Pasifika Village Council

Pacific Islander Advoacy Coalition

Pasifika Village Council is our commitment to advocacy for the unique and diverse health & wellness priority needs of Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander communities across Washington State.

We are committed to supporting policies that reduce barriers for NH/PIs to thrive while creating civic education opportunities to cast a wide net to help NH/PIs politicize their values and their voice.

Our Washington Pasifika Village Council works in partnership with the National NH/PI Policy Council to drive national priorities from the local and state level. We are made up of a broad coalition of NH/PI trusted community-based leaders and organizers who are concerned about the well-being of our NH/PI communities and are galvanized to advance the threefold mission of PICA-WA: advance NH/PI wellness, build community power and nurture cultural home together.

Our Council Members

Adriana Suluai,
UTOPIA WA
Amasai Jeke,
UTOPIA WA
Dania Otto,
Sakura 39ers Youth Assoc.
Dr. Tara Lawal, Rainier Valley Birth and Health Center
Faaluauna Pritchard,
Asia Pacific Cultural Center
Faapouaita Leapai, Washington Housing Alliance
Frances Limtiaco, WA State Department of Health
Inez Finau Olive,
WA Achivement Council
Kiana Fuega, Sociocultural Anthropology Doctoral Student – UWUW
Lydia Faitalia, WA Commission on Asian Pacific American Affairs
La'i King Samoan Catholics; Pacific Islander Health Board
Mirius Wenda,
West Papua Campaign-USA
Paige Castro-Reyes, Community Campus Partnerships for Health
Rachel Molina,
Marshallese Women's Association
Santino Camacho, Guma’ Gela’ Queer & Trans Chamoru Art Collective; UW
Sierra Suafoa,
Front and Centered
Violet Lavatai, TOA: Tenants Organizers & Advocates
Diana Krishna,
UTOPIA WA
Sui Lan Ho'okano
Dorcas Taidrik, Marshallese Heritage Language Program
Kiana McKenna,
PICA-WA
Keola Tagovailoa-Kualapi, PICA-WA
Luke Kobin, Spokane Marshallese Community Association
Kaloku Holt,
Ke Kui Foundation
Dichela Ueki,
Pacific Islander Health Board
Vanessa Hernandez, American Civil Liberties Union of WA
Max Halvorson, Research Scientist, Social Development Research Group – UW, School of Social Work

Our Wellness Policy Priorities

Created with community input and based off the most critical needs being addressed through our direct service and systems advocacy work, these priorities guide our systems advocacy work and serve as a values system for how we believe systems and institutions should be working with and serving our NH/PI communities.

Currently, there are no Pacific Islanders that hold any political office in WA. Many NH/PIs aren’t able to vote due to COFA/US National/undocumented status. We stand with efforts to build up civic education and power within oppressed communities in helping them in getting a sense of their own power politically.

We believe in full voting suffrage for Pacific Islanders who have made the US their home

Food is at the center of our wellness and and also our unhealth. Pasifika communities have traditionally accessed their lands and oceans to provide sustenance for their families. Through environmental racism, many in our communities are now exposed to colonized diet that is disembodied from land and from culture. Access to healthy foods is critical for Pasifika well-being.

We support food sovereignty movements that elevate localized food justice solutions.

NH/PIs in the State of Washington are five times more likely to experience homelessness than their white peers according to the One Night Count in 2020. Many NH/PIs facing housing insecurity often do not engage with housing service providers due to institutional paternalism and prescriptions, linguistic racism, and culturally irresponsive services that are not aligned with Pasifika cultural values. We champion housing solutions that keep families together and lean on the family for the solutions.

Xenophobia goes hand in hand with white supremacy and has littered the ways that our national and local government systems continue to dehumanize the lives of those who are undocumented through policies that enforce an economic embargo in immigrant communities of color. Pacific Islanders who are undocumented face enforced poverty and a broken system that locks them up in detention centers.

We support immigration policies that create pathways to citizenship/residency and policies that offer immediate economic relief.

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the devastating fact that NH/PIs face the worst health disparities compared to all other racial groups – intersections of COFA, US National, undocumented status, and chronic low wages in employment fields where NH/PIs work have all led to a significant part of the community lacking healthcare coverage expounding negative consequences in health outcomes for NH/PIs.

We combat these harms by fighting for accessible and culturally-responsive healthcare.

We know too well the plight of our peoples in facing systematic state violence historically in their traditional homelands and on the continent. We support the decriminalization of our NH/PI communities and restorative justice solutions that center community leadership in co-designing rehabilitation that centers the liberation of our incarcerated NH/PI family.

We champion healing practices that restores harmony where those who have harmed and victims of harm are given real pathways to healing. 

Pasifika communities have suffered under policing policies that are birthed from anti-Indigenous and anti-Black sentiment. We are in alignment with restructuring our policing systems so it reflects the values of the communities they serve.

We stand with the Black Lives Matter movement and the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women’s Movement and call on the defunding of harmful policing systems while investing in public safety methods based on restorative justice principles.

The harmful lumping of Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders under the “API” label have led to the erasure of NH/PIs in the past decades in aggregated data but it has also led to the decades of political and funding disinvestment in NH/PI community infrastructure.

We are determined to fight for full data sovereignty not just for NH/PIs, but for other Indigenous communities who are overlooked in data collection methods. We are committed to decolonizing data collection.

PICA-WA is aligned with all Indigenous Pasifika movements struggling to regain control over the stewardship of Pasifika soil, oceans, waters and mountains.

We align with West Papuan liberation efforts, Pacific-led climate justice efforts, the fight to protect water and mountain and also the struggle of Indigenous Pasifikans to be free of military occupation and nuclear poison from their traditional homelands

PICA-WA believes that our youth and their families are the best stewards of their educational journey – Pacific Islander youth suffer from the highest rates of suspension and expulsions according to OSPI data reports. Explicit racism from faculty who know little of our cultures and experiences have led to dismal outcomes for our youth.

We support educational policies that is rooted in cultural identity development and resourcing poor schools through equitable funding solutions.

We believe in the full integration of our queer & trans Pasifika siblings including Mahu, Fa’afafine, Fa’atane, Leiti, Vakasalewalewa, Gela and other Two-Spirit identities within Oceania that reflects our Indigenous references and commitment to decolonizing Christian and Western notions of the gender binary that continues to harm members of our communities.

Pasifika languages retain cultural and spiritual traditions and protocols rooted in right stewardship with the Earth. We believe that the technology that is our Indigenous languages need to be nurtured and perpetuated for generations to come. Our languages point back to the Pasifika soul – without it, we lose our soul.

We lift up language justice and language access for all of our Pasifika languages.

Pacific Islander Community Association (PICA) acknowledges that our organization and community work, live, and play on the unceded traditional lands of the Spokane, Chinook, Cowlitz, Muckleshoot, Snoqualmie, Duwamish, Chelan, Nisqually, Squaxin, Chehalis, Sauk-Suiattle, Stillaguamish, Tulalip, Puyallup, and the Steilacoom tribes. We honor with gratitude the land itself and its original caretakers
Pacific Islander Community Association
is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

EIN: 84-2470123