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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.


American scholar William Arthur Ward said: "The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails." Despite financially challenging times, committed realists from across the state are diligently adjusting the sails to try and keep pace with the growing need for service-enriched housing. Since January of this year, eight development teams from diverse regions of Washington have been attending two-day sessions of the Supportive Housing Institute (SHI) to learn how to create permanent supportive housing in their communities.

Cheri Fleck and Ann Simpson of
Clallam County

The teams participating in the 2009 Institute are a study in geographical and social contrast, representing Pierce, Clallam, Clark, Cowlitz, Yakima, and Chelan-Douglas


Recently, Washington Families Fund and Sound Families grantees gathered to attend our recent training, "Increasing Earned Income for Homeless Families: Strategies for Being a Change Agent at Your Agency." The Tacoma Housing Authority graciously hosted. I had the privilege of facilitating, along with Mark Putnam from Building Changes and national employment for the homeless expert, John Rio, from Advocates for Human Potential. Twenty-five people from six counties (Pierce, King, Snohomish, Thurston, Clallam, and Whatcom) participated.

It was a long day, jam-packed with information, questions, and worksheets that participants used to track key ideas and post-training action steps. I was encouraged and inspired by the passion of the training participants and their desire to continuously


As I was driving through Skagit County the other day, taking in the tulips on the way back from meetings in Bellingham, I began thinking about the incredible range of work Building Changes is leading in many corners of the state. We are a Seattle-based agency, but we are working hard to make an impact beyond our headquarters. Consider:

Consulting Services:


  • On April 21 and 22, we continued our co-leadership of the Supportive Housing Institute, hosting two days of trainings (days 6 and 7 of the 12-day training series) in Sea-Tac in partnership with the Corporation for Supportive Housing and Common Ground. Five staff -- Erin Chambers, Emily Nolan, Mariah Ybarra, Alice Shobe, and myself -- provided trainings on supportive services planning, funding, and best practice models at the Institute.

For its fifth National Conference on Ending Family Homelessness, the National Alliance to End Homelessness (NAEH) chose the theme "Making Progress in a Time of Challenge." The theme felt even more appropriate - and urgent - amidst ongoing news of massive layoffs across the country and of Congress struggling to negotiate terms for the $787 billion stimulus package.

The NAEH conference, held in San Diego on February 12th and 13th, brought together hundreds of homeless service providers, advocates, and activists to share best practices, learn from one another's experiences, and to discuss "detailed, practical strategies" to end family homelessness. Workshop topics ranged from direct service concerns to broad-based advocacy strategies.

Building Changes had a hand in several of the conference


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