SEATTLE (MARCH 6, 2024) – A new report released by the Office of Homeless Youth and A Way Home Washington details significant strides in addressing unaccompanied youth and young adult homelessness (YYA) in Washington state since a collaborative, multi-sector, statewide effort was launched in 2016.
“Yes to Yes” Washington State: Unaccompanied Youth and Young Adult Homelessness Landscape Scan, funded by the Raikes Foundation and the Schultz Family Foundation, pairs comprehensive data analysis with perspectives from more than 100 young people with lived experience, service providers, and other stakeholders across the state. The report presents a roadmap and a vision for Washington state where unstably housed young people can receive the help they need promptly within their community.
There have been remarkable achievements including the near complete closure of the geographic service gap identified in 2016 as well as solutions showing promising results such as flexible diversion funds and closer partnerships with schools. The findings show that even when faced with a problem as complex and dynamic as YYA homelessness, progress can be made with focused funding, attention, and public-private partnerships that provide capacity for innovation.
Key findings include:
The report shows that while youth homelessness is an urgent crisis, it is a solvable problem. Since the state assembled a broad coalition of community leaders and youth with lived experience in 2016 to develop an integrated, consistent statewide approach, much has been learned about promising solutions. By putting young people at the center, focusing on prevention, collecting better data, investing in creative solutions such as cash assistance, working with schools, and intervening earlier to meet young people’s and family’s needs, positive progress is being made. Likewise, the state has seen significant strides disrupting the pipeline of youth exiting the foster care, behavioral health, and juvenile justice systems into homelessness over the past four years.
Recognizing the work to address YYA homelessness is far from done, the report is transparent about persistent challenges and gaps —especially in rural communities—where unaccompanied YYA continue to struggle to find safe housing and shelter, particularly youth under 18 years old, LGBTQIA2S+, BIPOC, and pregnant/parenting young people.
This report delves into the authentic experiences of affected young people and reveals a narrative often overshadowed by numbers alone. It should become a vital resource for policymakers, advocates, and individuals dedicated to addressing youth and young adult homelessness.
QUOTES
About Office of Homeless Youth
The Office of Homeless Youth Prevention & Protection leads statewide efforts to prevent and end homelessness for youth and young adults by partnering with community programs to establish ongoing and future funding, policy, and best practices.
About A Way Home Washington
A Way Home Washington (AWHWA) is a statewide movement to prevent and end youth and young adult homelessness, with a focus on prioritizing young people of color and LGBTQ+ youth who experience homelessness at higher rates than their white, straight, cisgender peers. Co-Chaired by First Lady Trudi Inslee, AWHWA unites passionate stakeholders across the state to build systems that respond to the unique needs of all young people.
About Raikes Foundation
At the Raikes Foundation, we believe that when we work together and center the voices of young people, we can build a fair society for all. Our goal is to bring people together to break down barriers that prevent communities from thriving and to support solutions that allow all of us to determine a fair and just future for America. We make grants in four core areas: education, housing stability for youth, racial equity and democracy, and impact-driven philanthropy. Through our grants, we seek to redefine financial impact, support individuals, and promote community agency and solutions to build a more just and inclusive society where all young people have the support they need to achieve their full potential. To learn more about our work, visit https://raikesfoundation.org.
About the Schultz Family Foundation
The Schultz Family Foundation's mission is to create greater opportunity, accessible to all. Our work is deeply rooted in the lives and values of our co-founders, Sheri and Howard Schultz, who believe talent is everywhere, but opportunity is not. We seek to apply the lessons they have learned over the decades to seed innovations and scale solutions to help young people successfully navigate the transition to adulthood and positively impact the trajectory of their lives. We are investors in unleashing potential and unlocking opportunity, working in partnership with employers, entrepreneurs, non-profits, and governments that share our aspiration of enabling everyone to access the full promise of America. Learn more at: www.schultzfamilyfoundation.org
CONTACTS
Showcases Washington as a national leader in the field, spotlighting promising solutions and the power of public-private partnership to address persistent challenges and gaps
SEATTLE (MARCH 6, 2024) – A new report released by the Office of Homeless Youth and A Way Home Washington details significant strides in addressing unaccompanied youth and young adult homelessness (YYA) in Washington state since a collaborative, multi-sector, statewide effort was launched in 2016.
“Yes to Yes” Washington State: Unaccompanied Youth and Young Adult Homelessness Landscape Scan, funded by the Raikes Foundation and the Schultz Family Foundation, pairs comprehensive data analysis with perspectives from more than 100 young people with lived experience, service providers, and other stakeholders across the state. The report presents a roadmap and a vision for Washington state where unstably housed young people can receive the help they need promptly within their community.
There have been remarkable achievements including the near complete closure of the geographic service gap identified in 2016 as well as solutions showing promising results such as flexible diversion funds and closer partnerships with schools. The findings show that even when faced with a problem as complex and dynamic as YYA homelessness, progress can be made with focused funding, attention, and public-private partnerships that provide capacity for innovation.
Key findings include:
The report shows that while youth homelessness is an urgent crisis, it is a solvable problem. Since the state assembled a broad coalition of community leaders and youth with lived experience in 2016 to develop an integrated, consistent statewide approach, much has been learned about promising solutions. By putting young people at the center, focusing on prevention, collecting better data, investing in creative solutions such as cash assistance, working with schools, and intervening earlier to meet young people’s and family’s needs, positive progress is being made. Likewise, the state has seen significant strides disrupting the pipeline of youth exiting the foster care, behavioral health, and juvenile justice systems into homelessness over the past four years.
Recognizing the work to address YYA homelessness is far from done, the report is transparent about persistent challenges and gaps —especially in rural communities—where unaccompanied YYA continue to struggle to find safe housing and shelter, particularly youth under 18 years old, LGBTQIA2S+, BIPOC, and pregnant/parenting young people.
This report delves into the authentic experiences of affected young people and reveals a narrative often overshadowed by numbers alone. It should become a vital resource for policymakers, advocates, and individuals dedicated to addressing youth and young adult homelessness.
QUOTES
About Office of Homeless Youth
The Office of Homeless Youth Prevention & Protection leads statewide efforts to prevent and end homelessness for youth and young adults by partnering with community programs to establish ongoing and future funding, policy, and best practices.
About A Way Home Washington
A Way Home Washington (AWHWA) is a statewide movement to prevent and end youth and young adult homelessness, with a focus on prioritizing young people of color and LGBTQ+ youth who experience homelessness at higher rates than their white, straight, cisgender peers. Co-Chaired by First Lady Trudi Inslee, AWHWA unites passionate stakeholders across the state to build systems that respond to the unique needs of all young people.
About Raikes Foundation
At the Raikes Foundation, we believe that when we work together and center the voices of young people, we can build a fair society for all. Our goal is to bring people together to break down barriers that prevent communities from thriving and to support solutions that allow all of us to determine a fair and just future for America. We make grants in four core areas: education, housing stability for youth, racial equity and democracy, and impact-driven philanthropy. Through our grants, we seek to redefine financial impact, support individuals, and promote community agency and solutions to build a more just and inclusive society where all young people have the support they need to achieve their full potential. To learn more about our work, visit https://raikesfoundation.org.
About the Schultz Family Foundation
The Schultz Family Foundation's mission is to create greater opportunity, accessible to all. Our work is deeply rooted in the lives and values of our co-founders, Sheri and Howard Schultz, who believe talent is everywhere, but opportunity is not. We seek to apply the lessons they have learned over the decades to seed innovations and scale solutions to help young people successfully navigate the transition to adulthood and positively impact the trajectory of their lives. We are investors in unleashing potential and unlocking opportunity, working in partnership with employers, entrepreneurs, non-profits, and governments that share our aspiration of enabling everyone to access the full promise of America. Learn more at: www.schultzfamilyfoundation.org
CONTACTS