For more than 25 years, Dwight struggled with cocaine use. In 2013, after repeated offenses, a police officer referred him to Seattle’s Law Enforcement Assisted...
Feb 02- Featured Story
King County homeless shelters left to deal with omicron mostly on their own
Public Health couldn’t staff every room in the hotels and the bar to get into one of the beds rose. Staff at homeless nonprofits, who’d...
May 28
Camping ban stands
The King County Superior Court ruled this month that Burien’s...
May 08
King County sues over homelessness, transit funding rules
King County and seven other governments sued Friday to block...
Apr 30
Community Lifeline struggles
The nonprofit provides emergency shelter, meals, showers and other services...
Apr 23
Seattle sweeps break records
In the past two years, Seattle has taken down more...
Apr 16
Outreach in Little Saigon
Workers for REACH spend several hours each day walking the...
Apr 09
Kent approves SODA zones
Nine organizations signed letter opposing new ordinance as ‘not an...
Apr 02
HUD cuts could grow housing crisis
The Dept. of Housing and Urban Development may close its...
Mar 26
Bills limiting cities’ homelessness regulation could return
Two bills to limit how much cities can regulate homelessness...
Mar 18
Washington House passes ‘rent stabilization’ bill
House Bill 1217, which caps yearly increases at 7% of...
Mar 12
New York’s involuntary removal policy
New York City’s involuntary removal policy was supposed to make...
REACH improves lives daily for more than 3,500 King County residents. Whether it’s a visit to the doctor, a warm meal, or getting into substance use treatment, our work changes lives. You can help.