Tim Greyhavens is a Seattle-based photographer, writer and researcher. He concentrates on self-assigned photography projects, writing about the intersections between photography and philanthropy, and researching funding sources for photographers around the world.
Jeevika Verma recently graduated from the University of Washington and is now a poet hungry for the world. Her work aims to create conversations about power, art, culture and identity. She is originally from India.
Mary Ann Gwinn is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who writes about books and authors for The Seattle Times, Booklist, Newsday and other publications. She was one of three jurors for the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in fiction. She serves on the board of the National Book Critics Circle.
Amy Gulick is an award-winning nature photographer and writer, and a Fellow with the International League of Conservation Photographers. Her images and stories have been featured in Outdoor Photographer, National Wildlife, Audubon and other publications. Her work in Alaska has received numerous honors including the Daniel Housberg Wilderness Image Award from the Alaska Conservation Foundation and the Voice of the Wild Award from the Alaska Wilderness League. Her book, Salmon in the Trees: Life in Alaska’s Tongass Rain Forest, is the recipient of an Independent Publisher Book Award and two Nautilus Book Awards.
David J. Leonard is author of "Playing While White: Privilege and Power on and off the Field" (University of Washington Press) and a professor at Washington State University.
Frederick P. Rivara, MD, MPH, holds the Children's Guild Association Endowed Chair in Pediatrics, and is a UW professor of pediatrics and an adjunct professor of epidemiology. His contributions to the field of injury control have spanned 30 years. He served as founding director of the Harborview Injury and Research Center in Seattle for 13 years, and was founding president of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention. Dr. Rivara has devoted his career to studying childhood injury and injury prevention. He has conducted seminal research on the effectiveness of bicycle helmets and developed programs to promote helmet use that have been copied and implemented around the world. These programs have led to a significant reduction in the number of children sustaining bicycle-related traumatic brain injury and death. His current research is on the long term disability after traumatic brain injury in children, interventions to reduce the prevalence of PTSD after traumatic injury in adolescents, and the genetic factors associated with poor recovery from trauma. He is the author of over 390 publications, the majority on injury control.
Paula Boggs fronts the touring “Seattle-Brewed Soulgrass” Paula Boggs Band and is a recipient of the 2018 Seattle Mayor’s Arts Award. Boggs sits on the Seattle Symphony Board as Vice Chair, Audiences and Communities, co-chaired KEXP’s New Home Campaign, is a voting member of the National Recording Academy, Pacific Northwest Chapter and until August 2017 served as a member of the President’s Committee for the Arts and the Humanities.