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About
Heather Hiles
Mayor Gavin Newsom appointed Heather Hiles to the San Francisco
Board of Education on January 12, 2004. Since assuming the seat,
Heather has become a vocal advocate for public school children,
families, teachers and staff. On the school board, Heather Hiles
is working to improve every school and create opportunity for every
child. She is working to make neighborhood schools centers of community
life and a safe place for our kids to stay after school. She is
bringing academically rigorous Dream Schools to under-served communities.
And, to make sure that our money is well spent, she is fighting
for better financial accountability at every level.
Heather’s passion for excellence in public education comes
from her own experience as a student in public schools in Los Angeles
and Santa Barbara. Raised by a determined single mother, Heather
was encouraged to challenge herself and achieve in school. The only
person of color in her high school to take college prep classes
and sit for the SAT – in a school that was over 50% African-American
and Latino – Heather recognized early on the gaps in academic
opportunity and achievement. Majoring in Development and Ethnic
Studies at U.C. Berkeley, she wrote her thesis on the role of education
in creating and perpetuating social and economic opportunity. She
went on to obtain an MBA with emphasis in Finance and Strategic
Planning from Yale University School of Management.
Heather has 17 years of professional experience as a small business
owner, social entrepreneur and nonprofit executive in the Bay Area.
She is the founder and president of The Hiles Group, LLC, a professional
consulting firm offering strategy development and management services
for individual and family philanthropies, foundations, nonprofit
organizations and professional advisors.
Before establishing The Hiles Group in 2001, Heather was the first
CEO of San Francisco Works, a public/private workforce development
intermediary that was nationally recognized for its effectiveness
and innovation in designing sector-based training programs and building
collaborations among businesses, for-profit and community-based
training organizations, public administrators and policy makers.
She founded and chaired the San Francisco Asset Building Initiative
(now SF EARN), a city-wide asset accumulation and economic development
program for low-income families.
Heather’s early career was in public policy. She was a deputy
political director of the 1992 Clinton/Gore campaign, and in 1990-91
was a Coro Fellow in Public Affairs, interning with the SF Department
of Public Health, the Bayview-Hunter’s Point Foundation and
Urban Strategies Council. She also worked with low-income teens
and families in Oakland, CA as a program director at Youth Employment
Partnership and Break the Cycle.
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