Generated by GPT-5-mini| All Home | |
|---|---|
| Name | All Home |
| Formation | 2016 |
| Type | Nonprofit organization |
| Headquarters | Seattle, Washington |
| Region served | King County, Washington |
| Leader title | Executive Director |
All Home
All Home is a nonprofit organization based in Seattle, Washington, focused on coordinating homeless response and housing systems in King County. The organization works with municipal, county, and philanthropic actors to implement strategies that address chronic homelessness, shelter access, and housing stability. All Home partners with service providers, advocacy groups, and funders to align data-driven planning, policy development, and community engagement.
All Home was formed in 2016 following a series of regional initiatives addressing homelessness in King County, influenced by prior actions from the City of Seattle, King County, Washington, and philanthropic efforts by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation. Its creation built on earlier collaborations such as the Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessness and the Downtown Emergency Service Center. Key early milestones included coordinating response to the homelessness crisis highlighted during the 2015 regional planning cycles and aligning with federal frameworks like the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development continuum initiatives. Leadership transitions have included executives recruited from civic organizations and housing nonprofits, reflecting ties to institutions like Enterprise Community Partners, National Alliance to End Homelessness, and local elected offices including the King County Executive.
All Home's stated mission centers on reducing homelessness and increasing housing access through coordinated systems and strategic investment. Programmatic efforts typically involve system planning, performance measurement, and resource allocation, connecting with initiatives led by Seattle Mayor offices, the King County Council, and regional planning bodies. All Home administers coordinated entry processes informed by standards similar to those recommended by the U.S. Interagency Council on Homelessness and employs data practices compatible with Homeless Management Information System implementations. Program partners have included service providers such as Mary's Place, Catholic Community Services, Union Gospel Mission, and housing developers like Low Income Housing Institute and Bellwether Housing.
Governance of All Home incorporates a board and executive leadership that collaborates with public sector stakeholders including the Seattle Human Services Department and the King County Department of Community and Human Services. Staff teams are organized around functions such as strategic planning, data analytics, policy, and community engagement, interfacing with entities like the Seattle/King County Public Health Department and regional funders including the Washington State Department of Commerce. Advisory bodies and workgroups often include representatives from advocacy organizations such as Housing Development Consortium of Seattle–King County, A Way Home Washington, and legal aid organizations like King County Bar Association clinics.
Funding streams for All Home have comprised public allocations from the City of Seattle and King County, federal funding through HUD Continuum of Care grants, and philanthropic support from foundations including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and Kaiser Permanente. Strategic partnerships extend to research and evaluation partners such as University of Washington's urban studies programs and policy institutes like the Brookings Institution and Urban Institute on homelessness research projects. Collaborations with health systems such as Swedish Medical Center and Virginia Mason have been used to integrate healthcare and housing interventions, while alliances with developers like Vulcan Real Estate and nonprofits including Descanso Housing have supported housing production.
All Home has contributed to measurable system-level outcomes reported in regional dashboards and plan documents used by the Seattle City Council and King County Council for policy decisions. Its advocacy and coordinated planning have intersected with campaigns and coalitions such as End Homelessness Washington and federal policy dialogues involving the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. Impact reporting often references reductions in chronic homelessness counts in specific programs, integration of homeless services with healthcare partners like Harborview Medical Center, and the deployment of prevention resources aligned with state efforts spearheaded by the Washington State Legislature.
Critiques of All Home have echoed broader debates around homelessness policy in the region, involving disputes among stakeholders like the Seattle Police Department, business groups such as the Seattle Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce, and neighborhood associations. Controversial issues have included allocation decisions tied to municipal budgets debated in Seattle budget hearings, the efficacy of coordinated entry prioritization that some advocates challenged in forums hosted by AARP Washington and tenant organizers, and concerns about transparency raised during public comment processes before the King County Council. Questions have also arisen about reliance on philanthropic funding from entities like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and how such funding shapes local priorities.
Category:Non-profit organizations based in Washington (state) Category:Homelessness in the United States