Kira Zylstra, the acting director of All Home based in King County, resigned over the weekend after she came under fire for hiring a drag queen to perform at a work conference

The director of a Seattle-area homeless agency has resigned after she hired a drag queen to perform at a recent annual conference where she twerked, gave lap dances, and kissed attendees.

Kira Zylstra, the acting director of All Home based in King County, Washington, resigned over the weekend.

Zylstra, 40, hired performer Beyonce Black St. James, a transgender dancer, to put on a 'cultural presentation' at the company's conference held at South Seattle College on December 9.

Independent journalist Christopher Rufo, who is outspoken on the homelessness crisis in Seattle, shared video of the dancer on Twitter and Facebook criticizing the agency for spending taxpayer money on the performance.

Video from the event shows the dancer perform a rehearsed choreography on stage then walk through the crowd twerking on attendees and shaking her chest wearing just pasties.

In one moment she appears leans over an attendee and kisses her.

Zylstra hired performer Beyonce Black St. James, a transgender dancer, to put on a 'cultural show' at the company's conference held at South Seattle College on December 9. Video from the event shows the dancer perform a rehearsed choreography on stage then walk through the crowd twerking on attendees and shaking her chest wearing just pasties

In the clip Beyonce Black St James shares a kiss with a seated attendee

However, Zylstra came under fire for the performance.

'For years, Seattle has claimed that it "needs more resources" to solve homelessness, but as the video shows, they find it totally appropriate to pay for a transgender stripper to grind on members of the region's homelessness nonprofits and taxpayer-funded organizations,' Rufo tweeted.

'I think this was really a boiling point for people, because they are saying, "You're asking taxpayers for money, and then you are squandering it on something totally inappropriate in any work place, especially when you are using taxpayer funding,"' he said on Facebook.

Some of the people in the audience – who comprised of government employees, non-profit workers, and members of the faith community - were uncomfortable with the choice of entertainment, according to the Seattle Times.

'I’m not personally offended by it, it just seemed so wrong and out of place for what we were there for,' Rev. Bill Kirlin-Hackett said.

He said he worried that critics of the homeless would see the video and attack All Home.

'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,' he said.

'No one expected it, so I think some people felt uncomfortable,' one staffer at the conference said to the Times.

'This is a perfect opportunity to break up All Home. Allowing employees to get their cheap thrills at the expense of innocent homeless faced with another cold winter,' David Haines, a homeless veteran, said to KIRO7.

The LGBTA Business Alliance shared a statement supporting Beyonce St James after the performance at the homelessness conference came under fire

Last week Zylstra was placed on paid leave after the video surfaced online and an investigation was opened. She resigned before the investigation finished.

She had served as acting director of All Home for nearly two years.

A spokesperson said that officials at the county’s Department of Community and Human Services found out about 'a performance that was inappropriate for the conference' and launched an investigation into the event as well as 'the leadership of All Home'.

'The investigation of the event and the leadership of All Home is currently underway,' a department spokesperson said.

DCHS chief of staff Denise Rothleutner has stepped in to run All Home following Zylstra's resignation.

The LGBTA Business Alliance shared a statement supporting Beyonce St James after the performance came under fire at the homelessness conference.

'We love drag at our non-profit events. We love our friends with The Imperial Sovereign Court of Spokane. We love our Beyoncé Black St James. If this non-profit made an entertainment booking error for their target audience, it’s on them, not the performer, not the art,' the Inland Northwest business alliance that supports the local LGBTQ community said in a Facebook statement.

All Home King County may not be an agency for much longer as Seattle, King County and other suburban governments are moving towards creating a regional homelessness authority that will have more power over budgets and policymaking than All home had.

King County voted to approve the new authority last week. The Seattle City Council voted 5-1 on Monday in favor of the new authority.

All Home King County was established in 2015 to address the issue growing homelessness problem in Seattle and surrounding areas.