A Lifetime Commitment of Care
Deborah Leigh Stevens, 68, was living on the streets of West Hollywood in 2014, within blocks of her former apartment. She had lived most of her life in the area, much of it with her elderly mother, and worked as a paralegal. But then her mother died, their apartment building was sold, rents soared, and she found herself a senior citizen with nowhere to go.
Celina Alvarez, now executive director of the nonprofit Housing Works, met her on a park bench and they forged a bond. Housing Works found Stevens housing, and while she hated to leave her beloved West Hollywood, she gratefully moved to Azusa to live safely inside. Two years later, she was diagnosed with cancer and after a five-year battle, Housing Works ensured she had hospice care. Alvarez sat by Stevens’ bed in her final days, letting her know how much she was loved and appreciated. It was Housing Works’ loving staff who
attended her burial.
“One life, one relationship, one person at a time” is Housing Works’ motto. And it is the only way Alvarez knows how to do this work.
And the work Alvarez and her dedicated team at Housing Works do is nothing short of visionary and life-changing. Believing that “housing is a right not a privilege,” they aim to end homelessness through housing, health, and community. For people experiencing homelessness, housing is just the first step. Housing Works and their programs go far beyond that – with employment and educational enrichment and support to enhance food security. With the idea being to keep that housing permanent and support the ability of those they work with to thrive in the community.
“You don’t show up to the people we are serving on a limited-time basis,” Alvarez says. “It’s got to be a lifetime commitment, in order to ensure that we can keep people off the streets.”
California accounts for 28% of the unhoused in the nation, with more than 181,000 people living without permanent shelter – 75,300 people in L.A. County alone. In Santa Barbara County the most recent Point in Time Count showed an 11% increase in homelessness.
“We really push to understand what’s happening in the person’s life and figure out: what do we need to do to overcome the barriers that are creating challenges for people to get inside,” says Alvarez. “It is very, very rare that we have to turn someone away.”
Founded in 2003, by co-founder Mary Kirchen, a member of the Immaculate Heart Community of Montecito, Housing Works has grown and now gives on-site support for more than 800 people in 11 housing sites and in individual housing. And it has a 93% success rate of housing retention. Through its mobile team (MIST), Housing Works helps locate the chronically homeless and retain housing and other critical services for them.
Housing Works believes that this dire humanitarian crisis can be solved by a one-on-one commitment of care based on empowerment, forgiveness, love, and compassion that fuels living environments that allow people to flourish and become thriving members of the community.
Housing Works
Donate now!www.housingworksca.org
Executive Director: Celina Alvarez
Mission
Our mission is to create housing and service options that model, with respect and dignity, sustainable, environmentally sensitive, affordable communities for people of limited resources.
Begin to Build a Relationship
We know you care about where your money goes and how it is used. Connect with this organization’s leadership in order to begin to build this important relationship. Your email will be sent directly to this organization’s director of development and/or Executive Director.
Help Get More of the Unhoused into Permanent Housing
Housing Works has a nationally recognized approach to guiding people off the streets and into permanent housing. They use hope, empowerment, and encouragement plus a resourceful base of proven programs that go beyond housing to include enrichment services that help those they work with maintain that housing.
With lack of housing at dire levels, Housing Works’ goal this coming year is to provide on-site services for 400 more clients and to add two building sites. They also plan to expand their reach by creating a framework to pass on their institutional knowledge and train a new generation of advocates.
All of this requires the support and generosity of the community. Housing Works’ goal is to raise $7 million to increase their reach as they tackle the humanitarian crisis of homelessness in California. Every dollar helps them reach this goal.
Key Supporters
Immaculate Heart Community
The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation
Santa Monica College: Dr. Nancy
Greenstein (Board Trustee)
SoCal Gas: Neil Navin (Senior Vice President of SoCal Gas) Corporation for Supportive Housing
L.A. Care The Guibord Center
Remi Kessler (Film Producer) The Sprague Foundation
Mary Kirchen, Founder of Housing Works
Saba Mwine-Chang (HW board member and Deputy Chief of DEI LAHSA)
Gary Blasi (Professor of Law Emeritus, UCLA School of Law)
Mollie Kaiser – Private Wealth Advisor
Dr. James Thing (Professor of Sociology)
Zella Knight (Homeless Advocate serving multiple L.A. agencies)
Linda Peacore (HW Board Chair and instructor, Westridge School)
Dulce Acosta (Senior Principal Director of USC Community and Local Government Partnerships)
Roland Palencia (former Community Benefits Director – L.A. Care Health Plan and Founder and President of BreakSpell Consulting)
Heather Sanchez (Head of Business Banking – Farmers & Merchants)
Val Zavala (retired – 30 years – broadcast journalist KCET)