The head of a Seattle-area nonprofit resigned this week after a video of a performer giving lap dances and kissing attendees at the organization’s annual homeless conference went viral, according to new reports.

Kira Zylstra, acting director of King County’s coordinating agency for homelessness, All Home, stepped down after the clip — showing transgender performer Beyoncé Black St. James’ provocative act at the Dec. 9 event — circulated, the Seattle Times reported.

St. James, who wore a revealing bodysuit with silver pasties over her chest, can be seen in the clip doing high kicks and even smooching one of the attendees.

Zylstra had hired St. James, according to local outlet KIRO 7. She initially went on paid leave after the video emerged, but then left her post altogether, according to the report.

A county spokesperson told the Times that when officials at the county’s Department of Community and Human Services found out about “a performance that was inappropriate for the conference,” they launched an investigation into the event “and the leadership of All Home.”

“The investigation of the event and the leadership of All Home is currently underway,” spokesperson Sherry Hamilton wrote in the email.

Christopher Rufo, a researcher at Discovery Institute, a nonprofit think tank in downtown Seattle, was the first to post the video.

“I got a contact from an anonymous tipster who provided video from inside the conference,” Rufo told KIRO 7. “And it’s almost incredible to believe that this is funded by taxpayer dollars right here in King County.”

Attendees at the event included government employees, nonprofit workers and members of the faith community, according to the Times.

“I’m not personally offended by it, it just seemed so wrong and out of place for what we were there for,” the Rev. Bill Kirlin-Hackett told the paper. “I just knew it was going to hit social media and when it hit social media, this is kind of like what every opponent of the collective work would wish for.”

In a statement shared by St. James on Facebook, the Trans Women of Color Solidarity Network said that before her drag performance, the performer “volunteered her time with a cultural presentation as a featured speaker.”

“Additionally, she took the precaution of getting her performance approved by conference organizers and providing numerous announcements about her performance to conference attendees,” the statement said.