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Union workers don ‘Grinch’ costumes to emphasize frustrations with PeaceHealth

SEIU Healthcare 1199NW pushes for 'fair' wages for more than 900 employees

By Isaac Stone Simonelli Enterprise/Investigations Reporter

Greeny, fuzzy and with a mischievous smirk, the hospital “Grinch” brought attention to something she said didn’t quite work.

Standing alongside fellow union workers at PeaceHealth St. Joseph Medical Center, Juniper Wilder’s seasonal costume served as a metaphor.

“I’m the Grinch today to bring awareness to the community, on behalf of our patients, on behalf of our families, for the issues that we are facing at PeaceHealth,” said Wilder, a sonographer at the hospital and one of two union workers dressed up as the Grinch in the hospital’s cafeteria Monday, Dec. 23.

“I deeply believe that Bellingham and Whatcom County deserve a well-staffed, safe hospital, and we cannot attract and retain that staff because we are so severely underpaid,” she continued.

The Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Healthcare 1199NW union has been in negotiations since September with PeaceHealth over their contract, which expired on Nov. 16. 

Wilder was joined by about a dozen union workers handing out cookies, stickers and a Dr. Seuss-inspired poem to fellow PeaceHealth employees as they came down for lunch.

The union represents a sweeping group of more than 900 employees including technicians, lab professionals and service workers, such as environmental services (EVS) staff.

“We cannot have a well-functioning, clean hospital without EVS, and yet they are some of the most underpaid staff members in this entire hospital,” Wilder said. “We cannot prevent communicable diseases in the community without clean health care.”

1199NW stickers reference PeaceHealth Northwest CEO Chuck Prosper and ongoing contract negotiations. (Finn Wendt/Cascadia Daily News)

She said that PeaceHealth was failing to raise wages to meet the increased cost of living in Whatcom County and that some employees were relying on food banks to try and make ends meet.


Wilder said that the stress these employees are under causes a ripple effect throughout the entire community. Despite this, she said the union was struggling to make progress in the negotiations.

“We keep hitting walls, and it ultimately comes down to them not wanting to compromise,” Wilder said.

PeaceHealth spokesperson Amy Drury told CDN that the hospital values the union and the caregivers it represents, as they are “part of the team.”

She said that while she couldn’t comment on the specifics of the bargaining process, they had brought in a professional negotiator.

Among those at the demonstration on Monday was Gabrielle Madeiros, a surgical technician at the birthing center and the author of “How Chuck Stole the 199NW Christmas Contract.” 

“I was like, let’s step it up,” Madeiros said about the planning process for Monday’s demonstration. “Let’s have a story that we can read and that would really identify what’s happening in our community. “

The poem, following the classical format and storyline of “How the Grinch Stole Christmas,” focuses on Chuck Prosper, the chief executive of the Northwest PeaceHealth network.

Madeiros said the bargaining team is mostly focused on securing increases in wages, because of the high cost of living in Whatcom County. She also pointed out that St. Joseph is a trauma two hospital, capable of initiating definitive care for all injured patients, yet there are better-paying jobs in a less intense environment for them in Skagit County.

The next round of negotiations for the contract is set for Jan. 2, 2025, confirmed Drury.

The poem offered by Madeiros is below:

Isaac Stone Simonelli is CDN’s enterprise/investigations reporter; reach him at isaacsimonelli@cascadiadaily.com; 360-922-3090 ext. 127.

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