Kurt Chilcott
Board Chair
Kurt Chilcott currently serves as the Chair of The California Endowment’s Board of Directors. A recognized leader in economic development and small business finance joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2019.
For more than 35 years, Chilcott has led innovative successful organizations and programs in the public and non-profit sectors, and for more than 20 years has served as the Chief Executive Officer of the San Diego-headquartered CDC Small Business Finance. The non-profit organization has experienced tremendous growth, establishing offices throughout California, Arizona, and Nevada, and maintaining its rank as the top-volume CDC in the nation under Chilcott’s leadership.
Chilcott has a long history of leadership in the economic development field. He currently serves on the board of the National Association of Government Guaranteed Lenders and Bank of America’s National Community Advisory Council. He is president of California Southern Small Business Development Corporation, a state-funded loan-guarantee program designed to help secure financing for small businesses and create jobs. In addition, he is a director for Neighborhood Bancorp, the holding company of Neighborhood National Bank, which provides capital to underserved communities.
Chilcott was the first co-chair of the International Economic Development Council and in 2013 received IEDCs prestigious Lifetime Achievement Award for Excellence in Economic Development. Chilcott was the last chair of the Council for Urban Economic Development (CUED), chair of the National Association of Development Companies (NADCO), and president of the California Association for Local Economic Development (CALED). He also has served on the boards of numerous local and state non-profit organizations.
Chilcott’s leadership and accomplishments have been recognized by his peers and industry leaders. He is both a Fellow Member and an Honorary Life Member of the International Economic Development Council. Chilcott has received both the Golden Bear Award California’s Highest Accolade for Economic Development Leadership and the Arthur Goodman Memorial Award for commitment to underserved populations and areas. During his tenure, CDC has received the National Lender Award a record three times, most recently in 2007.
Katherine A. Flores, MD
Board Vice Chair
Katherine A. Flores, MD, a national leader in primary health care and the development of a diverse health workforce, is the Vice Chair for The Endowment Board of Directors. She joined the Board in May 2020.
Dr. Flores spent her early years as a farm worker until the age of 16 and currently serves as a family physician in private practice in an all‐woman, bilingual medical group in Fresno, CA. Dr. Flores is also an Associate Clinical Professor in Family Medicine at the UCSF School of Medicine and the Director of the UCSF Fresno Latino Center for Medical Education and Research (LaCMER), an organization that works with disadvantaged students to help prepare them to become healthcare professionals who will ultimately return to the Central Valley to provide culturally competent healthcare to the medically underserved.
Dr. Flores has been active over the past 30 years in developing and overseeing programs that recruit and retain Latino and other underrepresented youth into the health professions. She has worked collaboratively with multiple partners to establish a comprehensive health careers pipeline program in the Central Valley of California, targeting disadvantaged youth, particularly from migrant farmworker backgrounds. The goal of the Junior and High School Doctors Academies and the Health Careers Opportunity Program at California State University, Fresno, is to academically enrich, nurture and support disadvantaged youth from 7th‐12th grade through college to assure their academic success and ultimate acceptance into health professional schools. Incorporated within the developed curriculum is a research focus that requires these students to explore health disparity issues in their local communities and provides them with the scientific research skills necessary to address them.
Through her work in developing health professions pathway programs for disadvantaged students, Dr. Flores and others jointly formed the California Health Professions Consortium in 2006 to explore the development of a statewide strategy to address increasing the diversity of the healthcare workforce. The Consortium has grown to include members from academic institutions (faculty and administrators from universities and health professions schools), K‐12 educators, direct service providers (hospitals, clinics, health plans, nurses, and physicians), health policy advocates, and others who have similar interests.
Dr. Flores, a resident of Fresno, is the Past Chair of the Board of Directors of the National Hispanic Medical Association and serves on many national and statewide committees and boards.
Brenda Solórzano
President/CEO
The California Endowment
A self-proclaimed change maker, Brenda Solórzano is known as a leader focused on continual learning while making time to play and enjoy life. Solórzano is the President and CEO of The California Endowment. She was appointed to the position in 2024. This is a return for Brenda, after working at the Endowment early in her philanthropic career.
Brenda began her career in advocacy circles and has continued to ensure community voice remains at the center of her philanthropic work. She is a nationally recognized leader in trust-based philanthropy, a values-driven approach that advances equity, shifts power, and builds mutually accountable relationships between funders and nonprofits. As a founding member of the movement, Brenda understands that democratizing philanthropy, putting the community at the center, and building trusted partnerships and relationships are critical to ensuring positive and healthy change.
After immigrating to the United States from Guatemala as a baby, Brenda was raised in San Francisco. She calls San Francisco home and lived in California for nearly 50 years before moving to Montana to be the founding CEO of Headwaters Foundation.
Brenda comes to the Endowment from Headwaters. During her tenure at Headwaters, Brenda built an institution for the community, by the community, from the ground up. Leading with a lens of health equity and trust-based philanthropy, she reimagined and reinvented philanthropic practices, changed systems and policies to advance better health outcomes, and built a network of trusted partnerships across the state.
In her career, Brenda has also held positions at the Blue Shield of California Foundation and the California Healthcare Foundation. Brenda has a bachelor’s degree in history with a minor in political science from the University of San Francisco and a Juris Doctorate from Whittier Law School in Southern California.
Brenda is married to Randall Caudle, an immigration attorney, and she has two college-aged children, Alina and Kian. Brenda is currently based in L.A. with her husband and their two pups.
Ashley Monterrosa
Ashley Monterrosa (she/her), a San Francisco native, has emerged as an educator, organizer, advocate, strategist, and storyteller. A tireless advocate for youth, especially those whose ideas, opinions, and potential have historically been devalued and underrepresented.
Ashley’s passion and dedication have turned into action and impact as she applies a proven ability to problem-solve, actively listen, and thoughtfully lead collaboratively. There is no complex task that Ashley hasn’t been able to assess and move forward to support and advance the power of youth and their desire to advocate for what they believe and need.
In June of 2020, Ashley lost her brother, Sean Monterrosa, to state-sanctioned violence during the George Floyd uprisings- just a day before her twentieth birthday. Since the tragic loss of her brother, she has emerged as a social justice warrior championing causes such as public safety, social justice, and youth mental wellness.
Ashley has had the opportunity to work directly with youth, families, and communities to ensure their voices are heard and centered when it comes to social justice efforts. Through her network, she has built transformative relationships with partners, organizations, and key stakeholders in California and throughout the U.S. While she has found fulfillment in her journey thus far, one of her career goal is to bring about change in her community.
Ashley has had the chance to recruit and mobilize hundreds of people in the San Francisco Bay Area, Sacramento, Washington D.C, and New York City surrounding issues of gun violence, youth, mental wellness, and state-sanctioned violence. In her work, Ashley has built and established programs for youth leadership, coalition building, and power building. Additionally, Ashley has assisted with building local and statewide alliances with community organizations and movements throughout California.
Ashley is a Principal Program Coordinator at Horizons Unlimited of San Francisco and is teaching social justice issues, community organizing, leadership development, life skills, and policy advocacy to elementary, middle, and high school students.
Ashley firmly believes that those most harmed are always closest to the solution. Through lived experiences, she continues to advocate for safer communities and victims’ compensation for families affected by state-sanctioned violence.
Britta Guerrero
Britta Guerrero, Chief Executive Officer of the Sacramento Native American Health Center, Inc .,a AAAHC accredited Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) and non-profit urban health center, joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2019.
SNAHC has emerged as a leader in the provision of quality health care delivered through a culturally competent, family-centered and wrap-around delivery system. To further demonstrate their commitment health leadership and to the patient centered philosophy, SNAHC was the first organization in the state of California to receive recognition as a AAAHC-Patient Centered Health Home.
Guerrero attended Humboldt State University and began her health care career in non-profit clinics. Her passion for health care for the underserved brought her back to service within her own community. Guerrero takes the responsibility of representing an Indian organization very seriously and made it her personal/professional mission to ensure Native Americans have access to health care in urban areas such as Sacramento, a population that is often overlooked, tremendously underserved and still suffers the disproportionate burden of health disparities.
Guerrero is a founding member of the California Consortium of Urban Indian Health (CCUIH); she also serves on the Central Valley Health Network (CVHN) and California Primary Care Associations (CPCA) Board of Directors, Board-Chair Elect. She is committed to social just and health equity.
Donnell Ewert
Donnell Ewert is a consultant in the areas of health and government organization/ leadership and resides in Redding, California. He was previously the Director of the Shasta County Health and Human Services Agency from 2012 to 2022, and the Director of Public Health for the same county from 2006 to 2012. An epidemiologist by training and experience, Ewert has served three health jurisdictions in that capacity. He is passionate about promoting human potential, health equity, racial equity, population based mental well-being, affordable housing, and meaningful social connections.
Ewert is a native Californian and has enjoyed living in diverse parts of the state, including San Jose, Los Angeles, and Redding. He had the opportunity as a young adult to obtain a bachelors degree in Biology from Wheaton College (IL) and a masters degree in Public Health from the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA).
Ewert has served on numerous boards and commissions, including the Partnership Healthplan of California Commission, the First 5 Shasta Commission, the governing board and executive committee of the County Health Executives Association (CHEAC), the governing board of the California Mental Health Services Authority (CalMHSA), the elected governing board of the Grant Elementary School District, the Office of Health Equity Advisory Committee of the California Department of Public Health, the Child Nutrition Advisory Council of the California Board of Education, and the Shasta County Community Corrections Partnership Executive Committee.
Ewert has lived and worked abroad on several occasions, most significantly in Honduras in 1984 and 1987 and in Kazakhstan during 1996-98. He enjoys traveling abroad with his wife and children whenever he has the opportunity.
Edgar Ernesto Ibarra Gutierrez
Edgar Ernesto Ibarra Gutierrez is an up-and-coming cultural communication strategist. He is the Communication and Leadership Coordinator at Motivating Individual Leadership for Public Advancement (MILPA). For the last five years, Edgar has worked directly with communities impacted by mass incarceration through local and state policy advocacy, mentoring youth and young adults returning from incarceration through cultural healing programs focusing on Palabra (One’s Word) and cultural teachings. Edgar has leveraged his lived experience and on-the-ground work to co-design narratives that lead with the stories of those most impacted by the criminal justice system to create meaningful systemic and cultural change as he works towards becoming an effective strategic communicator by honing in on his ability to bridge his lived experiences, community organizing, and cultural healing practices to create narratives and messaging and share stories of resilience that exist in the barrio.
Edgar has served as a Commissioner for the California 100 initiative (2021-2023), as an SB 823 Subcommittee Member for Santa Cruz County (2021 -2023), and now as a proud member of the Board of Directors for the California Endowment. He currently is a co-convener of California’s Youth Futures Movement, which aims to braid and blend futures and foresight practices with grassroots community organizing to create a California for all.
Edgar earned a B.A. in Communications from UC Davis and is pursuing an M.A. in Professional Communications at the University of San Francisco. Edgar has applied what he learned in the classroom by supporting MILPA with fundraising, partner collaboration, content design, event support, and marketing campaigns.
Kai Hong
Kai Hong is a Managing Partner and the Chief Investment Strategist at Bivium Capital Partners, a San Francisco-based asset management firm specializing in portfolio advisory solutions and boutique and emerging investment manager research. For nearly two decades, Bivium has provided customized asset management solutions, guidance and support to a wide array of investors. Their work ranges from helping public pension plans navigate the increasingly complex global investment landscape, to partnering with private institutions to realize values-aligned portfolios that meet their philanthropic endeavors.
Prior to Bivium, Kai was a Managing Director and the Head of Investment Management Consulting at Thomas Weisel Partners, where he oversaw the investment platform for the firm’s institutional and high- net-worth clients. Kai was formerly a Vice President and Senior Investment Analyst at Northern Trust Global Advisors and started his investment career in Goldman Sachs’ external manager of managers group. Kai received a SB in Computer Science and Engineering and a Master of Engineering degree from MIT. He is a CFA charterholder and a member of the CFA Institute and the CFA Society of San Francisco.
Kameiko Hostler
Kameiko Hostler, a citizen of the Hoopa Valley Tribe from the village of Ta’k’milding, embodies a commitment to community empowerment and cultural preservation deeply ingrained in her upbringing. With a background enriched by her great-grandmother, Lillian ‘Mush’ Hostler, the oldest living member of her Tribe, Kameiko draws upon a wealth of tribal wisdom and values in her endeavors.
Currently serving as an Organizer for the California Native Vote Project, Kameiko channels her passion for advocacy and community engagement in empowering the next generation. Her role involves organizing around causes such as curriculum reform, mental health awareness, civic engagement, and addressing the unique needs of Native communities.
Kameiko’s involvement in organizing initiatives began with her pivotal role in advocating for curriculum reform in the San Juan Unified School District in 2020. Beginning with a podcast addressing the gaps in education about Native American history and culture, Kameiko and her fellow organizers launched a campaign for change. They pushed for the discontinuation of ties with racist curriculum vendors, cultural humility training for staff, and local tribal consultation for curriculum reform. This experience reflects her commitment to empowering future generations and confronting systemic barriers, ensuring youth voices are heard in decision-making processes.
Having graduated from the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) with a Bachelor of Arts in Politics, Kameiko brings a blend of academic knowledge and lived experience to her work. During her academic journey, she served as the Lead Intern for the UCSC American Indian Resource Center, advocating for fair treatment of Native students and promoting visibility for
the Native American community on campus.
As she continues her journey, Kameiko remains steadfast in her belief in the power of community and the importance of honoring her ancestors’ legacy. With her unwavering dedication and commitment to social justice, she seeks to create a world worthy of passing down to future generations, guided by the principles of balance, resilience, and reverence for
the land.
Karthick Ramakrishnan, PHD
Karthick Ramakrishnan is professor of public policy at the University of California, Riverside, and serves as the executive director of California 100, a transformative statewide initiative focused on building a shared vision and strategy for California’s next century that is innovative, sustainable, and equitable.
Ramakrishnan also founded the Center for Social Innovation at UC Riverside, and AAPI Data, a national publisher or demographic data and policy research on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPIs). He has published many articles and 7 books, including most recently, Citizenship Reimagined (Cambridge, 2020) and Framing Immigrants (Russell Sage, 2016), and has written dozens of op-eds and has appeared in nearly 3,000 news stories. Ramakrishnan was named to the Frederick Douglass 200 and is currently working on projects related to racial equity in philanthropy and regional development. He holds a BA in international relations from Brown University and a PhD in politics from Princeton.
Ramakrishnan serves on the Board of The California Endowment and the Association of Princeton Graduate Alumni, chairs the California Commission on APIA Affairs, and serves on the U.S. Census Bureau’s National Advisory Committee (NAC). Ramakrishnan also founded Census Legacies, which builds on the foundation of census outreach coalitions to build more inclusive and equitable communities, and the Journal of Race, Ethnicity, and Politics, an official section journal of the American Political Science Association.
Kiah Williams
Kiah Williams, co-founder of SIRUM, a 501(c)3 social venture solving America’s high drug cost problem, joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2020.
SIRUM takes unused, surplus drugs and seamlessly delivers them to working poor families, using technology to democratize access. SIRUM has helped redistribute over 750,000 prescriptions worth over $66M of medicine to people across 5 states.
Kiah has been recognized for her work at SIRUM as both a Forbes 30-Under-30 Social Entrepreneur standout and Outstanding Alumni, Silicon Valley Business Journal 40-Under-40, Draper Richards Kaplan Entrepreneur, Grinnell College Young Innovator for Social Justice Prize, and inaugural Westly Foundation Social Innovator.
Kiah previously led negotiations for the Clinton Foundation to create the Alliance Healthcare Initiative, an industry collaboration to reduce childhood obesity. In addition, she developed partnerships with Fortune 100 companies to expand health benefits to 2 million children.
Williams earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Stanford University, where she was also the president of the NAACP. Kiah proudly hails from West Philadelphia and is passionate about health equity in underserved communities.
Kris Hayashi
Kris Hayashi most recently served as the Executive Director at the Transgender Law Center. Transgender Law Center (TLC) is the largest national trans-led organization advocating self-determination for all people. Grounded in legal expertise and committed to racial justice, TLC employs a variety of community-driven strategies to keep transgender and gender nonconforming people alive, thriving, and fighting for rights and justice. Kris has been active in social, racial, and economic justice organizing for 25 years. Kris served as the Executive Director/Co-Director of the Audre Lorde Project, a Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Two Spirit, Trans, and Gender Non-Conforming People of Color organizing center based in New York City for ten years. Previously he served as Executive Director of Youth United for Community Action a youth organizing group in California, led by young people of color organizing for social and environmental justice.
Leslie B. Kautz
Leslie B. Kautz joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2016. Prior to her retirement, Leslie was a cofounder and Principal of Angeles Investment Advisors, a leading investment firm working with many non-profit clients. Angeles is the successor practice to a firm which she also cofounded in 1991, Asset Strategy Consulting.
Prior to joining the investment industry, Leslie spent eight years as a policy analyst in the legislative and executive branches in Washington, D.C.
Leslie, who is a Los Angeles resident, received her B.A. from Carleton College, and her Masters in Public Affairs from Princeton University’s School of Public and International Affairs.
She is a Chartered Financial Analyst® Charterholder and a member of the CFA Society of Los Angeles.
Leslie is a trustee of a family foundation and a member of the board of her alma mater, Carleton College.
María Blanco
María Blanco is the former Executive Director of the UC Immigrant Student Legal Services Center, which provides immigration-related legal services for undocumented students and their families at nine University of California campuses. The Center is a joint project of the University of California Office of the President and the UC Davis School of Law.
With a BA and JD from UC Berkeley of Law, Blanco is a long-time civil rights litigator and advocate. She serves on the Board of Directors of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund (MALDEFA) and most recently served as Vice President of Civic Engagement at the California Community Foundation. Blanco has also served as Executive Director of the Chief Justice Earl Warren Institute at UC Berkeley School of Law, as Executive Director of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area, and as National Senior Counsel for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund. She is a member of the Public Policy Institute of California Board of Directors, Centro Legal de la Raza, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the Bay Area, and formerly served on the California Citizens’ Redistricting Commission.
Michele Siqueiros
Michele Siqueiros, who joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2020, was the first in her family to graduate from college thanks to many mentors, caring faculty, and critical federal, state and college financial aid. She is passionate about the power of college to change lives, and the ability of policy making to expand college opportunity for others.
As the President for The Campaign for College Opportunity, Michele is an advocate who works to expand college access and success for California students by raising public attention to the critical challenges facing students in our community colleges and universities, mobilizing a broad coalition of supporters, and influencing policymakers.
The Campaign’s mission to increase college going and completion rates is driven by a strong belief that California’s future economic success depends on our ability to produce the best educated workforce in the nation and that our diverse population of young adults deserve the same opportunity provided to previous generations – regardless of race or socio-economic status.
Under her leadership in 2010, the Campaign led the effort for historic transfer reform that makes it easier for students to transfer from any California Community College to the California State University system through the Associate Degree for Transfer. Over 217,000 California students have earned the degree and in 2018 the University of California announced a formal MOU with the California Community College system to provide a UC guarantee for Associate Degree for Transfer earners.
Michele has advocated for millions of additional state dollars to expand student enrollment and student success funding at our community colleges, CSU and UC’s. She also advanced legislative efforts to increase access to Pell Grants, protect Cal Grant funding, support undocumented and DACAmented students, promote college readiness, prioritize community college student success efforts and reform remedial education.
Across all these priorities she shines a bright light to the persistent inequities by race/ethnicity/income and calls on our college leaders and policy makers to address them.
In her 16 years at the Campaign for College Opportunity (12 as President), she has built a strong, independent, and influential organization by raising over $21 million dollars, assembling a team of experts and leaders in the field, championing major budget appropriations, securing historic higher education legislation and establishing a broad and influential network of over 12,000 coalition supporters.
Under her direction the Campaign has released powerful higher education research including prominent reports on college access and success rates, the lack of diversity amongst college leaders and faculty, the powerful return on investment for spending by the state in our colleges and universities, and the need for major improvements to close racial/ethnic gaps, fix transfer and reform remedial education at our colleges. Every day she is motivated by the many students who are working hard to reach their college dreams.
Michele, a resident of Los Angeles, has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Studies with Honors in Chicano/a Studies from Pitzer College and a Master of Arts in Urban Planning from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She serves on the Boards of the Alliance for a Better Community, the Alliance for College-Ready Public Schools, Pitzer College Board of Trustees, PPIC Strategic Leadership Council and in 2019 was appointed by Senate Pro Tem Leader Toni Atkins to the Student-Centered Funding Formula Oversight Committee. She previously served on the California Student Aid Commission.
Stacie Olivares
Stacie Olivares is a leading C-suite executive, board director, advisor to founders and funders, and policy expert driving equitable and sustainable economic progress through finance, technology, policy, and media.
Olivares leads innovative companies,investments, and organizations to optimize their returns and advance their impact. Across tech and media platforms, she authentically engages diverse audiences by simplifying the complex, building community, andcultivating collaboration.
At the start of 2022, Olivares joined the board of Core Scientific (NASDAQ: $CORZ), one of the largest (and carbon neutral) bitcoin miners in North America, as its Audit Committee Chair. President Biden nominated her in August 2021to the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment Board that oversees the world’s largest 401(k) program, the $800 B Thrift Savings Plan, a role subject to senate confirmation. Kroll Bond Rating Agency (KBRA), the 4th largest credit agency in the world, appointed Olivares to its board in April 2021. In early 2021, Olivares joined the board and became Audit Committee Chair of Mission Advancement Corp. (NYSE: MACC), a special purpose acquisition company focused on social impact. From 2019 until early 2022, she served as California Governor Gavin Newsom’s appointee to the Board of Administration of CalPERS, the largest public pension in the United States with more than $500B AUM and 2 million members.
Olivares is the former Chief Investment Officer of Lendistry, a fintech small business lender and the former senior advisor on blockchain and impact investment to the world’s 4th largest insurance market. She was the Chief Investment Officer of COIN, a $29B ESG investment fund of the insurance industry, from 2011 through 2018, and an ESG-focused portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley from 2008 through 2011. Olivaresentered capital markets after leading the State of California’s economic advisory board from 2002 to 2007 and advancing global licensing and business development for Palm, Inc., from 2000 to 2002.
She holds a bachelor’s degree in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley and a master’s degree in Business and Government from Harvard University. Olivares resides in Los Angeles.
Torie Weiston-Serdan
Torie Weiston-Serdan, a scholar and practitioner with over 17 years of teaching and youth programming experience. A leader in the youth mentoring field, she wrote Critical Mentoring: A Practical Guide, which has become the handbook for culturally relevant mentoring and youth work. Outside of teaching and research, Weiston-Serdan runs the Youth Mentoring Action Network, a non-profit dedicated to leveraging mentoring in the fight for justice and equity. Through her community-based work, she is focused on resourcing youth as they do the work of re-making and re-imagining systems.
She established the Center for Critical Mentoring and Youth Work in 2019 and through the center works extensively with community-based organizations in support of their youth advocacy efforts, specializing in training mentors to work with diverse youth populations: i.e. Black, Latinx, LGBTQQ, first-generation college students, youth with disabilities and low-income youth.
Torie serves as the director of the Community Engaged Education and Social Change MA program in the School of Educational Studies at Claremont Graduate University.
Vernita Todd, MBA, FACHE
Vernita Todd, a native of Tennessee, joined San Ysidro Health in February 2019 as Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer. In this role, she leads SYH in identifying, aligning and executing strategic opportunities for growth and development – including mergers and acquisitions, market development, organizational development, and external relations; along with formalizing the company’s strategic planning process and translating across departments, clinics and functions. Prior to joining SYHealth, Vernita was the Chief Experience Officer for Health Center Partners of Southern California, a consortium of 17 federally qualified health centers. Her priorities included ensuring members had a seat and a voice at the table for emerging policy discussions and issues impacting primary care, developing actionable relationships among both elected officials and their staffs at all levels of government and working in partnership with National Association of Community Health Centers (NACHC) and the California Primary Care Association (CPCA).
Todd is a lifetime member of the National Association of Community Health Centers, and has been honored twice by the national association: In 2014, she was presented with the Elizabeth K. Cooke Advocacy MVP Award; and in 2017 Vernita was inducted into NACHC’s Grassroots Hall of Fame for her advocacy work. Previously, Todd served 10 years as CEO of the Heart City Health Center in Elkhart, Indiana; and is the President/Founder of the Human Capital Group, which works with nonprofit organizations in strategic planning and change management. She is a frequently requested keynote and motivational speaker.
Over the course of her career, Todd has volunteered on numerous boards: Chair of the Indiana Primary Health Care Association, Governance Chair and Board Member for Oaklawn Psychiatric Center, and board member for Goshen Hospital. She is currently the Chair of Health Outreach Partners (located in Oakland, CA) and a member of the Health Policy & Legislative Committees for NACHC.
Todd holds a master’s degree of business administration from Davenport University, a master’s degree in organizational communication and behavior, and a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Murray State University, KY. Vernita is a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives (FACHE), and a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.
Vien Truong, Esq.
Vien Truong, Esq., President of the Dream Corps, joined The California Endowment’s Board of Directors in May 2019.
The Dream Corps brings people together to solve America’s toughest problems by supporting initiatives that close prison doors and open doors of opportunity for all. The Dream Corps includes Green For All, which works to build an inclusive green economy strong enough to lift people out of poverty, #Cut50, which works to reduce crime and incarceration in all 50 states, and #YesWeCode, which works to help 100,000 young women and men of diverse backgrounds find success in the tech sector.
Vien is a policy expert and movement builder who has been a key architect in building an equitable and sustainable economy in underserved communities.
Vien has developed numerous energy, environmental, and economic policies and programs at the state, federal, and local levels. She has formed collaborations with celebrities, artists, clergy, elected officials, businesses, and civil rights leaders to advance policies and programs for underserved communities. She has advised on billions of dollars in public investments for energy and community development programs. In California, Vien co-led a coalition to pass and implement the state’s landmark Senate Bill 535 (de Leon), a law that created the biggest fund in history for the poorest and most polluted communities. She also co-led Charge Ahead California to transform the transportation sector and ensure that communities most impacted by pollution will benefit from zero tailpipe emissions.
Vien has received recognition from the President of the United States, U.S. Senate, and Congress, state, regional, and local awards for her work advocating on behalf of those most vulnerable to climate change. She was featured in the San Francisco Chronicle as one of San Francisco’s “Top Women Leaders,” received the California League of Conservation Voters’ “Environmental Leadership Award”; and Transform’s “Leadership, Innovation, Vision, Equity” award. She also received YBCA 100 which recognizes the creative minds who are making the provocations that will shape the future of culture, and was recognized as a “Power Shifter” on the Grist 50.
Vien is a first-generation resident of Oakland, where she continues to live and invest. She holds a B.A. from the University of California at Berkeley and a J.D. from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law.
Brenda Solórzano
President/CEO
The California Endowment
A self-proclaimed change maker, Brenda Solórzano is known as a leader focused on continual learning while making time to play and enjoy life. Solórzano is the President and CEO of The California Endowment. She was appointed to the position in 2024. This is a return for Brenda, after working at the Endowment early in her philanthropic career.
Brenda began her career in advocacy circles and has continued to ensure community voice remains at the center of her philanthropic work. She is a nationally recognized leader in trust-based philanthropy, a values-driven approach that advances equity, shifts power, and builds mutually accountable relationships between funders and nonprofits. As a founding member of the movement, Brenda understands that democratizing philanthropy, putting the community at the center, and building trusted partnerships and relationships are critical to ensuring positive and healthy change.
After immigrating to the United States from Guatemala as a baby, Brenda was raised in San Francisco. She calls San Francisco home and lived in California for nearly 50 years before moving to Montana to be the founding CEO of Headwaters Foundation.
Brenda comes to the Endowment from Headwaters. During her tenure at Headwaters, Brenda built an institution for the community, by the community, from the ground up. Leading with a lens of health equity and trust-based philanthropy, she reimagined and reinvented philanthropic practices, changed systems and policies to advance better health outcomes, and built a network of trusted partnerships across the state.
In her career, Brenda has also held positions at the Blue Shield of California Foundation and the California Healthcare Foundation. Brenda has a bachelor’s degree in history with a minor in political science from the University of San Francisco and a Juris Doctorate from Whittier Law School in Southern California.
Brenda is married to Randall Caudle, an immigration attorney, and she has two college-aged children, Alina and Kian. Brenda is currently based in L.A. with her husband and their two pups.
Dan DeLeon
Chief Financial Officer
Dan DeLeon joined The California Endowment in May 2008 as Chief Financial Officer and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of The Endowment’s financial information and technology operations, including accounting, tax compliance, planning and analysis, audit, information systems and infrastructures.
Prior to his appointment at The Endowment, DeLeon was the Los Angeles regional vice president of Finance for Time Warner Cable, where he was responsible for the financial operations of the largest corporate division serving 2 million customers in Southern California with voice, video and data. While there, he integrated the financial and information technology functions of Time Warner, Comcast and Adelphia. In 2009, DeLeon was named CFO of the Year by the Los Angeles Business Journal.
Among his other positions of note, DeLeon served as the vice president of Finance, Western Division, for Charter Communications, a $900 million multiple system operator of cable television and internet services; vice president and chief financial officer for Comcast Cable Communications, Inc. (formerly AT&T Broadband); controller for Boeing Satellite Systems, Inc.; and controller for Merisel, Inc., a $5 billion international computer hardware and software distributor. DeLeon, a resident of Rancho Palos Verdes, earned his B.S. in Accounting from the University of Southern California (USC).
Kate Kendell
For 22 years, Kate Kendell led the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), a national legal organization committed to advancing the civil and human rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people and their families through litigation, public policy advocacy, and public education. Kate stepped down from this role at the end of 2018. From August 2019 to May 2021 Kate was the Interim Chief Legal Officer at the Southern Poverty Law Center. In June 2021 Kate became the first-ever Chief of Staff at The California Endowment.
Growing up Mormon in Utah, Kate learned about the complexities of religion and politics from an early age. After receiving her J.D. from the University of Utah College of Law in 1988 and a few years practicing corporate law, she pursued her real love—civil rights advocacy—and became the first staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Utah. There she directly litigated many high-profile cases focusing on all aspects of civil liberties, including reproductive rights, prisoners’ rights, free speech, the rights of LGBTQ people, and the intersection of church and state. In 1994 she joined NCLR as legal director, and was named executive director two years later.
Under her leadership, NCLR’s programs, budget, and impact grew exponentially, and the issues facing the LGBTQ community—the safety of LGBTQ youth, violence facing transgender women of color, draconian immigration policy, criminal justice reform and the freedom to marry—have taken center stage in our nation’s discussion of civil rights and justice for the LGBTQ community. Kate is a nationally recognized spokesperson and has an active voice in major media. Kate’s most rewarding responsibilities include fostering alliances and building inclusive cultures on the community and organizational levels and advocating from an intersectional perspective in pursuit of racial and social justice and an end to oppressive structures.
Kelli P. Washington, CFA
Chief Investment Officer
The California Endowment
Kelli P. Washington joined The California Endowment as its Chief Investment Officer in late 2024. As CIO, she manages the foundation’s $4 billion endowment, investment portfolio, and investment staff.
Before joining The Endowment, Kelli served as the Managing Director of Investment Strategy and Research at the Cleveland Clinic. In that role, which she held since 2017, she was primarily responsible for monitoring portfolio asset allocation policies, maintaining the macroeconomic research function, and collaborating with the CIO on research that directs tactical asset allocation, investment decisions, and hedging strategies for approximately $15.0 billion in assets across four investment pools.
Kelli has also served as Managing Director of Investments with Cambridge Associates, an endowment officer at Bowdoin College, and in multiple investing roles with Edward Jones in St. Louis.
Kelli is a Board Member of the Washington University (in St. Louis) Investment Management Company and the Robert Toigo Foundation. In 2021, Institutional Investor named Kelli a “Rising Star” as well as one of the “Top 50 Women in Investment Management,” and the Olin School of Business at Washington University selected Kelli as one of its “Distinguished Alumni.” In 2019, she was included on the CIO Magazine “NextGens” List and Institutional Investor’s “Most Wanted Allocators First Team.” Kelli is a CFA Charterholder; she is an Alumna of the Robert Toigo Foundation fellowship program. She earned a B.S. in Business Administration from Washington University in St. Louis and an M.B.A. from the Yale School of Management.
Martha Jimenez
Executive Vice President/General Counsel
Martha I. Jimenez joined The California Endowment as Executive Vice President/General Counsel in October 2014. Her responsibilities include serving as chief advisor to The Endowment’s President and CEO, the Board of Directors and staff on legal and governance matters. Additionally, Ms. Jimenez chairs the President and CEO’s Executive Team and leads the foundation’s organizational and operational effectiveness and strategy efforts, including the Office for Planning and Integration, Facilities, Center for Healthy Communities Conference Centers, and Administrative Grant-Making functions.
Prior to joining The Endowment, Ms. Jimenez served as Senior Counsel for Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina, having also served in that office as the Director of Legal and Health Programs. As Senior Counsel, she was responsible for providing guidance and recommendations to the Supervisor and her staff on legal strategy, policy development, and risk management issues. The First Supervisorial District is responsible for representing the interests of over two million Los Angeles County residents living in 24 cities, 26 unincorporated areas and 16 areas of the City of Los Angeles.
Additionally, Ms. Jimenez served as Vice President for Policy and Development for Fair Trade USA where she advocated for “fair trade” practices that support farmers in developing countries by working with U.S.-based businesses; as a Program Officer with the Rockefeller Foundation and The California Endowment; as a Managing Attorney with Public Advocates and an Executive Director of the Latino Coalition for a Healthy California; and as a civil rights attorney with the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) based in Washington, D.C. and Regional Counsel based in San Francisco. Ms. Jimenez received her J.D. from the University California, Berkeley School of Law and her undergraduate degree from the University of Notre Dame.
Sarah Reyes
Chief Communications Officer
Sarah Reyes is the Chief Communications Officer for The California Endowment. In that role, she is responsible for developing and managing the communications effort to put health at the forefront of every issue in California.
Since joining the Foundation in 2009, Sarah has served as regional program manager for the Central San Joaquin Valley, and Director of Communications for the Healthy Communities team. She was appointed Managing Director of Communications for The Endowment in 2018.
Prior to joining the Endowment, Sarah served in the California State Legislator for six years as the Assembly member representing the 31st District in Fresno and Tulare Counties. Upon her election in 1998, Sarah became the first Latina and only the second women to be elected to State office from the Central Valley.
Sarah’s background also includes serving as Executive Director of the Community Food Bank, where during her leadership the non-profit flourished and today continues to assist tens of thousands of hungry families with food assistance. Sarah has also served as Assistant to the Chancellor at State Center Community College District. She was a news reporter/anchor for KSEE Channel 24 and a news reporter for KCRA TV in Sacramento.
Sarah is a strong leader who believes in her community and works hard on a daily basis to be a positive representative and role model.