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Kinnon Williams |
As Vice-Chair of the Evergreen Healthcare Foundation, I’ve
witnessed firsthand the needs of patients and caregivers. I know that for patients
an important key to quality healthcare is providing physicians with the
resources required to deliver the best affordable medical services available.
Facing significant change and the opportunity of new
innovations, Evergreen Hospital needs new energy for new healthcare. As
healthcare faces new challenges, I will offer a new perspective on the board. I
also offer the experience and expertise gained as an elected utility District Commissioner,
lawyer and business owner. We will need
a new view, tempered with proven leadership and experience as we navigate
uncharted territory in healthcare reform.
Evergreen Hospital is at a pivotal juncture between changes
in healthcare and tremendous advancements in technology. There is a need for more
transparency in medical costs and how services are provided. Consumers must be
able to make informed choices regarding not only the care that is best for them
but how to best afford innovative treatments.
I will promote preventative medicine and shepherd our
limited public resources to take advantage of some of the best technology in
the world right in our backyard. As a life-long resident of this community, local
business owner and consumer I understand the frustration of facing the ever
rising cost of health care and the complexity of medical service options.
Health care is changing and the next twenty years will be
very different from the past twenty years. We cannot wait for a crisis to
address the need for change. I will be a new voice to ensure a quality,
affordable health care system for our community for years to come. I would
appreciate your vote.
Endorsed by Evergreen Board Chair Al DeYoung, King County
Council Member Rod Dembowski, and many others. Read More >>
For every 5 fourth graders in the Lake Washington School District, 1 student is failing math. For every 10 seventh graders, 3 are failing math. As a parent and volunteer in the district, I can tell you that when students fail the 4th grade math MSP, they are very far behind. When 7th graders fail the math MSP, they are far more likely to drop out. In 2011, when my child was a 5th grader at Horace Mann Elementary, there were a number of students who had failed the 4th grade MSP math test given the previous school year. Horace Mann had no formal plan for addressing failing students, so we inquired if supplemental funds were available from the district to target students with failing MSP scores. We were told that there was no money available "due to budget cuts." Eventually, an ad-hoc group of parents ended up tutoring the failing students to try to get them up to speed. This is no way to provide educational assistance to students who need help the most. Read More >>