She is also concerned about 35th Ave SW. “The roads are in such a condition that you can patch it, but the patches won’t last long,” she said. “It really needs to be repaved.”
She’s advocating for improvements to happen faster – and has been communicating with the Seattle Department of Transportation to expedited repaving schedules from 2023 to 2019.
Another main transportation issue on Herbold’s list is the Fauntleroy Boulevard Project. She wants to ensure that efforts to make the area more pedestrian friendly do not clash with Sound Transit plans for building a light rail in the same area.
In addition, Herbold is working on tweaks to the Mandatory Housing Affordability/ Residential Program (MHA), which requires residential developers to either provide affordable housing in their plans or to pay into an affordable housing fund.
The final proposal is expected to be complete around the end of the year – and then the city council will deliberate over it.
“If we’re able to get through it next year, it will be the strongest MHA in the country,” she said.
Herbold serves as chair of the Civil Rights, Utilities, Economic Development and Arts committee as well as on the Affordable Housing, Neighborhoods and Finance and Planning, Land Use and Zoning committees. She is also an alternate member of the Sustainability and Transportation committee.
Herbold studied journalism and political science at Syracuse University – and then went on to work for Syracuse United Neighbors, a grassroots organization in New York dedicated to equal access to public services for all neighborhoods.
Some of her earliest jobs involved knocking on doors and talking to people about their aspirations for the future.
“When you’re trying to create change, it’s important to talk about change in a way that people understand – and in a way that makes them want to get involved,” she said. “The object was to sit down in someone’s living room and get them to envision fairer attention from City Hall.”
Herbold moved to Seattle to open an office for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now and also served as an organizer for the Tenants Union.
In addition, she was a board member for the Neighborhood House, Homestead Community Land Trust, the Tenants Union, and the Young Adult Independent Living Project.
In 1997, she coordinated the campaign for Councilmember Nick Licata – and then stayed on as his legislative aide.
“He comes from a very similar background,” Herbold said. “He used to say that it is the obligation of government to tend to the greatest needs of those with the least – and that should be the highest calling.”
She said staying in constant contact with her constituents is the best way to make sure she’s on the right track – especially now as the city faces changes from the federal administration and in the city’s leadership with the upcoming election.
“In times like this, you have to go towards your constituents, seeking as many opportunities to connect with people as possible,” she said. “That keeps me grounded in a time of uncertainty.”