- ‘Ana Fonongava’inga Stringer
- Aissa Yazzie
- Alana Quintasket
- Amanda Millin
- Azure Boure
- Barbara Wilson
- Beangka Elliott
- Brenda Asuncion
- Buster Landin
- Caroline Ammons
- Charlene Krise
- Cherie Kauahi
- Chris Whitehead
- Courtney Greiner
- Dana Lepofsky
- Darcy Mathews
- Darren Lerner
- Darren Okimoto
- Elizabeth Campbell
- Elizabeth Unsell
- Emily Akamine
- Emily Buckner
- Emma Norman
- Ginny L. Eckert
- Jamie Donatuto
- Janine Ledford
- Jay Mills
- Jennifer Nu
- Jodie Toft
- Joe Williams
- Julie Barber
- Kai Fox
- Karen Grosskreutz
- Katy Hintzen
- Kenneth Weitzel
- Kevin Chang
- Kim Moa
- Laural Ballew
- Leigh Engel
- Lindsey Pierce
- Mackenzie Grinnell
- Malia Heimuli
- Marco Hatch
- MaryAnn Wagner
- Maya Guttman
- Melissa Good
- Melissa Poe
- Miwa Tamanaha
- Myk Heidt
- Nicole Norris
- Octavio Alonso Cruz Coto
- Olivia Horwedel
- Raymond Paddock III
- Robin Little Wing Sigo
- Rosa Laucci
- Rosie Alegado
- Ryan Crim
- Sonia Ibarra
- Timothy Ballew Sr.
- Tylo Kennedy
- Viviane Barry
- Wally Ito

Emily Akamine is the former project assistant for Washington Sea Grant and Indigenous Aquaculture Collaborative Project. She recently earned a bachelors degree in Public and Global Health at the University of Washington. Growing up in Hawaii has made her appreciate the environmental stewardship led by Indigenous communities as well as injustices Native communities face in advocating for the environment. She has experience interning with Kua‘āina Ulu ‘Auamo (KUA) in the Limu Hui project to help survey the shoreline and educate community members on the importance of Hawaii’s seaweeds. She has also worked with University of Washington Medicine in the Kidney Transplant Department in coordinating patient care with providers. Emily’s broader professional goal is to bring about representation and awareness to the environmental justice that coastal communities practice in their daily lives.