Joy Hollingsworth Explained

Joy Hollingsworth
Office:Member of the Seattle City Council
from District 3
Term Start:January 2, 2024
Predecessor:Kshama Sawant
Birth Date:15 March 1984
Residence:Seattle, Washington
Occupation:Business owner
Party:Democrat
Spouse:Iesha Gloria Valencia

Jacqueline J. "Joy" Hollingsworth[1] (born March 15, 1984) is an American politician, businessperson, and former basketball player. She is a member of the Seattle City Council from the 3rd district, having been elected in 2023. She played basketball at the college level for the University of San Francisco and later the University of Arizona. She served as an assistant coach at Seattle University. Hollingsworth is now part of her family's local marijuana business, The Hollingsworth Cannabis Company (THC Co.), which is based in Washington.

Early life and basketball career

Joy Hollingsworth was born in Seattle on March 15, 1984.[2] Hollingsworth's paternal grandmother, Dorothy Hollingsworth, was a prominent educator and civil rights activist in Seattle.[3] Her uncle is former Sonics player, Bruce Seals.[4] Hollingsworth's mother, Rhonda, moved from New Orleans to Seattle to be closer to her brother, Bruce.[4]

Hollingsworth played for Seattle Prep and led the basketball team to their first girl's state title in 2002.[5] She started playing college basketball at the University of San Francisco and then later transferred to the University of Arizona after two years.[6] She earned her Bachelor of Arts in 2007 from the University of Arizona and in 2009, earned a Masters in Education in Intercollegiate Athletics Leadership from the University of Washington.

Before the 2009–2010 basketball season, she was hired as the assistant women's basketball coach at Seattle University.[7] Hollingsworth also played basketball in Athens, and has written for ESPN The Magazine.[8]

San Francisco and Arizona statistics

Source[9]

YearTeamGPPointsFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGSPGBPGPPG
2002–03San Francisco2930940.7%36.1%80.6%5.01.61.80.010.7
2003–04San Francisco2729341.2%25.8%57.1%5.91.91.10.010.9
2004–05Did not play due to NCAA transfer rules
2005–06Arizona3043143.3%33.3%56.1%6.02.31.30.214.4
2006–07Arizona3251839.5%28.4%74.8%5.32.22.10.116.2
Career118155141.1%11.1%66.7%10.32.01.60.113.1

Post-basketball

Hollingsworth left coaching in 2012. In 2013, Hollingsworth's brother, Raft, convinced the family to begin and invest in a marijuana business, growing plants for their own business.[10] They opened the Hollingsworth Cannabis Company (THC Co.), located in Shelton, with Hollingsworth overseeing processing.[11] Their marijuana farm has around 9,000 plants and appeared on an episode of .[12] [13]

Hollingsworth and her family were crucial in ensuring a law supporting more people of color entering the cannabis industry in Washington state passed.[13]

Seattle City Council

2023 election

In January 2023, Hollingsworth announced that she would be running to represent District 3 on the Seattle City Council.[14] In her announcement, Hollingsworth state she would "develop and promote progressive and practical strategies to address root causes..."[15] Later that week, incumbent Kshama Sawant, the council's only socialist member, announced that she would not run for reelection.[16]

In the primary, Mayor Bruce Harrell endorsed Hollingsworth of the eight challengers for the open seat.[17] She earned the most votes in the August election, with 36.87% of the vote, and advancing to the general election alongside transportation advocate Alex Hudson, who earned 36.53%.[18] [19] Hollingsworth and Hudson agreed that homelessness, housing affordability, and public safety, but differed on approach, with Hollingsworth supporting moderate solutions and Hudson more progressive ones.[18] Hollingsworth advocated for increasing police staffing and supported the city council's bill to prosecute low-level drug offenses, while Hudson advocated for greater community investments and police alternatives.[20]

In the November general election Hollingsworth defeated Hudson, 52.94% to 46.71%.[21] [22]

Tenure

Hollingsworth took office on January 2, 2024.[23] She was sworn in with five other new council members who all ran on a moderate platform, representing the largest turnover in the city council since 1911.[24]

In July 2024, Hollingsworth proposed legislation that would continue exempting businesses with less than 500 employees from matching the minimum wage for companies with 500+ employees and increasing the minimum wage based on inflation.[25] The plan was meant to advert small businesses from wages increasing by $3 per hour.[25] After public backlash from citizens, workers, and labor organizers, Hollingsworth pulled the bill, though she vowed to continue the advance the bill in the future.[26]

Hollingsworth also voted in favor of the controversial exclusionary zones known as the Stay Out of Drug Areas (SODA) and Stay Out of Areas of Prostitution (SOAP).[27] She added amendments that would create a SODA zone in the Captial Hill neighborhood to disrupt drug trafficking in the area.[27] [28]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Financial Affairs Disclosure . https://web.archive.org/web/20240903230812/https://apollo.pdc.wa.gov/public/financial-affairs/statement/115154 . 2024-09-03 . 2024-09-03 . Washington State Public Disclosure Commission.
  2. Web site: Joy Hollingsworth Biography. University of Arizona Athletics. en. April 20, 2019.
  3. News: Dorothy Hollingsworth, trailblazer in Seattle's education, civil rights community, dies at 101. Yoon-Hendricks. Alexandra. July 22, 2022. . January 23, 2023.
  4. News: Joy Hollingsworth: Shooting, scoring is gift from family. Smith. Craig. March 13, 2002. . April 20, 2019.
  5. News: Raley . Dan . Prep rules Metro . 2 December 2024 . Seattle Post Intelligencer . February 8, 2002.
  6. Web site: Joy Hollingsworth Biography. GoSeattleU.com. April 20, 2019.
  7. Web site: WBB Assistant Coach Joy Hollingsworth to Leave Seattle U. June 1, 2012. GoSeattleU.com. April 20, 2019.
  8. News: Joy Hollingsworth to be inducted into Seattle Prep Hall of Fame. Ringer. Sandy. October 6, 2010. The Seattle Times. en-US. April 20, 2019.
  9. Web site: NCAA Statistics. web1.ncaa.org. 2021-05-19.
  10. Web site: Meet the Hollingsworths, a family pot business. Luna. Ruby de. October 24, 2018. KUOW. April 20, 2019.
  11. News: Trailblazing Seattleites run a family farm on the pot frontier. Young. Bob. November 28, 2016. The Seattle Times. en-US. April 20, 2019.
  12. News: 420: Pot's own holiday. April 20, 2018. The Dispatch. Moline, Illinois. Associated Press. April 20, 2019. Newspapers.com.
  13. News: Frizzelle . Christopher . Olympia Just Passed the Most Progressive Cannabis Law in the Country . 2 December 2024 . The Stranger . April 12, 2020.
  14. News: Bellamy-Walker . Tat . January 16, 2023 . Hollingsworth to run for Seattle City Council seat held by Sawant . The Seattle Times . January 17, 2023.
  15. News: Dyer . Oxley . Hollingsworth aims for Sawant's District 3 in race for Seattle City Council . 2 December 2024 . KUOW . January 17, 2023.
  16. News: Staff . Kshama Sawant will not seek re-election on Seattle City Council . 2 December 2024 . KOMO . January 19, 2023.
  17. News: Schumann . Timothy . Joy Hollingsworth endorsed by Mayor Harrell in District 3 Seattle City Council Race . 2 December 2024 . The Center Square . July 8, 2023.
  18. News: Clarridge . Christine . Seattle voters to pick Sawant's successor in District 3 . 2 December 2024 . Axios . October 24, 2023.
  19. Web site: King County Official Results August 2023 Primary . King County Elections . 18 August 2024 . August 2023 primary results.
  20. News: Cohen . Josh . Seattle City Council District 3: Joy Hollingsworth vs. Alex Hudson . 2 December 2024 . Cascade PBS . October 3, 2023.
  21. Web site: King County Official Results November 2023 Election . King County Elections . 18 August 2024 . 2023 General Election.
  22. News: Taylor . Sarah Grace . November 10, 2023 . Joy Hollingsworth wins Seattle City Council District 3 race . The Seattle Times . November 10, 2023.
  23. News: Beekman . Daniel . January 2, 2024 . Seattle politics shift as City Council gets new members, president . The Seattle Times . January 2, 2024.
  24. News: Ng . Assunta . 2024 will transform Seattle’s City Hall — Its diversity is incomplete . 1 December 2024 . Northwest Asian Weekly . December 12, 2023.
  25. News: Hocker . Cornelius . Seattle City Council member proposes wage hike delay to save small businesses from 'financial cliff' . 2 December 2024 . King5 . July 31, 2024.
  26. News: Kroman . David . Council member withdraws bill to rewrite Seattle’s minimum wage law . 2 December 2024 . The Seattle Times . August 2, 2024.
  27. News: Cohen . Josh . Seattle enacts controversial drug, prostitution ‘stay out’ zones . 2 December 2024 . Cascade PBS . September 17, 2024.
  28. News: Carder . Justin . Hollingsworth proposes new Capitol Hill ‘Stay out of Drug Area’ including Cal Anderson Park, light rail station, Broadway/Pike hot spots . 2 December 2024 . Capital Hill Seattle Blog . September 9, 2024.