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What role does advocacy play in a housing-and-services provider's work to end homelessness? “Plenty,” they would say. Many of Building Changes’ grantee providers already have executive directors and staff who actively engage their elected officials for funding and support. But often, they’ve excluded some of their best assets: their board members.

This year, several of our staff, including Executive Director Betsy Lieberman, Deputy Director Alice Shobe, and Public Policy Specialists Seth Howard and I, had the privilege of meeting with the executive directors and board members of four provider organizations to discuss the role of advocacy among board members. We did this under the Board Advocacy Project, run by Common Ground and funded by the Campion Foundation, whose goal is to mobilize board members of social justice organizations to lend their weight and influence to advocacy.

We held trainings with Helping Hand House in Pierce County, Hopelink in east King County, Community Youth Services in Thurston County, and Housing Hope in Snohomish County.

The board members were an impressive and diverse bunch. They ranged from retired community leaders to heads of our region’s major industries to sitting elected officials. All dedicated their free time to fundraising for and managing their organizations, but most had not thought of advocacy as part of their scope of responsibilities. Their staff, meanwhile, are sophisticated advocates. Community Youth Services, for example, frequently sends their clients—youth in foster care—to testify in Olympia about how their programs prevent youth homelessness.

What our team did was to initiate the board’s discussion on how they could become a significant part of their organization’s advocacy strategy and how they could create a tailored advocacy model that served their organization’s needs.

With Washington State facing a $2 billion budget deficit and the legislature looking to make painful cuts in human services, board members are well aware that they need to have all hands on deck to ensure the long-term sustainability of their organizations. At our most recent training with Housing Hope, nearly 20 board members took time off in the middle of their work day to explore their role in securing public dollars to keep their programs running.

Things will not be easy in the near future: The economic outlook remains difficult, and legislators will be making more budget cuts next session. But as they grapple with major funding decisions, we hope to hear a new set of voices reminding them to continue supporting the work of providers that are reducing homelessness in their communities.


In a budget cutting session--like what we're all sweating in Olympia right now--good news can be hard to come by. But good news is what came out of the Senate Human Services and Corrections Committee yesterday with the passing of HB 1811 on a voice vote. And we're celebrating! HB 1811 has already passed the Washington State House of Representatives unanimously, and once it passes the Senate Rules Committee, we'll be in business.

What's the business? Getting vulnerable and homeless families and individuals assistance as fast as possible in order to prevent them from becoming homeless or immediately re-house them if they already are. HB 1811 allows housing or homeless services providers working on behalf of vulnerable and homeless families and individuals to assist clients more immediately


New national data shows more children and their families are experiencing homelessness in our country and state. Our state's dilemma is that we have proven programs that end homelessness, but their continued longevity is threatened by ongoing State deficits. Programs like the Washington Families Fund, Home Security Fund, and Housing Trust Fund are good for families and good for our economy. 

Building Changes will soon release new data on an emerging subset of "high needs" families served by the Washington Families Fund. These chronically homeless families are a small subset of the total homeless population but the most complicated. The good news is that the data shows we're making progress in stabilizing families who have been homeless an average of ten times:

  • Thirty percent more families

As we stood in a circle at Building Changes' staff retreat, reading aloud each other's responses to the prompt of "Why our work matters," I couldn't help but marvel both the hopeful tone that unified them all and the idiosyncratic styles that set them apart. Some statements were lyrical in their simplicity, but once allowed to simmer in the subsequent silence, had an effect more complex. Others leaned toward the ornate, recounting stories or laying out logic that landed last-second wallops of emotion. No matter which way it was said, the verdict was clear: our work to end homelessness in Washington State mattered, and we knew why.

But the truth was, I had long struggled with the "our" part of that sentiment. As a recent graduate when I first started at Building Changes, my freshman


Getting sick isn't fun and it usually sets you behind on work, which is never good. So when I landed in bed last week with a head cold, I decided to catch up on some work-related reading. You know -- all those riveting statistical reports that get shoved to the bottom of the work pile for when you have "time to spare."

On the docket for this sick-induced, day-in-bed was the Washington Families Fund High-Needs Family Program: Baseline Evaluation Summary. As I started reading, a few things became clear: first, through the Washington Families Fund (WFF), Building Changes is doing a good thing by funding nonprofits that help the most vulnerable families in our community. These agencies diligently work to connect families to stable housing and the services they need, help them repair their