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Oct 28, 2022
Seattle-based Atlas Health named five new executives to its leadership team: David Franklin, president; Christopher Parks, chief client officer; Nicole Nye, vice president of product management; Nicole Hess, senior vice president of marketing; and Todd Helmink, head of strategic partnerships. Atlas Health connects patients to $30 billion in annual philanthropic aid from over 20,000 patient assistance and social support programs. Franklin will lead marketing, sales, partnerships, pharmacy, cancer services and client success functions. He previously served as co-founder and COO of Connance, a health care revenue cycle and predictive analytics technology company acquired by Waystar. Parks will be responsible for managing the company's patient advocacy, client success and implementation teams. Previously, he founded Change Healthcare, a technology platform that improves information flow and cost and quality transparency for payers, providers and patients. Parks also held several senior-level positions with Avaneer Health. Nye will lead the management team to advance product strategy and execution. Over the past 25 years, she launched one of the first consumer-driven health plans in the country and has delivered advanced technology solutions to the provider market. She previously guided product management and strategy in senior roles at McKesson, Connance and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. Most recently, Hess helped to build the marketing and demand generation functions at Olive, a health care AI automation leader. Previously she held marketing leadership roles at Surgical Information Systems, MedAssets (now FinThrive and Vizient), DocASAP (now owned by Optum) and Connance. Helmink will focus on building out the partner strategy and ecosystem to expand the company's hospital and health system network, as well as establishing new relationships within the payer, pharmaceutical and specialty pharmacy verticals. He has held both sales and strategic partnership executive roles at PocketScript, Allscripts Healthcare, and most recently at ConnectiveRx.
Commerce platform fabric hired Yon Nuta as its first chief product officer. In this role, Nuta will lead product vision and development across fabric's suite of commerce offerings. He joins fabric from Babylon Health, where he guided analytics, product design and development as CPO. He has also held product leadership roles at Gaia, Talenthouse, ComScore and Microsoft. Previously, he was the co-founder/CEO of TalkIQ. Fabric secured $140 million in Series C funding in February. Headquartered in Seattle, with offices around the world, fabric is backed by SoftBank, Glynn Capital, Forerunner Ventures, Stripes, B Capital Group, Greycroft, Norwest Venture Partners, Redpoint Ventures, Sierra Ventures, Innovation Global Capital, Ascend Venture Capital, and Expa.
The Quinault Indian Nation launched Toptana Technologies, the first Indigenous-owned cable landing station and backhaul network provider on the West Coast. This new venture will bring connectivity to unserved and under-served markets across Washington and Oregon, and extending to surrounding communities, rural areas and other tribal groups. Toptana will provide trans-Pacific network capacity from the Pacific Northwest to Asia-Pacific and Oceania markets, while enabling network access from the coast to the I-5 corridor with onward connectivity to Seattle, and Hillsboro, Oregon. The cable landing station will support four sub-sea cable customers at launch, with the capacity to expand up to 16 over time. Construction of the landing station will begin in mid- to late 2023, and is expected to be operational in 2025. Assured Communications Advisors was selected to be the primary operations service provider and facilitator of sales and industry partnerships. The Quinault Indian Nation is a sovereign Indian nation covering about 210,000 acres, including 27 contiguous miles of coastline, in the Pacific Northwest. Its population consists of the Quinault and Queets tribes and descendants of five other coastal tribes: Quileute, Hoh, Chehalis, Chinook and Cowlitz.
Oct 27, 2022



PCC Community Markets announced three executive hires: Chris Naismith as chief financial officer; Susan Livingston as vice president of marketing and purpose; and Michele Mallory now serves as vice president of IT. These three leaders complete the executive team that will guide PCC into the future with a newly defined three-year strategic plan under the leadership of Krish Srinivasan, who stepped into the role of president and CEO in January. Naismith has more than two decades of experience with consumer retail for both public and privately held companies. She started her career in public accounting and went on to hold CFO or senior financial roles at Walt Disney, Gap, Williams Sonoma, Microsoft and Sur La Table. Livingston's hire marks a new era for PCC, as she leads the merger of the marketing and social and environmental responsibility teams to form the co-op's first Marketing + Purpose department. She comes to PCC as a brand marketing and social impact leader with more than 25 years of cross-sector experience. She bridged from her early career in public health policy into purpose-driven brand strategy for consumer brands, including Nike and Whole Foods Market. In her new role, Livingston's focus will be optimizing private sector resources, systems, and teams to deliver scaled social impact solutions through PCC's triple bottom line business strategy. Mallory has over 20 years of technology experience across multiple industries. She will oversee all aspects of the planning, development and maintenance of PCC's information systems, technologies, and processes to support brick and mortar retail, online/digital and e-commerce. Founded in Seattle in 1953, PCC operates 16 stores in the Puget Sound area.
Leafly Holdings, an online cannabis discovery marketplace and resource for cannabis consumers, hired Carlos Pinto as chief commercial officer. Pinto will lead Leafly's sales, marketing and content teams. As part of his role, he will manage and shape the go-to market strategy for existing and new products, oversee the sales planning process and refine the company's product strategy to increase revenue generation in both existing and new markets. Prior to joining Leafly, Pinto was chief commercial officer at Adnet Global. Before Adnet, Pinto spent two decades at Getty Images, where he managed multiple business units. Leafly is headquartered in Seattle.
Eric Sprunk, former Nike COO, and General Mills and Bombardier board member, has joined the Jigx board of directors. During his tenure at Nike, Sprunk was known for modernizing the operations and technology groups. Additionally, he brings years of board experience across a range of retail and corporate entities. Jigx, based in the Seattle area, is a mobile application development software as a service that enables companies to build mobile applications. In addition to joining the board of directors, Sprunk invested in Jigx. His funding adds to the Series A funding previously received from FUSE.vc, with a post-money valuation of $45 million. Jigx was founded in 2020 by Adriaan van Wyk, former CEO of K2 technologies software, and Grant Dickenson.
Named for the old Rhodes department store that once occupied the three buildings in downtown Tacoma, Tacoma Rhodes Center is gradually finding new tenants. Lee & Associates is brokering the space, and recently announced that Maxim Healthcare Services, Mindful Support Services, ES Technologies and CU Strategic Planning have signed for a combined 17,000 square feet. Harrison Laird and John Bauder led the leasing effort. The latter said in a statement, “The landlord has done a great job of attracting tenants with high-end buildouts, flexible floor plans, and leasing incentives. An aggressive marketing program combined with the property's abundant parking, great accessibility, and recent improvements has led to outstanding recent leasing success.” The complex sold to Portland investors two years ago. Lee has since signed eight tenants occupying 42,000 square feet. Besides the garage, two century-old office buildings offer some 180,000 square feet.

Monica Wallace joined the Bellevue office of Kidder Mathews last year. Now the firm has announced she's been promoted to executive vice president, and will oversee six offices in our state and Oregon. KM's Brian Hatcher said in a statement, “Kidder Mathews is on a substantial growth path, and Monica has what it takes to help expand our brokerage division in the Pacific Northwest.” Said the industry veteran Wallace, “When you include the opportunity for brokers to become shareholders, it makes for compelling conversations with brokerage talent, and I look forward to helping grow our team.”

A longtime broker in the South Seattle office for Kidder Mathews, now an executive vice president, Patricia Loveall has also been a longtime member of the Society of Industrial and Office Realtors. Fellow SIOR members recently elected her to the rank of SIOR global president. She said in a statement, “As a long-time SIOR designee, I'm honored to serve as the 2022-2023 SIOR global president, and look forward to working with SIOR leadership to implement our new five-year strategic plan.”
Prologis is gradually building and filling a potential 1.5 million square feet at its Emerald Gateway. (Numbers and building numbering vary according to tenant demand.) JLL brokers the 62-acre development, which is south of Boeing Field, and just west of Interstate 5. In its recent third-quarter industrial report, CBRE says that electric truck maker Rivian has taken 97,791 square feet at Building 2, on the northwest corner of the site. That's over half of a building slated to have 171,924 square feet, with delivery in March of next year. As the DJC first reported early last year, HPA Architecture designed the tilt-up structure, with Sierra Construction as the builder. (The latter's webcams indicate that ground work is well underway.) For Rivian, Building 2 will evidently replace the service operation it now has in the Wilburton area of Bellevue. The JLL team representing Prologis includes Chris Spofford, Les Boudwin, Scott Carter and David Cahill. As for a future sales center, Rivian filed a plan early last year for the Federal Army & Navy Surplus store in Belltown, but it withdrew the plan that summer. The building remains for sale, with CBRE and Azose Commercial Properties as the brokers.

Neil Walter Co. recently announced a new addition to its roster of talent. Spencer Mead joins the firm as an industrial associate. He makes the move from Sunbelt Rentals. His new focus will be on sales and leasing in the Kent Valley and south Puget Sound areas.