my website!!
I honored to serve the diverse communities of the 37th Legislative District, from Central Seattle to Southeast Seattle to our unincorporated King County neighborhoods of Bryn Mawr, Lakeridge, Skyway, and West Hill. The people who built these communities were the people who shaped my priorities and my perspectives, so I am deeply gratified to advance our views and our voices in the People's House as your elected Representative.
The Washington State Legislature will convene for Session from January 23, 2023 through April 23, 2023. You may follow our proceedings through tvw.org or leg.wa.gov. My official legislative website is Representative Sharon Tomiko Santos. If you wish to reach me regarding legislative matters, please feel free to e-mail me through this form or directly at [email protected] You may also call the legislative Hotline at 1-800-562-6000 (TTY for Hearing Impaired 800.833.6388). I will look forward to hearing your views on the issues before us.
In the meantime, this website will be in hibernation until the next re-election campaign begins! I'll look forward to that reunion of all the Friends of Santos.
Warm Regards,
Sharon Tomiko Santos
ABOUT SHARON TOMIKO
Sharon Tomiko Santos is a local grassroots leader with a history of activism that spans more than 40 years in the Seattle area. A strong advocate for human rights, quality public education, economic justice, and affordable healthcare and housing, Santos represents one of the most ethnically diverse legislative districts in the State of Washington, the 37th District. She was first elected in 1998.
Santos entered politics early in her youth when the threat of a federal desegregation order created a storm of controversy in the Seattle public school system. As a young student at Franklin High School, Santos was one of many local advocates of a locally developed plan to encourage voluntary desegregation. Today, Santos still believes in the concept of “local voices and local control.”
With strong ties to the community, Santos’ tireless efforts to advance the interests and concerns of women, immigrants and refugees, and people of color are well-recognized. In 1993, she received the Martin Luther King, Jr. “Keeping the Dream Alive” award; she was a 1996 Honoree of the Washington State Women’s Political Caucus; in 2000, she received the inaugural Bernie Whitebear Award from United Indians of All Tribes Foundation; and, in 2006, the Hate Free Zone of Washington (now, OneAmerica) recognized her with the Leadership in Justice in Government award. Santos’ interest in issues affecting women worldwide led her to help form a delegation from Seattle to attend the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China in 1995. She is the first Japanese American woman elected to the Washington State House of Representatives.
She has been involved with numerous local organizations such as the Church Council of Greater Seattle, the King County Women’s Political Caucus, Puget Sound Public Radio (KUOW 94.9 FM), and the Wing Luke Asian Museum.
Santos serves as the Chairperson of the Education Committee in the House of Representatives and sits on the Standing Committee for Business and Financial Services and for Finance. She also serves as the founding Chairperson of the National Asian Pacific American Caucus of State Legislators Foundation.