While in municipal office, King served on the Standing Policy Committees on Community and Protective Services and Land Use, along with Planning & Transportation Audit Committee, Intergovernmental Affairs, the Calgary Homeless Foundation, Calgary Exhibition and Stampede Board, Calgary Arts Development Authority, Affordable Housing Committee, Imagine Calgary Roundtable. The Calgary Committee to End Homelessness and finally the Calgary Heritage Authority, our very own predecessor.
King announced her candidacy early, with a story appearing in the Calgary Herald on May 4, 2001. One other person, Mary Rosza de Coquet, had also announced her candidacy already at that point, though she had dropped out before election day. By the time ballots were cast, the race for Ward 8 was crowded; 11 people vying for the office, including a close friend of Premier Ralph Klein and part-owner of a Calgary Hooters franchise, Al Browne. Because of just how many candidates there were, it was an incredibly close race, with King coming out ahead of runner-up Robert Lang by less than 400 votes and less than 18 per cent of the vote share in the ward.