I’m in Spokane today to hear about all the innovation happening throughout the community. There’s a lot of good work to celebrate here.
Today I got to tour Spokane’s WorkSource and the new Resource Center to learn about their efforts to connect members of their community with local workforce resources, as well as those for legal, housing, health care and justice. @WDCSpokane
I then met w/ Spokane electeds, law enforcement & mental health leaders on their jail diversion efforts. By using new services, like pairing police and mental health experts & a new mental health crisis center, they’re successfully diverting people away from jail & to resources.
According to Frontier Behavioral Health, in the past year, Spokane’s police officer and mental health expert teams diverted 70 percent of the 973 people contacted away from jail, the ER or psychiatric impatient treatment and instead to the behavioral health services they need.
WSU's number one wish for the 2019 #waleg session was for the funding to expand their medical school. Thanks especially to their local legislators Sen. Billing, Rep. Ormsby & Rep. @marcusriccelli, today we got to celebrate @WSUMedicine getting the $14.4 M they needed to grow.
.@WSUMedicine is already breaking barriers. 58 percent of their medical school students are women, and 25 percent are first-generation college students. That’s something to be proud of. Go Cougs!
Eastern WA needs more doctors. With this expansion, @WSUSpokane will be ready to train more Washingtonians to be top medical professionals. Students like Cassidy, @WSUMedicine class of 2022, will be the next generation of physicians bringing health care to more people in WA.
@WSUSpokane@WSUMedicine@WSUNews Today I took a virtual reality tour of the future Avista Catalyst Building, the first in Spokane University District's new innovation hub. The plans for this eco-friendly #cleanbuilding outline 150,000 sq. feet of @EWUEagles labs, office space, classrooms & study areas.
Beyond bringing research & economic development to Spokane, the Catalyst building uses #cleanbuilding tech & materials. Eco features include this cross-laminated timber, rainwater recovery, gray water, showers for bike commuters & smart building tech for max energy efficiency.
I ended the day visiting Eastern State Hospital to discuss their plans for the $33 M slated to them for improvements in the 2019-21 capital budget. They're making much-needed updates to the building that will increase safety for all and give patients a better quality of care.
I also got to tour one of the two new 25-bed wards being built at Eastern State Hospital. These will provide competency restoration services for forensic patients. I appreciate the hospital's continued work in behavioral & mental health in Eastern WA.
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COVID cases are skyrocketing, in large part due to the Delta variant. The best way to protect everyone is to get vaccinated and wear a mask.
Today I announced a vaccine requirement working in K-12, most childcare and early learning, and higher education.
It has been a long pandemic, and our students and teachers have borne their own unique burdens throughout. This virus is increasingly impacting young people, and those under the age of 12 still can’t get the vaccine for themselves. We won’t gamble with the health of our children.
K -12 educators, staff, coaches, bus drivers, volunteers and others working in school facilities will have until Oct. 18 to be fully vaccinated as a condition of employment. This includes public, private and charter schools. This does not impact students, regardless of age.
Starting Tuesday, all Washington counties will move to Phase 3 of the Healthy Washington plan. We will stay at 50% capacity for most indoor activities until after June 30.
However, if statewide ICU capacity reaches 90% at any point we will rollback activities to save lives.
The recent shootings in Atlanta and Boulder remind us that COVID-19 hasn’t stopped the crisis of gun violence.
At the state or federal level, we must act to stop the preventable gun violence that happens every day, especially when easy access to firearms mixes with violence, hate and racism.
This is a moment that calls for leadership. As President Biden said, we can ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines in this country – I was proud to do so when I represented central Washington in 1994. It was the right policy for our country then, and it still is.
Today FEMA approved the state and the Yakima County Health District’s application for a mass vaccination site. READ: governor.wa.gov/news-media/fem…
We are appreciative to @fema and our other federal partners for working with us to make significant additional resources available to the people of the Yakima Valley.
This will provide 1,200 vaccinations daily and will be a tremendous boost to our vaccine equity efforts and will also reach out directly to Washingtonians who don’t have the means of transportation to a fixed vaccination site.
I stand today with our state’s Asian and Pacific Islander communities, which have come under increased racist attacks over the last year.
This violent hate is not new – our Black, Indigenous and other communities of color have been victims of this insidious brand of cultural violence and white supremacy for centuries – but it remains no less urgent to defeat it.
To do that, we must continue to build respect for one another, respect that is reflected in our shared quality of life and our shared values of dignity.
Today, we’re taking action to make sure that every child in Washington state has an option for onsite learning. I will be issuing an emergency proclamation that will give every K-12 student the opportunity for on-site learning.
This has been a long year for Washington’s children. More than half of our schools have returned to some form of in-person instruction, but there are still hundreds of thousands of students who have not had access to in-person learning.
The impact of this pandemic on our children’s mental health has created a crisis among our young people. Now is the time for all schools to return to in-person learning.