Skip navigation menu

News + Press

news & press

The Latest in local Party news

So much is happening right now. Write a few lines to intro your news section or turn this section off in the sidebar.

News Article

About 1,300 Providence nurses are walking out. Here’s what to know.

The work stoppage comes after more than six months of talks. About 1,300 nurses and their supporters plan to picket both Everett campuses, 1700 13th St. and 900 Pacific Ave. They plan to picket for 24 hours each day, with rotating shifts. Nurses are also planning a candlelight vigil for 6 p.m. Thursday at Drew Nielson Neighborhood Park, across the street from the hospital at 13th Street and Colby Avenue.

Many supporters are expected to join the picket line, nurse Kelli Johnson said.

Nov
14
2023

News Article

New law gives nurses stronger voice in setting hospital staffing levels

Nurses pressed hard for specific patient-to-nurse ratios to be written into the bill. Though it didn’t happen, they expressed confidence the new law will get them there eventually while boosting morale immediately.

“We needed something this year. This is very strong,” said Kelli Johnson, an emergency room nurse at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett who attended the bill signing. “I think it’s going to turn things around in the staffing crisis.”

Apr
20
2023

NEWS ARTICLE

A handshake, a deal then hospital staffing bill emerges from Senate

Kelli Johnson, a nurse at Providence Regional Medical Center Everett, said it’s progress even if it’s not as much as hoped.

A key piece is it will require hospitals do a lot more reporting to the state on when they are not sufficiently staffed, she said.

”Nurses and health care workers have been carrying the burden for a long time. We needed something passed. This bill is that something a step in the right direction,” she said.

Mar
7
2023

NEWS ARTICLE

‘I’ve never experienced the patient loads that I experience now’

Kelli Johnson has worked as a nurse for 10 years, the past three in the emergency department at Providence Everett. She has been talking to public officials for her patients and herself wherever possible this past year: the state, Snohomish County and the city of Everett.

“If we can’t get legislators to heed the concerns that nurses are trying to share with them about what’s happening at the bedside,” Johnson said, “it doesn’t bode well for the future of health care.”

Feb
22
2023