Civil Beat Staff
Jim Simon
Jim Simon is managing editor of 天美视频.
Before relocating to a place where he can now kayak without a wet suit, Jim spent more than 30 years as a reporter and editor at The Seattle Times.
He held several leadership positions there, including managing editor. He helped lead Seattle Times teams that won two Pulitzer Prizes for breaking news 鈥 the first in 2010 for coverage of the killing of the three suburban police officers; the second in 2015 for reporting on a deadly landslide in Northwest Washington.
He also worked on some of The Times鈥 more innovative projects, including Education Lab, which explores solutions to the most pressing problems in schools, and 鈥淪ea Change,鈥 an award-winning multi-media project about ocean acidification in the Pacific.
Jim鈥檚 career includes stints as The Times鈥 chief political reporter and head of its statehouse bureau, environmental reporter and staff writer for the Sunday magazine. He co-won several national awards for investigations into Washington鈥檚 troubled mental health system and how taxpayers lost out on federal wilderness land swaps.
He got his start in journalism as a very green UPI reporter in the Philippines, covering the beginning of the 鈥淧eople Power鈥 uprising that eventually brought down Ferdinand Marcos.
The path to journalism included a lot of other jobs along the way: he helped start a low-income child care center as a Vista volunteer, worked at a college bookstore and a nursery, produced an oral history on Seattle鈥檚 historic First Avenue, and taught middle school in Indonesia.
Jim has taught journalism at the University of Washington and Seattle University. He also as taught and trained journalists in Indonesia and East Timor. In 1998, he was a Jefferson Fellow at the East-West Center in Honolulu and later participated in a seminar there with Muslim editors from Asia.
Growing up in Nebraska, Jim never saw the ocean until he was a teenager.
His wife, Lori Fujimoto, had a very different upbringing, growing up on Lanai when it was still a pineapple plantation. Her parents, siblings and numerous other relatives live in Hawaii.