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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Spin Control

Western State Hospital CEO ousted, replacement named

OLYMPIA -- Gov. Jay Inslee announces that Cheryl Strange, left, has been named chief executive officer of Western State Hospital after the dismissal of current CEO Ron Adler. (Jim Camden/The Spokesman-Review)
OLYMPIA -- Gov. Jay Inslee announces that Cheryl Strange, left, has been named chief executive officer of Western State Hospital after the dismissal of current CEO Ron Adler. (Jim Camden/The Spokesman-Review)

OLYMPIA – Gov. Jay Inslee fired the head of Western State Hospital, the controversial mental health care facility from which two dangerous patients escaped last week.

Chief Executive Officer Ron Adler is being replaced by Cheryl Strange, Inslee said Tuesday at a press conference announcing the change. Strange is a former assistant director of the Department of Social and Health Services Mental Health Division, who currently works as senior director of the Health Benefits Trust for Service Employees International Union. She was once a deputy secretary at the state Department of Corrections.

“It is clear transformational cultural change is needed at this hospital,” Inslee said.

Western State has had a number of problems with staffing levels and court orders to provide better or faster treatment, and last week had two patients in its civil commitment ward escape through a formerly secured window that had been tampered with.

The two were later caught.Anthony Garver, who was accused of murder but had been ruled incompetent to stand trial, was captured in the Spokane foothills not far from the home of his mother and stepfather.

Strange’s appointment completes a series of staffing changes that include a new assistant secretary at DSHS, which oversees the hospital, a new chief medical officer, a new chief nursing executive and a new compliance officer to ensure the facility meets mandates from state and federal regulators. 

“An all-new leadership team is now in place at Western,” Inslee said. He expects them to “act with all due urgency to make sure no more dangerous patients get away from Western.”

Some Republicans were skeptical. Seattle Port Commissioner Bill Bryant, who is running against Inslee this year, says appointing someone who formerly worked for DSHS and Corrections “looks more like musical chairs than a serious attempt at culture change.” 

Sen. Mark Miloscia, chairman of the Accountability and Reform Committee and a candidate for state auditor, said the new leadership was “welcome but overdue.” Strange needs to develop a detailed corrective quickly to restore confidence in the hospital, he added.

“Without real accountability and performance, we can expect the care and safety of both staff and patients to continue to suffer,” Miloscia, R-Federal Way, said in a prepared statement. “For the sake of our state, I hope this is more than just shuffling the deck chairs on a sinking ship.”

Inslee said Western State sustained the loss of some 400 positions during the recession and has yet to replace all those staff members. The pay is also below that of similar jobs in the private sector. The Legislature recently approved some money for bonuses and the hospital is adding about 15 new employees a month, but still has times when a staff member works an extra half-shift to cover a needed position.

Before the escape, he and DSHS Secretary Pat Lashway had been discussing replacing Adler as the hospital’s CEO, Inslee said. “It would be fair to say (the escape) accelerated the change.”

Lashway said the hospital is reviewing security of the structure, as well as policies and procedures in the wake of the escape and expects to have a report “in a couple weeks.”

The state needs a more secure facility than Western State to house patients who have been charged with serious crimes, been judged not competent to stand trial but don’t respond to treatment and are then held on a civil commitment, Inslee said. Courts have ruled they cannot treat them the same is convicted criminals.

“They need to be treated as a patient under the law,” he said. “We need to ramp up security measures.”



Jim Camden
Jim Camden joined The Spokesman-Review in 1981 and retired in 2021. He is currently the political and state government correspondent covering Washington state.

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