Every Program on the Map
All 71 programs and pathways, stage by stage — what each one does, what it can hold, who pays for it, and where people go from it. The atlas’s deep-dives, in browsable form.
This page is the whole board, unrolled: all 71 boxes from the atlas, stage by stage, left to right — the same journey shape the map draws. Each entry opens to the full deep-dive: what the program does, its capacity, its funding, and the connections that carry people onward. Status chips use the atlas’s semantics: green fully funded/operating, amber partial/under capacity, red gap, gray a pathway or outcome rather than a service. It is long by design — use the stage chips above to jump, and the Full Map page for orientation first.
1 · The Foundation — Enforced Community Standards
The first pillar — not a program but the environment the whole system rests in: consistent, humane enforcement of the public rights-of-way. Per the mayors of Boise and Houston, without a steady ’no’ to street living, the recovery system to the right never receives its people (the One-Third Rule). Spokane currently has no dedicated beat-patrol model — which is why this column is red.
Rights-of-Way Enforcement & Beat Patrols — the Forcing Function GAP Criminal Justice & Courts
The missing input, per the mayors of the cities that succeeded: consistent, humane, on-street enforcement of the public rights-of-way — daily beat presence, not episodic sweeps. Without a steady “no” to street living, the recovery system downstream never receives its people: they remain in place, and the map to the right runs under capacity while people die to the left of it. Boise’s four-term Mayor Dave Bieter calls the result the One-Third Rule: enforce consistently and roughly a third go home to family, a third enter services, a third move on. Spokane today has no dedicated on-street beat patrol model — the 2025 camping ordinance is enforced episodically by patrol response, not sustained presence.
Capacity: Spokane: no dedicated beat-patrol / ROW enforcement program ⚠ — the box is red because the function is absent, not underfunded
Funding: City/county general funds (would-be); the “offer” side is funded through the treatment nodes
Steward: City / Valley / County
Where people go from here
- The Enforcement Fork — Engage, Reconnect, or Move On — Consistent, humane enforcement creates the fork: a real 'no' to the sidewalk paired with a real 'yes' at the treatment door.
- Law Enforcement Contact (SPD / SCSO / Valley) — Beat presence produces contacts — each one either a warm handoff or just a citation, depending on what stands behind it.
- Arriving for the Open Street Scene — Enforcement differentials move people between cities. When Spokane was the permissive one, this line ran inward.
- Other Communities — Where the Outward Flow Lands — The deterrence effect: facing a consistently enforced 'no,' some choose another city before ever pitching a tent. Read this row's ⓘ for the honest rules on interpreting that.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The One-Third Rule — what the successful mayors actually say
Dave Bieter, Boise’s four-term mayor (and the SBA’s keynote speaker last year), describes what happened when Boise enforced its rights-of-way consistently and humanely: roughly one-third went home — back to family and friends, a bumpy road to recovery, but all roads out of addiction are bumpy, and the impossibility of street life is what made them take it; roughly one-third went into services — the entire “sausage” this map documents, sometimes by way of the criminal justice system, which, properly built, is itself part of the recovery system for chronic offenders; and roughly one-third left — not ready to engage, still held by their addiction, drifting to places where street life stays viable. He didn’t know where they went. He knew they left.
Houston’s three-term Mayor Annise Parker told the SBA substantially the same thing in fewer words: enforce the public rights-of-way or the recovery systems never get their chance — the people who cannot abide simply leave. At the time of that testimony, Houston’s overall homelessness rate ran roughly 89% below Spokane’s — before the fentanyl era, but instructive still.
The fallacy this box exists to correct
Spokane’s instinct has been to work the system harder — more programs, more contracts, more effort inside the boxes to the right of this one — while never quite saying “no” to the street itself. The mayors’ testimony inverts that: without the forcing function, the system has no intake pressure. People stay where they are; the beds run under-occupied (183 empty on count night); the deaths continue to the left of every program built to prevent them. Enforcement without services is cruelty, and this map documents that too — but services without enforcement is theater.
The sequencing question — build the plane while flying it
Every city faces the same chicken-and-egg: do we enforce first, or build the system first? The mayors who succeeded — Bieter in Boise, Parker in Houston — give the same uncomfortable answer: enforcement comes first, and it forces the system to build itself out around it. Not because jail is the tool (it remains, as this map documents, the least effective and most expensive option on the board) — but because the decision to move people off the streets creates the urgent, unavoidable demand that finally makes shelter, treatment, and housing capacity get built at speed. Houston’s version of the lesson: you build the plane while you’re flying it. Enforcement at the front end, capacity built in response, mid-air, uncomfortable the whole way — and, in their testimony, the only sequence that has ever actually worked.
The reverse sequence — first perfect the system, then enforce — sounds humane and orderly. Spokane has now run that experiment for roughly six years. The system was never declared ready; enforcement never anchored; the streets absorbed the wait. That, as much as any single policy, is the defining difference between Spokane’s trajectory and Boise’s. Waiting for readiness is how a city chooses, year after year, not to decide.
Capacity & providers
What this would look like — and what Spokane does instead
The model: dedicated, daily, on-foot beat patrols in the corridors where street life concentrates — the same officers, the same blocks, paired with co-responders and armed with the same-day offer (detox, MAT, shelter, a bus ticket home). Presence, not sweeps: sweeps scatter and destroy trust; beats build the predictability that makes the fork real.
Spokane today: no dedicated beat-patrol program exists. The October 2025 camping ordinance is enforced by patrol response and periodic emphasis operations — episodic pressure that displaces without deciding. The downtown precinct, BID security, and CCEW’s police-embedded outreach are partial ingredients awaiting the model that combines them.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- The ordinance is already on the books (Oct 2025, unanimous) — the legal tool exists
- Partial ingredients exist: downtown precinct, embedded outreach, co-responders
- Both mayors’ testimony gives political cover: this is what the successful cities did
Weaknesses
- No dedicated beat model, staffing plan, or budget line — the box is red
- SPD staffing constraints make foot patrols compete with 911 response
- Without same-day treatment doors, enforcement becomes displacement (the JAMA warning)
Opportunities
- Pair every beat with the PATH center (2027) for a true no-refusal drop-off
- Fund beats from the same regional measure as treatment — one package, per Safe & Healthy D1
- Measure the thirds: track home-reconnections, service entries, and departures from day one
Threats
- Done episodically or punitively, it burns outreach trust and invites litigation
- Done alone — without the offer — it simply exports the crisis (see Leaving Spokane box)
Path forward & best practices
Sequence: (1) stand up dedicated beats in the 3–4 highest-concentration corridors, same officers daily; (2) wire each beat to same-day intake (detox, MAT, shelter hold, family-reunification travel) so every contact carries a real offer; (3) publish the thirds monthly — reconnected, engaged, departed — so the community can watch the rule work. Boise and Houston are the references; the PATH center’s 2027 opening is the natural start date, but the beats can precede it using existing doors.
Funding
Would-be funders: city/county general funds, the prospective regional public-safety measure (this is precisely the “alternatives paired with facilities” the Safe & Healthy roadmap requires), and BID partnership downtown. Cost scale: a 6–10 officer dedicated beat unit ≈ $1.5–2.5M/yr.
Sources
- Mayoral testimony to the SBA — Dave Bieter (Boise, One-Third Rule) & Annise Parker (Houston) — primary source — file: SBA keynote & direct conversations, to be documented
- Houston — The Way Home results — https://www.cfthhouston.org/houston-facts-info
- Spokesman — Oct 2025 camping ordinance — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/oct/27/spokane-city-council-unanimously-toughens-homeless/
- JAMA 2023 — displacement without services (the warning half) — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37036716/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
2 · Regional Inflow — Who Arrives & Why
Who arrives in Spokane, and why — told honestly. Most people on our streets fell into homelessness here (75.6% by the PIT question), some come legitimately because Spokane is Eastern Washington’s service hub, and some come because street life has been viable here. No one is busing anyone.
Where Are They From? It Depends on the Question N/A Housing & Shelter
Ask "where were you living immediately before losing housing?" (the HUD PIT question) and 75.6% say Spokane County. Ask "where did you FIRST become homeless?" (Marbut survey, July 2025) and only 49.8% say Spokane. Ask where they went to high school: 26.5% Spokane. Born here: 19.3%. Family ties here: 36.8%. Both surveys are right — they measure different things: recent residence vs. lifetime rootedness. What no evidence supports anywhere: organized busing from Seattle.
Capacity: PIT (prior residence): 75.6% local · Marbut (first homeless): 49.8% local · HS here: 26.5% · born here: 19.3% · family ties: 36.8%
Funding: N/A — context
Steward: Data point
Where people go from here
- Eviction & Housing Loss — Most local homelessness begins as housing loss, not street arrival — an eviction notice, a lost job, a family breakdown. This line says: the crisis is mostly home-grown.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Same population, five questions, five answers
Two credible Spokane surveys asked "where are homeless people from?" — with different questions, and very different results. Neither is wrong. They measure different things.
| The question asked | "Local" answer | What it measures / source |
|---|---|---|
| "Where were you living immediately prior to loss of housing?" | 75.6% | Recent residence — where the housing crisis happened. HUD PIT survey, Jan 2026 |
| "Where did you first start experiencing homelessness?" | 49.8% | Onset location — 50.2% became homeless elsewhere, then came to Spokane. Marbut survey, Jul 2025 |
| "Do (or did) you have family living in Spokane?" | 36.8% | Support network — 63.2% never had family ties here. Marbut |
| "Where did you attend high school?" | 26.5% | Where they grew up (23.7% elsewhere in WA; 49.8% out of state). Marbut |
| "Where were you born?" | 19.3% | Birthplace (14.8% elsewhere in WA; 65.9% out of state). Marbut |
📄 Read the full reports: Marbut Spokane Final Report (July 2025) · Discovery Institute Seattle study · EWU PIT "Broader Context" report
How to read the gap
The PIT question captures where the fall happened — and by that measure, most people fell in Spokane. The Marbut questions capture rootedness — and by those measures, most of Spokane's homeless population grew up somewhere else and lacks local family networks. Both can be true at once: a person can move to Spokane housed, live here two years, lose housing here (PIT: "local"), while having no roots here (Marbut: "not local"). A wrinkle inside the PIT's own data cuts the other way too: excluding the convention-center surveys, 32% of downtown-core respondents were living outside Washington entirely before losing housing.
Context that keeps this from being a Spokane-shaming exercise: Marbut's identical survey in Seattle found nearly the same numbers (86.6% born outside Seattle/King County; 19.8% went to high school there; 49.7% first homeless elsewhere) — mobile, low-rooted populations are the norm in Western cities, not a Spokane anomaly. And each survey team draws different policy conclusions from its own data: Marbut argues recovery works best where people have deep ties, favoring reconnection-oriented tracks; the EWU/PIT team notes family reunification is already offered, is the least-requested service, and that family is sometimes part of why a person is homeless. Both perspectives are represented in this map's nodes.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
This box has no provider — it is the community itself: 75.6% of those counted were last stably housed in Spokane County. The work’ is done (or not done) by every upstream system: landlords, courts, hospitals, schools, families.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Local origin means local levers work — prevention here pays here
- Data (PIT survey) is collected annually
- Counters the "shipped in" myth with evidence
Weaknesses
- No single owner: everyone’s inflow is no one’s job
- Self-reported data; different surveys (Marbut) yield different pictures
- Inflow tracking is not by-name or real-time
Opportunities
- A shared inflow dashboard (evictions + discharges + releases) would make prevention targetable
- SHTF B2 upstream-prevention recommendation is the vehicle
Threats
- Rent growth re-accelerating outpaces every prevention program
- Fatigue narrative ("they all come here") erodes support for local fixes
Funding
No dedicated funding — by design and by neglect. Prevention dollars (CHG, HEN, doc fees) touch this box only indirectly. The cheapest interventions in the whole system live here, unfunded.
Sources
- Marbut Consulting — Spokane Final Report (Jul 7, 2025, for Spokane Business Association) — full PDF — sources/Marbut%20Spokane%20Final%20Report%207-7-25%20FINAL.pdf
- Discovery Institute — Seattle homelessness study (same survey method) — full PDF — sources/Discovery%20Institute.pdf
- EWU et al. — 2025 PIT "Broader Context" report (Myth #1 section; downtown 32% out-of-state wrinkle) — https://static.spokanecity.org/documents/chhs/hmis/reports/2025-point-in-time-count-report-the-broader-context.pdf
- Center Square — 75.6% (2026 PIT) — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_cb7c4d1b-bfb4-4a00-aa48-1d16f50a9d7c.html
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Arriving for Services — the Regional Hub Reality N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
Spokane is Eastern Washington's service capital — and that pulls people here legitimately. The region's ONLY licensed teen shelter, only opioid treatment programs, the E&T psychiatric beds, Eastern State Hospital, and the 6-county crisis system are all here. A person in Colville, Omak, or Ritzville who wants detox has one realistic option: come to Spokane. Hub cities carry regional load — the question is whether the region shares the cost.
Capacity: Spokane RSA serves 6 counties; Eastern WA generates ~55% of statewide secure-withdrawal admissions; most rural counties have zero detox/shelter beds
Funding: The problem: outlying counties send people but almost no money
Steward: Regional dynamic
Where people go from here
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Some who come to Spokane for the region's only detox, teen shelter, or psychiatric beds arrive before a bed opens — and wait on the street. Hub load without hub capacity lands here.
- Withdrawal Management (Detox) — The legitimate hub path: someone travels from Colville or Ritzville because Spokane holds the region's only detox door.
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — New arrivals seeking services enter properly here — coordinated entry is the front desk for the whole region.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Why the hub pulls — the service geography of Eastern Washington
Count what exists ONLY in Spokane for a six-county region (Spokane, Adams, Ferry, Lincoln, Pend Oreille, Stevens — the SCRBH Regional Service Area): the crisis system's E&T beds, both opioid treatment programs, the withdrawal-management beds, the only licensed teen shelter in Eastern WA (Crosswalk), the DOC reentry centers, the VA medical center, and — one county over — Eastern State Hospital. Rural counties have essentially zero of these. Statewide data confirms the flow: Eastern Washington generates ~55% of secure-withdrawal (Ricky's Law) admissions while having almost no local capacity.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
No agency recruits people to Spokane — but the region’s service concentration (the only 24/7 shelters, detox, MAT, and crisis beds in a 100-mile radius) makes the city the de facto county seat of need for the Inland Northwest. Marbut’s survey: 50.2% first became homeless elsewhere.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Regional hub role reflects real capacity neighbors lack
- Marbut + PIT给 two-lens visibility into inflow
Weaknesses
- Surrounding counties under-build and refer out
- No regional cost-sharing for hub burden
- Data on origin is survey-based, contested
Opportunities
- Regional funding measure could price the hub role honestly
- Interlocal agreements (SHTF model) could share load
Threats
- Hub role grows as rural BH capacity shrinks
- Political backlash frames services as magnets — risking cuts to the wrong things
Funding
Unfunded as a function. Spokane taxpayers carry hub costs neighbors don’t share — one of the quietest arguments for the regional structure this map recommends.
Sources
- SCRBH BH-ASO — 6-county Regional Service Area — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/4891/BH-ASO
- HCA Ricky's Law report — E. WA ≈55% of admissions — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/rickys-law-annual-report-202507.pdf
- VOA — Crosswalk, only licensed teen shelter in Eastern WA — https://voaspokane.org/crosswalk-2-0/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Arriving for the Open Street Scene N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
The harder truth, told to Gavin directly by the mayors of Boise, Portland, and Houston: some people migrate toward cities where street life is viable — light enforcement, abundant free meals and supplies, an established scene. This share is real but unmeasured, and it responds to policy: when enforcement differentials shift, so does drift. This is not busing; it is individual choices following incentives.
Capacity: Share unmeasured ⚠ — a by-name intake question ("where did you sleep 90 days ago?") would answer it
Funding: N/A — dynamic
Steward: Regional dynamic
Where people go from here
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — When street life is more tolerated here than where someone came from, arrival often means straight to a camp — enforcement differentials move people between cities.
- Life on the Streets — the Survival Circuit — Arrivals drawn by an open street scene plug into the survival circuit — meals, gear, community — within days.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What three mayors told Gavin
The mayors of Boise, Portland, and Houston have each said directly: a meaningful slice of street populations migrates toward permissive environments — places where you can camp without consequence, where the survival circuit is rich, where the scene is established. Their common experience: when a city enforces its rights-of-way consistently AND pairs enforcement with real services, that slice faces a choice — engage or move along — and street counts fall without mass arrests. Boise (post-Grants Pass namesake city) and Houston (which cut homelessness ~63% while enforcing encampment rules) are the reference points.
What we honestly don't know
Spokane's permissive-arrival share is unmeasured — but the Marbut survey (July 2025) sharpens the picture: 50.2% of Spokane's homeless population first became homeless somewhere else and then came here, and 63.2% have never had family in Spokane. That establishes substantial post-homelessness migration; it doesn't establish why each person came (services? scene? a bus ticket and a rumor?). One intake question on the by-name list ("where did you sleep 90 days ago, and what brought you here?") would replace anecdote with data within a year.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
No one operates this box; it is a policy climate. Enforcement differentials between jurisdictions (camping rules, sit-lie, service levels) shift where street homelessness is visible — the mayors’ enforcement-choice dynamic documented in this map’s inflow research.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Post-Grants Pass, cities can actually choose their standard
- Spokane’s Prop 1 (75% vote) shows public mandate exists
Weaknesses
- Uncoordinated standards = displacement ping-pong between jurisdictions
- No shared measurement of enforcement-driven movement
Opportunities
- Regional enforcement compact + shared offramps (the bookend bargain)
- Citations-to-services ratio as a public metric
Threats
- One jurisdiction defecting (strict or lax) shifts burden to others
- Enforcement without offramp capacity just rotates people through jail
Funding
Enforcement is funded (police, courts, jail); the offramps are the underfunded half. The 125-citations-vs-34-acceptances ratio is the budget question in one line.
Sources
- Houston — The Way Home (−63%) — https://www.governing.com/housing/how-houston-cut-its-homeless-population-by-nearly-two-thirds
- Spokesman — Spokane enforcement impact (Nov 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/nov/09/spokane-re-criminalizing-homelessness-has-had-quic/
- Marbut Consulting — Spokane report (50.2% first homeless elsewhere; 63.2% no family ties) — file: Continuum Map/sources/Marbut Spokane Final Report 7-7-25 FINAL.pdf
- Mayoral testimony to Gavin Cooley (Boise, Portland, Houston) — primary source — file: direct conversations, to be documented
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
3 · Inflow — Pathways In
How local people fall in: eviction, jail and hospital discharge to the street, aging out of foster care, fleeing domestic violence, untreated mental illness, and addiction. Every box here is a doorway the region could narrow.
Eviction & Housing Loss N/A Housing & Shelter
The single largest driver of first-time homelessness. Rent burden, no-cause terminations, and loss of a doubled-up arrangement push people directly to cars, couches, and streets. By the PIT's prior-residence question, 75.6% were living in-county before becoming homeless — though other survey questions yield lower "local" shares (see the Regional Inflow stage).
Capacity: N/A — inflow driver
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Eviction Prevention & Rental Assistance — The system's best bargain: catch the eviction before it lands. A few hundred dollars of rent help here beats tens of thousands downstream.
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — When prevention comes too late or runs dry, the eviction completes and the street receives the household — the costliest version of this line.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
How eviction works in Washington — and how long it takes
For nonpayment, the landlord serves a 14-day notice to pay or vacate. Paying in full within those 14 days stops everything. If not, the landlord files an unlawful detainer in superior court; the tenant has 7 days (excluding weekends/holidays) to answer; a show-cause hearing typically follows within 1–2 weeks; if the landlord prevails, the sheriff executes a writ of restitution. Total: usually 3–6 weeks from notice to removal in uncontested cases.
Washington's protections — among the nation's strongest on paper
WA was the first state to guarantee appointed counsel for indigent tenants (SB 5160, 2021) — though a 2025 UW study found it reaches fewer than half of eligible tenants. HB 1236 (2021) requires just cause for terminations. And in May 2025, WA became the third state with a statewide rent cap (HB 1217): annual increases limited to the lesser of 10% or 7%+CPI (2026 cap: 9.68%). Notably, the Eviction Resolution Pilot — mandatory pre-filing mediation with a 78% settlement rate — was allowed to expire July 1, 2023, and filings surged that fall.
The data
Reading Spokane's curve: the eviction moratorium (Mar 2020–Oct 2021) and ERA/mediation era suppressed filings to a fraction of normal; then the rebound blew past the pre-pandemic baseline to a record ~2,164–2,228 in 2024 (OCLA-compiled count vs. news-cited court count — same story, slightly different vintage). Note the hopeful wrinkle: Spokane filings fell to 1,794 in 2025 even as the state set another record — worth watching whether that holds (2026 is tracking ~160–175/month through April). Spokane's filing rate (2.9% of renter households in 2024) still ranked second-third among WA counties. Filings are counted at Spokane County Superior Court, so no separate city-only series exists. Meanwhile average asking rent rose from $934 (2019) to ~$1,300 (2026) — +39%.
The causal evidence: a quasi-experimental NBER study (NYC housing-court records) found an eviction order raised emergency-shelter use more than 300% in the following year, hitting Black and female tenants hardest; a Seattle Women's Commission survey found 37.5% of evicted renters ended up literally on the street. Desmond's Milwaukee work established the baseline: about 1 in 20 renter households faces eviction annually.
Capacity & providers
The front edge of the inflow
Eviction is a process with multiple intervention points — notice, filing, hearing, writ — and each is a chance to divert. Spokane's infrastructure at those points: SNAP rental assistance, Northwest Justice Project / OCLA-appointed counsel at hearings, and the (episodic) city prevention funds. There is no permanent courthouse-based same-day assistance presence — the single best-evidenced intervention point.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- WA's legal toolkit (counsel, just cause, rent cap) is nation-leading
- 14-day cure window creates a natural, targetable intervention moment
Weaknesses
- Record filing volumes despite the toolkit
- Right-to-counsel reaches <50% of eligible tenants
- Mediation program expired 2023 — the cheapest fix, gone
Opportunities
- Courthouse-based eviction defense + same-day assistance (NYC/Cleveland model)
- Landlord early-warning partnerships before filings
- A Spokane eviction dashboard: filings, outcomes, assistance reach, by month
Threats
- Rent growth outpacing the new cap's effective floor
- One-time prevention funds create boom-bust rescue capacity
Path forward & best practices
The eviction-to-homelessness pipeline is the most measurable and most interruptible inflow on this map. Priority order: (1) permanent prevention fund with courthouse delivery; (2) push Olympia to revive ERPP mediation; (3) full right-to-counsel funding. Each dollar here is the cheapest homelessness dollar Spokane can spend.
Funding
Today: HHAA recording fees, CHG prevention lines, CDBG, episodic city funds (declaration ~$4.2M precedent). State: OCLA funds appointed counsel. Gone: federal ERA, ERPP mediation. See also the Eviction Prevention node's funding analysis.
Sources
- Eviction Research Network — WA & Spokane County filings (chart data; June 2026 vintage) — https://evictionresearch.net/washington/
- ERN underlying county-month data (Spokane = FIPS 53063) — https://evictionresearch.net/washington/data/o2b_county_monthly.json
- WA AOC superior court caseload reports (cross-check) — https://www.courts.wa.gov/caseload/?fa=caseload.showIndex&level=s&freq=a
- OPB — Spokane record 2,228 filings 2024 — https://www.opb.org/article/2024/12/17/eviction-washington-pacific-northwest-housing-spokane-king-evicted/
- WA right to counsel — SB 5160 (2021, first state) — https://senatedemocrats.wa.gov/kudererarchive/2021/04/22/washington-becomes-first-state-to-enact-right-to-counsel-in-eviction-cases/
- HB 1217 rent stabilization (May 2025) — https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2025/05/07/cap-on-rent-increases-across-washington-is-signed-into-law/
- Zillow — Spokane rent trend — https://www.zillow.com/rental-manager/market-trends/spokane-wa/
- Eviction process timeline (WA) — https://ipropertymanagement.com/laws/washington-eviction-process
- Collinson et al./NBER — eviction→shelter causal estimate — https://nlihc.org/resource/evictions-cause-increases-residential-mobility-homelessness-and-hospital-use-and-decreases
- Seattle Women's Commission — post-eviction outcomes — https://shelterforce.org/2020/07/24/what-happens-if-23-million-renters-are-evicted/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Job Loss / Economic Shock N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Medical debt, job loss, a car breakdown, a family breakup — for households with no savings, one shock cascades into housing loss within weeks.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Eviction Prevention & Rental Assistance — A lost job or a medical bill becomes a missed rent payment; rental assistance is the shock absorber.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
One shock from the street
67% of American workers report living paycheck to paycheck (2025) — meaning a car repair, medical bill, or lost shift is a housing event in waiting. The EWU/PIT research team's core finding applies here: individual risk factors decide who falls, but housing costs and vacancy rates decide how many. In a Spokane where rent rose 39% in seven years, the margin between "working poor" and "unhoused" narrowed to a single bad month.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The inflow nobody staffs: rent outrunning wages. Spokane rents rose ~40%+ since 2019 while vacancy sat near 1-2%; every 10% rent increase predicts measurable homelessness growth (GAO). SNAP, landlords, and the courts are the de facto workforce of this box.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Purely economic cases exit fast with light help (diversion works)
- Prevention here is the cheapest dollar in the system
Weaknesses
- Rent assistance is episodic and waitlisted
- No local rent-burden early-warning system
Opportunities
- Eviction-filing data as targeting tool (NBER causal link to shelter entry)
- Employer/housing partnerships for workforce housing
Threats
- Regional growth without building = permanent inflow pump
- Federal voucher/CDBG cuts land directly here
Funding
HEN, CHG prevention slices, SNAP’s LIHEAP/rent programs, HHAA doc fees — all small against the market force. The housing-production side (HTF, LIHTC, HEART) is the only durable answer.
Sources
- EWU 2025 PIT report — structural analysis — https://static.spokanecity.org/documents/chhs/hmis/reports/2025-point-in-time-count-report-the-broader-context.pdf
- Colburn & Aldern — Homelessness is a Housing Problem — https://homelessnesshousingproblem.com/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Hospital Discharge to Street N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
Hospitals discharge medically fragile patients with nowhere to go. Without medical respite beds, people recover from surgery in tents — and cycle straight back to the ER.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Hospital Discharge Planning — The fix in progress: discharge planning intercepts patients before the sidewalk — a plan, a bed, a follow-up instead of a taxi voucher.
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Without a planning stop, patients leave the hospital to the sidewalk — wound care instructions in hand, nowhere to heal.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What we know — and the coding problem
U.S. hospital discharge data is notoriously bad at capturing homelessness: "discharged home or to self-care" can mean a shelter cot or a sidewalk. The best population-level study (Ontario) found ~2.3% of psychiatric inpatients homeless at discharge, with sharply higher 30-day readmissions (17.1% vs 9.8%) — the round-trip that makes discharge-to-street expensive as well as cruel. California now requires hospitals to screen and report housing status at discharge; Washington has no equivalent mandate, and no Spokane-specific estimate exists.
Capacity & providers
The local seam
Providence Sacred Heart and MultiCare Deaconess are the discharge sources; the receiving infrastructure (medical respite beds, discharge-planning protocols into CE) is the map's acknowledged gap — see the Medical Respite and Hospital Discharge Planning nodes.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Hospitals have both community-benefit dollars and readmission-penalty incentives to fix this
- Medicaid FCS can bill for post-discharge tenancy support
Weaknesses
- No screening/reporting requirement, no data, no respite capacity
- ERs default to discharge-to-street at 2 a.m. because nothing else exists
Opportunities
- A city/county-hospital respite partnership (national models: Chicago, Seattle's Edward Thomas House) funded jointly by hospital community benefit + Medicaid
- WA-level advocacy for a discharge-housing-status reporting requirement
Threats
- Readmission cycles silently consume charity-care budgets that could fund the fix
Path forward & best practices
Sequence: (1) count it — voluntary hospital reporting of discharge housing status; (2) build 20–30 medical respite beds with braided hospital/Medicaid funding; (3) protocol: no discharge of a homeless patient without a CE referral and a respite offer. Every element has a working national model.
Funding
Hospital community benefit (largest untapped source on this map), Medicaid FCS, HUD CoC SSO (NOFO-favored), philanthropy. This is a build-it node: dollars exist, structure doesn't.
Sources
- Ontario study — homelessness at psychiatric discharge — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8061292/
- PPIC — hospital discharge data & homelessness policy — https://www.ppic.org/publication/how-hospital-discharge-data-can-inform-state-homelessness-policy/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Jail / Prison Release to Street N/A Criminal Justice & Courts
Release from Spokane County Jail or DOC custody with no housing plan is a direct pipeline to the street — and a top predictor of re-offense. The jail's booking restrictions mean many are released within hours, back to the same corner.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Jail Reentry Planning — Reentry planning meets people at the gate — ID, meds, a housing plan — the countermeasure to the deadliest two weeks on this map.
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Release with no plan: the door opens, often at night, onto the same sidewalk — with a 129× overdose-death risk in the first two weeks.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The scheduled emergency
Formerly incarcerated people are ~10× more likely to be homeless (13× after multiple stays), ~15% of prison releases hit homelessness within a year — and Washington's own NEJM-published data shows overdose death risk running 129× in the first two weeks out. Unlike every other inflow on this map, this one comes with a date known weeks in advance.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Spokane County Detention Services releases ~16,000 bookings a year — many to no address. Release planning exists for sentenced DOC populations (Brownstone, Eleanor Chase, Revive contracts), but pretrial and misdemeanor releases — most of the volume — walk out with a bag and a bus line.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Verified data now exists (dashboard: 15,891 bookings 2024)
- CAT jail MAT bridge + Revive housing prove the model locally
Weaknesses
- No universal release screening for housing/BH need
- 14% book-and-release churn defeats any planning
- The 129× post-release OD window is unstaffed
Opportunities
- SHTF B4 warm-handoff mandate names this exact door
- Medicaid reentry waiver will pay for pre-release linkage
Threats
- Rising bookings (16,283 in 2025) grow the unplanned outflow
- Jail crowding pressure shortens stays, quickens churn
Funding
County general fund runs the jail; almost nothing dedicated runs the exit. DOC funds its own; the pretrial majority is the gap. The Bill prices this door’s failure at its 129× mortality seam.
Sources
- Prison Policy — incarceration & homelessness — https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/housing.html
- Binswanger NEJM — WA post-release mortality — https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmsa064115
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Aging Out of Foster Care N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Youth exiting foster care at 18 without family supports are dramatically over-represented in the homeless population within two years.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Youth Diversion / Host Homes / Family Reconciliation — Aging out at 18 with no family net; youth diversion, host homes, and reconciliation are the doors built for exactly this cliff.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The measured pipeline
Washington DCYF's current performance measure: 16% of youth aging out of foster care experience homelessness or housing instability within 12 months (5-year average; a methodology change makes this non-comparable to earlier studies, which found 28% to roughly one-third within a year). Either number makes foster-care exit one of the most predictable single moments of homelessness risk government controls — the state literally schedules the discharge date.
Capacity & providers
Spokane's counter-assets
VOA's youth continuum (Crosswalk 2.0, YAS young-adult shelter, Cannon Hall, scattered-site youth RRH) plus state Extended Foster Care (to 21) and DCYF transition planning. The gap is the warm handoff: youth who decline EFC or exit placements early surface at YAS or the street months later.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- VOA continuum is unusually complete for a region this size
- Risk is identifiable YEARS ahead — perfect prevention target
Weaknesses
- 16% still failing a fully foreseeable transition
- Cross-system data (DCYF→homeless system) not linked publicly
Opportunities
- Host homes + kinship expansion; direct DCYF-to-CE referral protocol
- Prioritize former foster youth in youth RRH/voucher lines (FYI vouchers exist federally)
Threats
- Federal RHY funding pressure hits exactly this population
- Young-adult homelessness converts to chronic adult homelessness within a few years
Path forward & best practices
The measurable goal: zero exits from Washington foster care in Spokane County to homelessness. Tools already exist — EFC, FYI vouchers, host homes, VOA's continuum. What's missing is a named accountable owner for each aging-out youth and a linked data trail.
Funding
DCYF (EFC), federal Chafee/FYI vouchers (via SHA — utilization ⚠ to verify), WA Office of Homeless Youth, HHS RHY (VOA), county $300K (2025–27). Small dollars, high certainty of return.
Sources
- DCYF — housing stability measure (16%) — https://dcyf.wa.gov/node/3299
- DSHS RDA — youth aging out studies (28%–1/3) — https://www.dshs.wa.gov/ffa/rda/research-reports/youth-aging-out-foster-care
- Gavin Cooley — VOA NOFO memo (youth continuum) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Fleeing Domestic Violence N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
A leading cause of homelessness for women and children. Leaving an abuser often means leaving housing, income, and belongings the same day.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- DV Advocacy & Emergency Shelter — Fleeing violence, the first call is DV advocacy — safety planning, confidential shelter, legal help.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Fleeing home, losing housing
Across studies, 22–57% of homeless women cite domestic violence as the immediate cause of their homelessness — up to ~80% among mothers with children in some samples. Survivors leave with what fits in a car, often mid-lease with shared finances weaponized. See the DV Advocacy & Shelter box for Spokane's (strained) counter-assets: YWCA absorbed ~$400K in federal cuts in 2025.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
YWCA Spokane — the county’s only state-recognized DV victim program — runs the confidential safe shelter (~11 families at a time, private room per family, pets when possible, hotel vouchers as overflow, "near capacity almost every day"), the 24-hour helpline (509-326-2255, record call surge in 2024), legal advocates in the Family Justice Center with SPD’s DV unit, and a full housing continuum from prevention through PSH. [Audited Jul 2026]
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Complete continuum under one experienced roof (shelter → legal → housing)
- Family Justice Center co-location = one-stop safety
- Pet accommodation removes a documented barrier to fleeing
Weaknesses
- ~11-family shelter vs the state’s highest county DV rate (10.4/1,000 vs 7.4)
- Hotel overflow = safety without community or services
- VOCA cliff already closed 3 of 6 emergency apartments
Opportunities
- County’s $500K DV homeless-prevention contract (2025–27) is a template to scale
- DV-specific RRH is among the best-evidenced interventions anywhere
Threats
- Federal VOCA fell >70% (≈$75M→<$18M statewide); state backfill uncertain after June 2026
- Every shelter turnaway is a coin-flip between return-to-abuser and street
Funding
VOCA (collapsing), OCVA/state contracts, DSHS, county $500K (2025–27), city slices, philanthropy. In 2018 HMIS, 931 people — 52% of those served — were actively fleeing DV; 2024 PIT: 151 adults (9%). When victim funding falls, the homelessness lane inherits the difference, one lane over.
Sources
- YWCA safe shelter (capacity, pets, overflow) — https://ywcaspokane.org/service/intimate-partner-domestic-violence/safe-shelter/
- KXLY: Spokane Co DV rate 10.4/1,000 (state high) — https://www.kxly.com/report-rate-of-spokane-co-domestic-violence-offenses-higher-than-state-average/
- Spokesman: 931 fleeing DV (52%, 2018 HMIS) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2019/oct/17/state-spokane-county-struggle-with-far-reaching-he/
- WA Standard: VOCA funding collapse — https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2025/07/17/crime-victim-programs-in-washington-struggle-as-funding-erodes/
- County $500K DV prevention award (Mar 2025) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/60746/March-13th-2025-Agenda-Packet
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Untreated Serious Mental Illness N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
Serious mental illness typically emerges in the late teens and twenties. Without early treatment, families burn out, jobs are lost, and the person drifts to the street. In the 2026 count, 640 people — over a third of Spokane's homeless population — reported serious mental illness.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Untreated psychosis erodes work, then family, then housing; without treatment engagement, the street is where the slide ends.
- 988 / Regional Crisis Line — A psychiatric crisis surfacing at home usually reaches the system first as a 988 call — the earliest, cheapest intercept there is.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The illness arrives before the system does
Serious mental illness typically emerges between the late teens and mid-twenties — years before most people touch this map. Nationally ~7% of adults report serious mental illness in a given year; the vast majority remain housed (in Spokane County an estimated 39,000 residents had SMI in 2022 versus ~500 counted homeless with SMI) — housing costs, family capacity, and treatment access decide which path each person takes. In the 2026 count, 52% of Spokane's homeless population reported a mental health condition.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Serious mental illness typically onsets at 15-25 — and when families can’t get care (WA ranks bottom-third for youth MH access), the street eventually inherits the crisis. Frontier’s New Journeys (first-episode psychosis) is the region’s dedicated early-intervention team.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- New Journeys is evidence-based (coordinated specialty care)
- 988/crisis line gives families a first number to call
Weaknesses
- Months-long waits for child/adolescent psychiatry
- Families navigate alone until crisis forces entry via ER or police
- ITA threshold means help often requires danger first
Opportunities
- School-based screening (SHTF C6, student wellness money from 0.1%)
- Early psychosis intervention demonstrably prevents chronicity
Threats
- Untreated onset + fentanyl-era street = fastest route to chronic homelessness
- Workforce shortage hits child psychiatry hardest
Funding
Medicaid pays for treatment once accessed; the 0.1% tax funds student wellness; New Journeys rides state/Medicaid blend. The gap money: family navigation before first crisis — almost none.
Sources
- EWU PIT report — SMI prevalence context — https://static.spokanecity.org/documents/chhs/hmis/reports/2025-point-in-time-count-report-the-broader-context.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Substance Use Disorder N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
Addiction — increasingly fentanyl and methamphetamine — both causes homelessness and is caused by it. Spokane County recorded 344 overdose deaths in 2025 (346 in 2024), among the highest rates of any large U.S. jurisdiction. 404 people in the 2026 homeless count reported SUD.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Addiction consumes rent, then relationships, then shelter. This line is that progression.
- Harm Reduction — Syringe Services & Naloxone — For people still using, syringe services and naloxone are often the first — sometimes the only — door they trust.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Spokane's overdose crisis in national context
Per CDC provisional data (12-month rolling), Spokane County ranks #3 among all U.S. counties over 200,000 population in overdose death rate — behind only Baltimore city and St. Louis city — and #2 among jurisdictions over 300,000 (St. Louis city is 286K). The trajectory is the story:
The Medical Examiner's 2024 report adds a housing lens: 41% of 2024 accidental overdose decedents were unhoused (35% in 2025 per SRHD) — high, but the majority of the dead in both years were housed.
📊 Don't take our word for it — download the source data: the definitive CDC workbook (v13) — 12 months ending September 30, 2025 (CDC snapshot Apr 2026): Spokane #2 among U.S. jurisdictions over 300,000 (57.9 per 100k, behind only Baltimore city) and #5 among 356 jurisdictions over 200,000 — including a full methodology README and a reconciliation tab that itself explains earlier ranking discrepancies. Alternate window: the quarterly rankings workbook (12 months ending Dec 2024) shows #5 among the 300k+ set. Under every recent CDC window, Spokane is top-5 in America — skeptics are welcome to pick their window and check the math.
Fentanyl drove the surge (11 fentanyl deaths in 2019 → 194 in 2023; ~78–80% of 2024 deaths), but in 2025 methamphetamine edged out fentanyl as the most common drug in fatal overdoses — a shift with treatment implications, since there is no methadone-equivalent for meth. Statewide, WA peaked at 3,459 deaths (2023) and declined to 3,086 (2024); Spokane has plateaued rather than declined. And a fact that reframes the debate: in 2025, 62% of Spokane's overdose decedents were housed, 35% homeless.
Capacity & providers
Where addiction meets the map
SUD is both an inflow (addiction → job/family/housing loss) and an accelerant once on the street. The system's counter-assets appear across this map: harm reduction (SRHD), MAT (two OTPs + CAT + CHAS), detox (~40 beds), the coming PATH center, and treatment courts. See those nodes for capacity detail; this node is the driver.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- County treats overdose as a named emergency with settlement money behind it
- Strong local data (ME/SRHD) and your CDC analysis give Spokane an honest baseline
Weaknesses
- #2 national ranking; plateau at peak while peers decline
- Meth (no medication pathway) now leads fatalities
- Detox/secure-withdrawal bottlenecks upstream of every recovery story
Opportunities
- $29.2M settlement over time — enough to build one complete, measured system of care if not scattered
- Every OD reversal (1,795 SFD responses) is an addressable engagement moment
Threats
- Normalization: a plateau at 344 deaths/yr becoming background noise
- Supply shocks (nitazenes, xylazine) could restart the climb
Path forward & best practices
Cities that bent the curve (Seattle-area's recent decline, Rhode Island statewide) combined saturation naloxone, same-day MAT anywhere, jail continuity, and OD-response follow-up teams. Spokane has pieces of all four; none at full scale. The mayoral-level framing: name a target (e.g., under 200 deaths by 2030) and publish quarterly against it.
Funding
The overdose response rides on: Medicaid (treatment), opioid settlement (county $29.2M lifetime + city $1.5M), state HCA, SAMHSA grants, and local EMS levies. The structural risk is fragmentation — dozens of small allocations instead of one accountable system. The Opioid Abatement Council is the natural venue for consolidation.
Sources
- Download: THE definitive CDC workbook v13 (12-mo ending Sept 2025; Spokane #2 of >300K; methodology + reconciliation tabs) — sources/Spokane_Overdose_v13_20260528_013402.xlsx
- Earlier Jan 2026 rolling-rate analysis (superseded by v13; retained for the chart series) — sources/CDC_Overdose_1-25-26__3.xlsx
- Download: CDC quarterly rankings workbook (Jul 2026, newest — Spokane #5, 12-mo ending Dec 2024) — sources/Spokane_Overdose_Rankings_Quarterly_7-1-26.xlsx
- Spokesman — 344 deaths 2025; meth overtakes fentanyl; 62% housed — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/feb/26/fatal-overdoses-in-spokane-county-remain-high-afte/
- Center Square — fentanyl trend 11→194 (2019–23) — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_a771060a-e4bf-11ef-9814-f37e8dc16145.html
- UW ADAI — WA overdose death data — https://adai.washington.edu/wadata/deaths.htm
- WA Standard — statewide 2024 decline — https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2025/06/02/washington-overdose-deaths-decline-after-years-of-growth-data-show/
- Spokane Co. Medical Examiner 2024 Annual Report (fentanyl detections 108→270; 41% unhoused) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/60075/2024-Annual-Report
- ME annual reports index (chart data 2015–2022) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/3003/Annual-Reports
- Spokesman — 2021 deaths (203) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2022/jul/14/increase-in-deaths-from-overdose-sand-heatwave-det/
- Spokesman — 2022 deaths (250) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/jun/13/medical-examiners-office-investigated-49-more-deat/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Family Rejection / Youth Crisis N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Family conflict and rejection (disproportionately affecting LGBTQ+ youth) push young people out of the home with no safety net. 119 young adults 18–24 were counted homeless in 2026.
Capacity: N/A
Funding: N/A
Steward: Pathway
Where people go from here
- Youth Diversion / Host Homes / Family Reconciliation — A young person rejected or in family crisis meets the system built for reconciliation before the street gets them.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
1 in 10 — and half start before 18
Chapin Hall's national study: 1 in 10 young adults (18–25) experiences some homelessness each year, with LGBTQ+ youth at 120% higher risk — family rejection is the signature driver. Over half of homeless youth first lose housing between 16 and 18. Spokane counted 119 homeless young adults in 2026; the Aurora Center (15 beds, LGBTQIA+) exists precisely because of this inflow's shape.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
When family conflict, rejection (LGBTQ+ youth ≈40% of youth homelessness nationally), or aging-out lands a young person outside: VOA’s Crosswalk 2.0 (18-bed licensed minor shelter + dorm floor — 44 youth beds total, opened 2025 beside SCC with GED center and CHAS clinic), the 44-bed Young Adult Shelter (18–24), Alexandria’s House for young mothers, Cup of Cool Water’s street drop-in, and YFA Connections’ 8-bed crisis residential center (12–17). [Audited Jul 2026]
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Purpose-built new capacity (Crosswalk 2.0’s $22M campus) designed around school/work exits
- Anchor Community Initiative by-name list achieved a certified 20% YYA reduction (270→217)
- Age-appropriate separation from adult system
Weaknesses
- Spokane Public Schools alone identifies 1,300+ homeless students (284 unaccompanied) — bed math doesn’t close
- Daybreak’s 2023 license suspension removed youth SUD residential capacity
- 18th & 25th birthdays remain cliff edges between systems
Opportunities
- SHTF C6: school-centered prevention system for 16–25 (HEART program as the finder)
- Host-home expansion (city NOFA exists) — cheapest youth bed there is
Threats
- Youth street time compounds for decades (the map’s inflow thesis in miniature)
- OHY/RHY funding streams are small and politically fragile
Funding
OHY (~$40M/yr statewide) + federal RHY + city youth NOFA + VOA philanthropy (Crosswalk 2.0 capital was still being raised at opening). The prevention-shaped hole: family reconciliation before the door closes — see the prevention row.
Sources
- VOA Crosswalk 2.0 (44 youth beds) — https://voaspokane.org/crosswalk-2-0/
- SPS HEART: 1,222→1,328 homeless students, 284 unaccompanied — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2024/nov/20/spokane-public-schools-sees-uptick-in-homeless-stu/
- Community Solutions: Spokane 20% certified YYA reduction — https://community.solutions/case-studies/a-way-home-washingtons-anchor-community-of-spokane-achieves-20-reduction-in-youth-and-young-adult-homelessness/
- YFA Connections crisis residential — https://www.yfaconnections.org/services/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
4 · Prevention & Diversion
The cheapest column on the map: rent assistance, discharge planning, reentry planning, youth and DV diversion — interventions that resolve a crisis before a person ever sleeps outside. Every dollar here saves many downstream.
Eviction Prevention & Rental Assistance PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
One-time rent help, landlord mediation, and legal aid keep households housed for a fraction of the cost of re-housing them later. SNAP is the lead provider. Mayor Brown's late-2025 emergency declaration steered an estimated $4.2M toward eviction prevention. Demand consistently exceeds funds.
Capacity: SNAP lead provider; emergency-declaration eviction prevention ≈$4.2M (Nov–Dec 2025). Households served/yr: ⚠ TBD
Funding: State Document Recording Fees (HHAA), city general fund/HEART, ESG, CDBG. Federal ERA expired.
Steward: Multi (City/County/Nonprofit)
Where people go from here
- ✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved — Prevention working: rent paid, crisis over, no shelter stay — the cheapest success on the entire map.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The evidence for prevention — and Washington's half-built system
Washington built, then partially dismantled, a strong prevention apparatus: the Eviction Resolution Pilot (mandatory pre-filing mediation) settled 78% of cases that entered it — and was allowed to expire July 1, 2023, after which filings surged to records. Right-to-counsel (first in the nation, 2021) reaches fewer than half of eligible tenants for funding reasons. The research (Notre Dame LEO, NYC right-to-counsel evaluations) consistently finds targeted emergency assistance and counsel cut homelessness entries at a fraction of downstream costs.
Capacity & providers
The cheapest box on the map
SNAP is the lead provider of eviction prevention and rental assistance; the late-2025 emergency declaration steered an estimated $4.2M toward eviction prevention (50 shelter beds + prevention + outreach, with $500K GF/$1M HEART contract caps). Federal Emergency Rental Assistance is gone; the durable base is state Document Recording Fees, CHG prevention lines, CDBG public services, and city funds. Households-served data: to compile from SNAP/city reports.
Why it deserves detail
Every eviction prevented is a shelter bed, a coordinated-entry assessment, and possibly a years-long system journey that never happens. National studies put prevention at a fraction of the cost of re-housing — and 75.6% of Spokane's homeless population fell into homelessness locally, mostly through exactly this door.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Experienced lead agency (SNAP) with countywide reach
- Emergency declaration proved the city can surge prevention money fast
Weaknesses
- Funding is episodic (declaration-driven) rather than structural
- No published prevention dashboard: applications, denials, saves
- SNAP's own anti-poverty backbone (LIHEAP/CSBG) is under federal threat — agency fragility
Opportunities
- Right-size prevention as a permanent budget line with a cost-per-household-saved metric
- Eviction court presence: right-to-counsel + same-day assistance at the courthouse (proven in NYC/Cleveland to cut eviction judgments)
- Landlord early-warning partnerships flag arrears before filings
Threats
- Post-ERA funding hangover as one-time money vanishes
- Rent inflation makes each save more expensive
Path forward & best practices
Prevention is the highest-ROI dollar on this map, but only when targeted — the research (Notre Dame LEO, NYC) shows the biggest effect concentrating help on households at genuine imminent risk. Spokane's build: a permanent prevention fund, courthouse-based delivery, and a published saves dashboard that lets policymakers see the return.
Funding
State: Document Recording Fees (HHAA), CHG prevention lines. City: general fund/HEART (declaration ~$4.2M precedent), CDBG public services. County/Valley: HHAA shares (Valley ~$640K/yr). Gone: federal ERA. The structural fix: a permanent, formula-funded prevention line across all three jurisdictions.
Sources
- Spokesman — emergency declaration, eviction prevention ~$4.2M (Nov 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/nov/11/spokane-city-council-modifies-passes-mayors-emerge/
- SNAP — NOFO memo context (CDBG subrecipient, LIHEAP/CSBG pressure) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Center Square — 75.6% local origin — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_cb7c4d1b-bfb4-4a00-aa48-1d16f50a9d7c.html
- Notre Dame LEO — emergency financial assistance research — https://leo.nd.edu/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Hospital Discharge Planning GAP Behavioral Health & Treatment
Coordinated planning so no one is discharged from a hospital bed to a sidewalk. Requires medical respite capacity to be real. Widely acknowledged as a weak link in Spokane.
Capacity: ⚠ PLACEHOLDER — TBD
Funding: ⚠ VERIFY — hospital community benefit, Medicaid (FCS)
Steward: Nonprofit / Hospitals
Where people go from here
- Medical Respite Beds — Too sick for the street, not sick enough for a hospital bed — respite is the discharge plan's landing pad.
- ✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved — A discharge with a real plan ends the episode entirely — housing crisis resolved at the hospital door.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The measurement void
No national standard tracks discharges to homelessness; "discharged to home or self-care" hides shelter cots and sidewalks. The best population study (Ontario) found ~2.3% of psychiatric inpatients homeless at discharge with double the 30-day readmission rate. California now mandates housing-status screening and a discharge plan; Washington doesn't. Spokane cannot currently answer "how many people did our hospitals send to the street last year?"
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Hospitals, ERs, and psychiatric units discharge to the street daily — the seam the SHTF calls out by name. WA law requires discharge planning; reality is a taxi voucher. Sacred Heart & Deaconess social workers, Frontier liaisons, and the new Hope House respite (44 beds) are the thin staffing.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Medical respite now exists (Hope House 44 + Healing Hearts 30)
- Medicaid FCS can bill post-discharge navigation
Weaknesses
- Respite beds ≪ discharge volume
- No hospital is required to verify a destination
- Psych boarding ends in discharge-to-sidewalk under bed pressure
Opportunities
- SHTF B4: every discharge carries plan+navigator+destination
- Hospital community-benefit dollars could fund respite expansion
Threats
- Uncompensated-care pressure pushes faster discharges
- Respite conversion (Hope House) traded shelter beds for it — zero-sum capacity
Funding
Hospitals fund social workers; Medicaid waiver funds respite; nobody funds the handoff itself. The Bill’s ER line ($16.2M) is largely this seam, billed annually.
Sources
- Ontario psychiatric discharge study — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8061292/
- PPIC — discharge data policy — https://www.ppic.org/publication/how-hospital-discharge-data-can-inform-state-homelessness-policy/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Jail Reentry Planning PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
In-custody release planning: ID, Medicaid activation, housing referral, MAT bridge. The Safe & Healthy Spokane roadmap (June 2026) calls for formalized "warm handoffs" exactly here.
Capacity: CAT jail reentry program (MacArthur grant); county program scope ⚠ TBD
Funding: County general fund, 0.1% BH sales tax, state reentry grants ⚠ VERIFY
Steward: Spokane County
Where people go from here
- Reentry Programs & Housing — Planning inside connects to programs outside — the warm-handoff version of leaving jail.
- ✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved — When reentry planning lands housing before release day, the jail door opens onto a home, not a sidewalk.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The most predictable inflow
Formerly incarcerated people are ~10× more likely to be homeless (13× after multiple incarcerations), and ~15% of prison releases hit homelessness within a year. The flip side is leverage: release dates are known weeks ahead, Medicaid can now switch on pre-release (WA's 1115 waiver), and Washington's own WSU-evaluated reentry-housing pilot cut new convictions. Spokane's jail — with its night releases under Critical Status — is where this science goes to be ignored.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The planned half of reentry: DOC’s Brownstone & Eleanor Chase centers (~55 beds), graduated reentry, Revive’s DOC-approved housing, CAT’s jail MAT bridge. It works — for the sentenced minority it reaches.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Lived-experience providers (Revive) with DOC trust
- Graduated reentry statute lets sentences finish in housing
- Medicaid reentry waiver arriving
Weaknesses
- Pretrial/misdemeanor releases (most volume) get none of this
- DOC housing vouchers are small and short
- County jail lacks DOC’s planning infrastructure
Opportunities
- Extend DOC-style planning to county releases (SHTF B4)
- Fair-chance employer pipeline (Pioneer model) scalable
Threats
- Housing discrimination against records stays legal and common
- One missed handoff = 129× overdose window
Funding
DOC budget + Medicaid FCS + county 0.1% slices. The asymmetry is the finding: state prison releases get a system; county jail releases get a door.
Sources
- Prison Policy — incarceration & homelessness — https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/housing.html
- WA Reentry Housing Pilot (WSU) — https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/436/2014/11/Criminal-Justice-and-Behavior-2014-Lutze-471-91.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Youth Diversion / Host Homes / Family Reconciliation PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Intervening in the first days of youth homelessness — reconciliation, kinship, host homes — prevents the slide into chronic adult homelessness. VOA's new Crosswalk 2.0 campus (opened fall 2025, $14.5M) anchors the youth system.
Capacity: Crosswalk: 18 licensed RHY beds; Cannon Hall TH: 18 rooms; YAS young-adult shelter; Alexandria's House: 5 beds
Funding: Federal RHY (HHS), WA Office of Homeless Youth, Spokane County ($300K 2025–27), philanthropy
Steward: Nonprofit (VOA)
Where people go from here
- ✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved — Reconciliation or a host home works — the young person never enters the adult system at all.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Catch it at 17, or manage it at 40
Chapin Hall's national count: 1 in 10 young adults (18–25) experiences homelessness in a year, and over half of homeless youth first experienced it between 16 and 18 — the same ages Washington's foster and juvenile systems schedule their exits. Youth homelessness is chronic adult homelessness in its cheapest, most reversible stage; VOA's Crosswalk continuum is Spokane's counter-bet.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Keeping the family door open: YFA Connections’ crisis residential center pairs 8 short-stay beds (ages 12–17) with DCYF Family Reconciliation Services counseling — the state’s formal cool-down-and-reunify tool; Spokane Public Schools’ HEART program finds and stabilizes 1,300+ students; the city has funded a host-home pilot; United Way’s Anchor Community by-name list tracks every young person by name. [Audited Jul 2026]
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- FRS/CRC model exists exactly for pre-street family crisis
- Schools are the best early-warning system in the county (HEART)
- By-name infrastructure (Anchor) already proved a 20% reduction
Weaknesses
- 8 crisis beds county-wide for ages 12–17
- Host homes remain pilot-scale
- Post-Daybreak youth SUD gap complicates reconciliation cases
Opportunities
- SHTF C6 three-tier school-centered prevention is the blueprint — student-wellness money (0.1% tax) is the seed
- Every reconciliation averts a potential decades-long trajectory
Threats
- Family homelessness rising regionally feeds youth crisis directly
- OHY grant competition against bigger west-side counties
Funding
DCYF (FRS), OHY grants, city youth NOFA, United Way, school district funds. Prevention’s best bargain: a counseling intervention at 16 against the persona receipts this map prices at $17K–$93K per street year later.
Sources
- OHY program overview — https://www.commerce.wa.gov/serving-communities/homelessness/office-of-youth-homelessness/office-of-homeless-youth-prevention/
- City host-home / youth NOFA — https://my.spokanecity.org/chhs/funding-opportunities/chhs/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
DV Advocacy & Emergency Shelter PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Confidential shelter, protection orders, and advocacy for survivors — a parallel system with chronically full beds. YWCA absorbed ≈$400K in federal cuts in 2025 and closed 3 of its 6 DV apartment units.
Capacity: YWCA DV shelter + joint TH-RRH (CoC DV bonus); 3 of 6 DV apartments closed 2025
Funding: State DSHS, VOCA (declining), HUD CoC DV bonus, philanthropy
Steward: Nonprofit (YWCA Spokane)
Where people go from here
- ✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved — Safety secured, housing stabilized: survivors resolve the crisis without ever entering the homelessness system's ledger.
- Transitional & Bridge Housing — When home can't be made safe again, DV shelter bridges into transitional housing.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The inflow hiding inside "family homelessness"
Across studies, 22–57% of homeless women cite domestic violence as the immediate cause of their homelessness — up to 80% among mothers with children in some samples. Leaving an abuser routinely means leaving housing, income, documents, and belongings in one day, which is why DV systems run parallel, confidential, and chronically full. The research supporting TH for survivors (reduced abuse severity, reduced financial dependence) is among the strongest TH evidence anywhere.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Prevention here means a survivor never reaches the street: YWCA’s prevention/diversion and rapid-rehousing arms, its civil legal team (intakes 70→101/month in early 2026), protection-order advocacy at the Family Justice Center, and the county’s dedicated $500K DV homeless-prevention contract (July 2025–June 2027). [Audited Jul 2026]
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- DV housing continuum helped ~1,000 families find housing in 2024
- Legal advocacy prevents homelessness at its cheapest point — the courtroom
- Flexible-funds model (deposits, locks, moves) is DV-prevention best practice
Weaknesses
- Legal demand rising (70→101 intakes/mo) against cut staffing
- Survivor-specific units scarce; confidentiality complicates normal CE routing
Opportunities
- Scale the county contract — DV RRH evidence is exceptional
- Landlord compact for survivors (mid-lease moves, lock changes)
Threats
- VOCA cliff directly de-staffs prevention before shelter
- Court backlogs extend the danger window prevention races against
Funding
VOCA/OCVA (at risk), county $500K, DV housing grants (DSHS/Commerce), philanthropy. The arithmetic: one prevented flight-to-street costs hundreds; one DV-driven chronic spiral costs the full Bill rate. This is the firewall budget — and it is currently being cut.
Sources
- SPR: YWCA legal team demand surge / funding need — https://www.spokanepublicradio.org/regional-news/2026-05-30/domestic-violence-survivors-legal-help-spokane-ywca-needs-more-funding
- YWCA: VOCA funds at risk — https://ywcaspokane.org/crime-victim-service-funds-at-risk/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
✓ Diverted — Housing Crisis Resolved N/A Housing & Shelter
The best outcome in the entire map: the crisis is resolved before a person ever sleeps outside. Every dollar here saves many downstream. This box should be the system's top target.
Capacity: N/A — outcome
Funding: N/A
Steward: Outcome
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The best outcome money can buy — cheaply
The prevention evidence is the strongest cost story on this map: targeted one-time assistance (Notre Dame LEO's Chicago study) cut shelter entry substantially at a fraction of downstream costs; Washington's own mediation pilot settled 78% of eviction cases before filing. Every person in this box skipped every other box — no shelter night, no assessment, no receipt.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The success box: people who touched the system once and bounced back to housing — via diversion (flexible one-time help), family reconciliation, or their own resilience. SNAP’s coordinated-entry diversion conversation is the formal version.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Diversion is the system’s best ROI (hundreds vs $53K/yr)
- Most people who become homeless exit quickly and never return
Weaknesses
- Diversion funds are tiny and episodic
- Success is invisible — no constituency defends this budget line
Opportunities
- Every benchmark system (Houston, veterans) scales diversion first
- Problem-solving conversation at every front door, not just CE
Threats
- When shelter is the only offer, diversion muscle atrophies
- Funding cuts hit flexible dollars first
Funding
CHG/county program diversion lines, SNAP administration, Family Promise Neighbors. Pennies against the reactive Bill — and the single best place to add a marginal dollar.
Sources
- Notre Dame LEO — emergency assistance research — https://leo.nd.edu/
- ERPP mediation — 78% settlement — https://evictionresearch.net/washington/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
5 · Street / Crisis
Life outside, as it actually is: the daily survival circuit of meals and clothing, street outreach, harm reduction, crisis lines, police contact — and the box every other box exists to prevent: fatal overdose.
Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles N/A Housing & Shelter
2026 Point-in-Time count (Jan 27): 1,738 people homeless countywide — 643 unsheltered, 1,095 sheltered, with 183 shelter beds empty on count night. Third consecutive annual decline (2,390 in 2023 → 2,021 → 1,806 → 1,738). The visible center of the crisis, and where health, addiction, and justice involvement compound.
Capacity: PIT 2026: 1,738 total; 643 unsheltered; 640 reporting serious mental illness; 404 SUD; 84 veterans
Funding: N/A
Steward: All jurisdictions
Where people go from here
- Street Outreach Teams — Outreach goes to the camp, the underpass, the parked car — trust built over repeated visits is the on-ramp for everything else on this map.
- Life on the Streets — the Survival Circuit — Days organize around survival: meals, hygiene, gear, safety. The circuit sustains life — and can sustain street life.
- Law Enforcement Contact (SPD / SCSO / Valley) — Police remain the default responders to visible crisis — though roughly 63% of these calls are noncriminal.
- EMS / Overdose Response — The street's healthcare system is 911: overdoses, exposure, infected wounds — the most expensive care at the latest possible moment.
- Co-Responder / Mobile Crisis Teams — The better dispatch: a clinician and officer together, resolving behavioral-health calls without arrest or an ER bill.
- Low-Barrier & Scattered-Site Shelter — A cot with no sobriety test — the lowest threshold indoors, and the street's most direct exit.
- Fatal Overdose — Where the Cycle Can End — The line no one wants on the map: Spokane County's overdose death rate ranks 2nd in America among large jurisdictions. Every reform on this board aims at making this line thinner.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The trend — and what's behind it
The long view matters: homelessness roughly doubled from 2016 (981) to 2023 (2,390), and the three-year decline since still leaves the count ~77% above 2016. The unsheltered series is even more dramatic — up from 138 (2017) to 955 (2023), then a sharp drop in 2024 (Camp Hope's closure and methodology shifts both land in that window; treat the 2023→2024 discontinuity carefully), and rising again since:
System outcomes are genuinely improving: per the city's 2025 Longitudinal Systems Analysis, people served fell 7,221→6,430, returns to homelessness fell 7%→4%, exits to permanent housing rose 22%→29%, and PSH-to-independent-housing exits jumped 37%→57%. Council skeptics note reduced shelter capacity and stricter enforcement may deflate counts; both things can be true.
Context for scale: the city+county spent ~$30M on homelessness in 2022 (~$43M city-allocated in 2023, only ~$3M of it city general fund) — the vast majority pass-through state and federal money. Washington state has spent ~$5B on housing/homelessness since 2013, ~80% of it in the last two biennia.
Capacity & providers
The numbers, and their trajectory
Spokane County's Point-in-Time count has declined three years running: 2,390 (2023) → 2,021 (2024) → 1,806 (2025) → 1,738 (Jan 27, 2026). But the composition shifted: unsheltered rose from 443 (2024) to 617 (2025) to 643 (2026), partly reflecting better outreach-team counting methodology. On the 2026 count night, 183 shelter beds sat empty while 643 people were outside.
Who this population is
2026 count: 640 reported serious mental illness (37%), 404 reported substance use disorder, 84 veterans, 119 young adults 18–24. And 75.6% lived in Spokane County before becoming homeless — this is a homegrown crisis, not an imported one. The 2024 chronic count was 536.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Three consecutive years of overall decline — the system is moving people
- By-name knowledge improving via better outreach methodology
- 75.6% local-origin finding rebuts the "magnet city" narrative and focuses solutions locally
Weaknesses
- Unsheltered count rising even as total falls — the hardest population is being left for last
- 183 empty beds alongside 643 unsheltered signals a barrier/match failure, not just supply
- Chronic + SMI + SUD concentration means shelter alone cannot resolve the street population
Opportunities
- A true by-name list (Built for Zero model) would let Spokane manage this as a caseload, not a crowd
- Pair assertive outreach with the new enforcement posture so every contact has a treatment offer
Threats
- Enforcement without treatment capacity behind it just moves people between map boxes
- PIT is one January night — undercounts are certain; policy built on it inherits the error
Path forward & best practices
Communities that cracked this (Houston: −63% since 2012; Built for Zero cities) share one discipline: a single real-time by-name list, one accountable command structure, and housing/treatment matched person-by-person. Spokane's fragmentation across city/county/Valley is the structural obstacle the Safe & Healthy roadmap's proposed Accountability & Coordination Council is designed to fix.
Funding
Unsheltered homelessness is not itself funded — it is the cost center: ER visits, EMS runs, jail bookings, enforcement, cleanup. National studies put chronic street homelessness at $35K–$60K+/person/year in public costs, generally more than housing plus services. Quantifying Spokane's per-person street cost (jail + ER + EMS + enforcement) would be a powerful policy exhibit.
Sources
- City of Spokane — 2026 update (PIT 2026: 1,738; 643 unsheltered; 183 beds vacant) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2026/06/15/city-provides-update-on-housing-and-homelessness-initiatives/
- City of Spokane — 2025 PIT release (1,806; 617 unsheltered) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2025/07/14/spokane-countys-homeless-population-shows-overall-decrease/
- City of Spokane — 2024 PIT release (2,021; chronic 536) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2024/06/10/snapshot-estimate-of-homeless-population-reveals-overall-decrease/
- Center Square — 75.6% lived in-county (Jan 2026) — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_cb7c4d1b-bfb4-4a00-aa48-1d16f50a9d7c.html
- EWU 2025 PIT report "The Broader Context" (historical series, unsheltered trend) — https://static.spokanecity.org/documents/chhs/hmis/reports/2025-point-in-time-count-report-the-broader-context.pdf
- HUD CoC WA-502 PIT/PopSub reports by year (chart data 2014–2022) — https://files.hudexchange.info/reports/published/CoC_PopSub_CoC_WA-502-2022_WA_2022.pdf
- City 2022 PIT release (2-year increase) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2022/05/06/annual-snapshot-of-county-homeless-population-reveals-2-year-increase/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Fatal Overdose — Where the Cycle Can End N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
For some, the cycle ends here. Spokane County lost 344 people to fatal overdose in 2025 (346 in 2024) — one of the highest rates among large U.S. jurisdictions, and 35–41% of the dead were unhoused. Every box on this map is, in the end, an attempt to keep people out of this one. Live local data: Spokane County overdose dashboard →
Capacity: 344 deaths (2025) · 346 (2024) · 301 (2023) · 80 (2019). Meth overtook fentanyl in 2025.
Funding: N/A — outcome. Cost falls on EMS, medical examiner, and families.
Steward: Outcome
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The numbers behind this box
Spokane County ranks #2 in overdose death rate among U.S. jurisdictions over 300,000 population (CDC provisional data). In 2025, methamphetamine overtook fentanyl as the most common drug in fatal overdoses; 35% of decedents were unhoused (41% of 2024 accidental ODs). The county has plateaued at the peak while the state as a whole declines.
Live interactive data: Spokane County Overdose Dashboard → (Gavin Cooley analysis of CDC VSRR county-level data)
📊 Don't take our word for it — download the source data: the definitive CDC workbook (v13) — 12 months ending September 30, 2025 (CDC snapshot Apr 2026): Spokane #2 among U.S. jurisdictions over 300,000 (57.9 per 100k, behind only Baltimore city) and #5 among 356 jurisdictions over 200,000 — including a full methodology README and a reconciliation tab that itself explains earlier ranking discrepancies. Alternate window: the quarterly rankings workbook (12 months ending Dec 2024) shows #5 among the 300k+ set. Under every recent CDC window, Spokane is top-5 in America — skeptics are welcome to pick their window and check the math.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The system’s terminal failure box. 344 deaths (2025); the Medical Examiner (1,156 case jurisdiction) documents what upstream boxes missed. SFD/AMR reversed 1,795 others — the difference between the two numbers is naloxone and minutes.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Best-documented failure in the system (ME + CDC data, this map’s spreadsheets)
- Every death is reviewable for seam analysis
Weaknesses
- No local overdose fatality review board publishing findings
- Deaths cluster in the 129× post-release and post-discharge windows — known, unstaffed
Opportunities
- Fatality review (like child-death review) would name the seams annually
- #2 ranking is the political mandate for everything else on this map
Threats
- Supply keeps evolving (carfentanil, sedative adulterants)
- Normalization: 344 became background noise
Funding
Death is cheap to government: ≈$2K/ME case, $0.7M/yr in The Bill. The moral ledger is the real one — this box is why the map exists. See the overdose dashboard (Tanya’s journey links).
Sources
- Spokane County Overdose Dashboard (live) — https://spokane-overdose-5-26.netlify.app/
- Download: THE definitive CDC workbook v13 (Sept 2025 window; #2 of >300K) — sources/Spokane_Overdose_v13_20260528_013402.xlsx
- Download: CDC quarterly rankings (Jul 2026 newest — #5, window ending Dec 2024) — sources/Spokane_Overdose_Rankings_Quarterly_7-1-26.xlsx
- Spokesman — 344 deaths 2025; meth overtakes fentanyl — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/feb/26/fatal-overdoses-in-spokane-county-remain-high-afte/
- Spokane Co. Medical Examiner 2024 Annual Report — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/60075/2024-Annual-Report
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Street Outreach Teams PARTIAL Crisis Response & Harm Reduction
Workers who go to camps and sidewalks to build trust — often over months — and connect people to shelter, treatment, and documents. CCEW outreach workers are embedded with Spokane Police precincts; the Sheriff's Office fields one homeless-outreach deputy for Spokane Valley.
Capacity: CCEW police-embedded outreach ($500K–$1M/yr); SCSO: 1 outreach deputy (Valley); HUD NOFO rebalance favors expansion
Funding: City HEART Fund + general fund, HUD CoC SSO (growing category), state
Steward: Multi (City/Nonprofit)
Where people go from here
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — Outreach's endgame: a name on the coordinated-entry list — the queue for actual housing.
- Low-Barrier & Scattered-Site Shelter — The night-by-night win: outreach talks someone indoors tonight.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Trust is measured in months
The outreach literature's central finding is humbling: engagement itself is the outcome, and NYC's street teams report hundreds of contacts over months before some individuals accept services. There is no standard engagement-to-housing benchmark — which is exactly why persistent, assigned outreach (same worker, same blocks) outperforms episodic sweeps, and why every enforcement action that scatters an encampment also liquidates months of accumulated trust.
Capacity & providers
Who's on the street
Catholic Charities outreach workers are embedded with Spokane Police precincts ($500K–$1M/yr, HEART Fund + general fund, begun under the Brown administration's emergency posture). Jewels Helping Hands runs street-level engagement through the Housing Navigation Center on Cannon. The Sheriff's Office fields a single homeless-outreach deputy for Spokane Valley. Frontier's mobile crisis teams handle the behavioral-health-crisis slice (see co-responder node).
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Police-embedded model puts a services offer inside every enforcement contact
- Trusted-messenger orgs (Jewels, CAT) reach people who avoid uniforms
Weaknesses
- Coverage is thin outside downtown; Valley has one deputy for a whole city
- No published metrics: contacts, engagements, placements
- Outreach without same-day bed/treatment access is trust-burning
Opportunities
- HUD NOFO grows street outreach (SSO) as a funded category — Spokane can capture new federal dollars here
- By-name list integration would make outreach the front end of a managed caseload
Threats
- If enforcement outpaces outreach capacity, contacts become citations without offers
- Grant-by-grant funding makes retention of skilled outreach staff hard
Path forward & best practices
The evidence favors persistent, assigned outreach (same worker, same blocks) with authority to make same-day placements. Expanding the embedded model to SCSO/Valley and adding overdose-response follow-up teams (knock on the door within 72 hours of every reversal, as Rhode Island and NC programs do) are the two highest-leverage moves.
Funding
City: HEART Fund + general fund ($500K–$1M/yr for CCEW embedded workers). Federal (growing): HUD CoC SSO street outreach is a NOFO-favored category. State: CHG supports outreach. Gap: no dedicated county/Valley outreach funding beyond the single deputy.
Sources
- Gavin Cooley — CCEW NOFO memo (police-embedded outreach line) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Center Square — Spokane Valley outreach deputy — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_560bbc1a-80ce-11ef-b763-cf44abbdc526.html
- HUD No. 26-031 — NOFO rebalance incl. street outreach — https://www.hud.gov/news/hud-no-26-031
- Homeless Hub — outreach evidence review — https://homelesshub.ca/resource/assessing-evidence-what-we-know-about-outreach-and-engagement/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Harm Reduction — Syringe Services & Naloxone PARTIAL Crisis Response & Harm Reduction
Keeps people alive until they're ready for treatment: SRHD runs one-for-one syringe exchange and naloxone distribution to highest-risk clients. Context: 344 overdose deaths in 2025. Also one of the highest-volume contact points for warm handoffs to MAT.
Capacity: SRHD syringe services (one-for-one); volumes not published ⚠
Funding: SRHD, state HCA, opioid settlement funds
Steward: Regional (SRHD)
Where people go from here
- Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT/MOUD) — Trust built across the syringe-exchange counter becomes a warm introduction to treatment — harm reduction is MAT's best recruiter.
- Street Outreach Teams — Harm-reduction staff know who's out there and who's ready; outreach follows their leads.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Kept alive but not yet connected: most harm-reduction visits end back at the camp. The service saves lives while the system waits for a treatment door to open.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Statewide trajectory
Washington's curve finally bent down in 2024 (−11% from peak) as fentanyl saturation stabilized and naloxone blanketed the state; ~2,100 fatal opioid ODs in 2025 (preliminary) suggests continued decline. Spokane has plateaued rather than declined — and in 2025 meth overtook fentanyl in local fatalities. Harm reduction's evidence base: syringe programs cut HIV/HCV transmission ~50% and participants are ~5x more likely to enter treatment than non-participants (CDC synthesis).
Capacity & providers
The program
Spokane Regional Health District runs syringe services on a one-for-one exchange basis with naloxone distribution to highest-risk clients, plus fentanyl test strips, wound care referrals, and treatment linkage. SRHD also operates the region's Opioid Treatment Program (see MAT node), making it uniquely positioned for exchange-to-treatment warm handoffs. Distribution volumes aren't published.
The stakes
344 overdose deaths in 2025 (346 in 2024) — Spokane's overdose death rate ranks near the top of large U.S. jurisdictions. Spokane Fire alone administered naloxone 980 times in 2025. Every reversal and every clean-supplies contact is a chance at a treatment conversation.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- SRHD's dual role (harm reduction + OTP) enables same-agency treatment handoffs
- Naloxone saturation is demonstrably keeping the death toll from being worse
Weaknesses
- One-for-one exchange is more restrictive than best-practice needs-based distribution
- No published volume/outcome data — invisible to policy debate
- Politically contested, so chronically under-championed
Opportunities
- Opioid settlement dollars are an on-mission funding match
- Co-locating bupe induction at exchange sites (proven in NYC, Boston) converts contacts to treatment starts
Threats
- Political backlash against harm reduction could cut the single highest-volume touchpoint with active users
- Fentanyl/meth market shifts outpace program design
Path forward & best practices
The evidence question for Spokane isn't whether to do harm reduction — it's whether each contact leads anywhere. Measure and publish: contacts, naloxone kits, treatment referrals accepted. Then wire same-day MAT starts into every exchange session. That reframes harm reduction as the front door of treatment, which is both good policy and good politics.
Funding
SRHD: district funds + state HCA harm reduction supports. Opioid settlement: natural expansion source (county $29.2M total; city $1.5M plan). Federal: SAMHSA/CDC grants episodically. Amounts by line: ⚠ to verify with SRHD budget.
Sources
- SRHD syringe services — https://srhd.org/programs-and-services/hiv-std-services/syringe-services
- Spokesman — 344 OD deaths 2025; SFD 1,795 responses / 980 naloxone — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/feb/26/fatal-overdoses-in-spokane-county-remain-high-afte/
- County opioid settlement funds — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/5718/Opioid-Settlement-Funds
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
EMS / Overdose Response FUNDED Crisis Response & Harm Reduction
Spokane Fire responded to 1,795 overdose patients in 2025, administering naloxone 980 times. Each reversal is a survival — and a missed opportunity if there is no warm handoff to treatment at the scene or ER.
Capacity: SFD 2025: 1,795 OD responses, 980 naloxone administrations
Funding: City/fire district levies, EMS levy; CARES expansion partly opioid-settlement funded
Steward: City & County Fire/EMS
Where people go from here
- Emergency Department — The ambulance's only destination: naloxone on scene, then the ER — often the fourth visit this month.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
1,795 chances a year
Spokane Fire responded to 1,795 overdose patients in 2025 and administered naloxone 980 times — nearly five reversals every day. National best practice treats each reversal as a referral: post-overdose response teams (a medic or peer knocking within 24–72 hours) and leave-behind naloxone measurably increase treatment entry. Spokane's CARES expansion (four social workers, partly settlement-funded) is the seed of that model.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
SFD + AMR run the reversal shift: 1,795 overdose responses in 2025 inside 47,845 EMS calls. SFD CARES (4 social workers, settlement-funded) follows up on high-utilizers — the 72% call-reduction pilot this map cites.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Response times and naloxone saturation genuinely save lives
- CARES proves follow-up works (72% high-utilizer reduction)
Weaknesses
- Reversal without warm handoff = repeat customer (see personas)
- $1,050 full cost per response, no treatment attached
- CARES is 4 people against 1,795 responses
Opportunities
- Buprenorphine induction at reversal scene (national model) not yet standard here
- Leave-behind naloxone + CAT same-day linkage
Threats
- EMS levy capacity is finite as volumes climb
- Responder burnout on repeat reversals
Funding
EMS levy (~$13.1M) + SFD budget + opioid settlement (CARES $500K). The reversal is funded; the exit from the reversal cycle is not — The Bill’s $1.9M OD-response line buys laps.
Sources
- Spokesman — SFD 2025 OD response volumes — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/feb/26/fatal-overdoses-in-spokane-county-remain-high-afte/
- City — CARES team expansion — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2025/04/02/spokane-cares-team-expands/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
988 / Regional Crisis Line FUNDED Crisis Response & Harm Reduction
Frontier Behavioral Health operates the 24/7 Regional Crisis Line and is the state-designated 988 hub for the six-county Spokane region, dispatching mobile crisis teams and Designated Crisis Responders.
Capacity: 24/7 coverage, 6-county RSA; call volumes ⚠ TBD. Adjacent intake lines routing non-crisis volume: 211 (community resources), 311 (city), Crime Check [SIM 2025]
Funding: State 988 tax, Medicaid via SCRBH (BH-ASO)
Steward: Regional (SCRBH BH-ASO)
Where people go from here
- Co-Responder / Mobile Crisis Teams — 988 triages; the mobile team rolls to the crisis that needs eyes on scene.
- DCR Evaluation — the ITA Entry Point — When a caller may be a danger to self or others, a Designated Crisis Responder is dispatched — the involuntary system's front door.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
988, three years in
The national 988 line has taken over 18 million contacts since July 2022 and now runs ~600,000 a month — proof that a lower-stigma front door releases demand the old system never saw. Locally, Frontier operates the 988 hub and regional crisis line for six counties and dispatches the DCRs and mobile teams behind it. The line is only as good as what it can dispatch to — which is why this box's real capacity lives in the co-responder and crisis-stabilization boxes beside it.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Frontier operates the 24/7 Regional Crisis Line and 988 hub for six counties — the front phone of the whole crisis lane, dispatching mobile crisis and DCRs, and the number every "what do I do" family is told first.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Single regional number, professionally staffed, always on
- 988 rollout raised volume = more crises reached earlier
Weaknesses
- A call needs a destination: beds behind the line are the scarcity
- Follow-up capacity thin — answered ≠ resolved
- Data on call outcomes not public
Opportunities
- "Someone to call, come, and somewhere to go" — the third leg (PATH facility 2027) completes it
- Publish call-to-resolution metrics
Threats
- 988 telecom revenue lags statutory ambitions
- Medicaid cuts threaten Frontier’s crisis infrastructure (77% gov-funded)
Funding
988 telecom tax + HCA crisis contracts via SCRBH + county 0.1%. Funded better than most boxes — its constraint is downstream beds, not phone capacity.
Sources
- KFF — 988 demand at year 3 — https://www.kff.org/mental-health/demand-for-988-continues-to-grow-at-third-anniversary/
- Frontier BH — regional crisis line & 988 hub — https://fbhwa.org/programs/crisis-response/24-7-regional-behavioral-health-crisis-line
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Co-Responder / Mobile Crisis Teams PARTIAL Crisis Response & Harm Reduction
Clinicians paired with police and fire who resolve behavioral health calls without arrest or ER transport when possible. The region fields eight co-response teams; Spokane Fire's CARES team expanded to four social workers in 2025. But state funding is retreating — the Sheriff's program faces a cut from ~$1.7M/biennium to $620K through mid-2027.
Capacity: 8 co-response teams region-wide (Apr 2026); SFD CARES: 4 social workers; the 2025 intercept map names the full roster — SPD: Community Diversion Unit (CDU) + Behavioral Health Unit (BHU); SFD: Behavioral Response Unit (BRU), CARES, Nurse Navigation (routes non-emergency calls to care, provides Lyft); regional mobile teams: MCAT (7 days, 8am–9pm), MRSS (M–F, 10am–7pm), CYFMC youth mobile crisis (24/7); DCRs 24/7. The hours tell the story: only DCRs and CYFMC never sleep [SIM 2025]
Funding: City/county general funds, state (retreating), opioid settlement, county $15M MH budget line (2025)
Steward: Multi (SPD/SFD/SCSO + BH-ASO)
Where people go from here
- Crisis Stabilization — SRSC & the PATH Expansion — Instead of jail or the ER, the team delivers people to the stabilization center — the right door, same day.
- DCR Evaluation — the ITA Entry Point — When someone can't consent to help and can't safely be left, the team calls in a DCR evaluation.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What the national experiments proved
Vera's analysis of 911 data across eight cities found 21–38% of calls involve mental health, substance use, homelessness, or quality-of-life issues — and ~63% of all calls are noncriminal. The alternatives work: Denver's STAR clinicians handled 748 calls in six months with zero arrests and no police backup, and served neighborhoods saw a 34% drop in low-level offenses (Science Advances); Eugene's CAHOOTS handled ~15–17% of call volume for ~$2.2M/yr in police savings for decades (before 2025 funding politics dismantled it — a cautionary tale about durability, not effectiveness).
Capacity & providers
The teams
Eight co-response teams operate region-wide (April 2026), pairing behavioral-health clinicians with Spokane Police (Behavioral Health Unit, with Frontier BH clinicians), Spokane Fire (CARES — expanded April 2025 from one to four licensed social workers, partly on opioid-settlement dollars), and the Sheriff's Office. Frontier also dispatches civilian mobile crisis teams via the 988/regional crisis line.
The squeeze
State funding is retreating: the Sheriff's co-responder program faces a drop from ~$1.7M/biennium to $620K through June 2027. Co-responders themselves report their options are limited by what's behind them — if there's no stabilization bed or detox slot, the best clinician on scene has nowhere to take someone.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Eight teams is real regional coverage, built fast
- Cross-agency buy-in: police, fire, sheriff, and Frontier all participate
- Documented reductions in arrests/ER transports for BH calls nationally
Weaknesses
- Hours of coverage limited; crises don't keep business hours
- Downstream capacity (stabilization, detox) constrains what teams can actually do
- Each agency funds its own teams — fragile, uneven, grant-dependent
Opportunities
- PATH 23-hour center (2027) finally gives teams a no-refusal drop-off destination
- Safe & Healthy roadmap's cross-system coordination could unify dispatch protocols
- County 0.1% tax and settlement funds can backfill the state retreat
Threats
- State pullback ($1.7M→$620K) hits exactly as street acuity rises
- Without visible wins, co-response loses political support to pure enforcement
Path forward & best practices
The national gold standard pairs three layers: a crisis line (988 — Spokane has it), mobile teams (Spokane has eight), and a no-wrong-door facility (Spokane's arrives spring 2027 with PATH). The near-term priority is protecting team funding through the state retreat and expanding to 24/7 coverage; the structural priority is unified regional dispatch so the same call gets the same response regardless of jurisdiction.
Funding
State: retreating ($620K through 6/2027 for SCSO program vs ~$1.7M/biennium prior). County: 2025 budget included $15M mental-health line incl. co-responder partnership; 0.1% BH tax is the durable local source. City: SPD BHU + SFD CARES (opioid settlement contributed). Regional: SCRBH/Medicaid for Frontier mobile crisis. The fix most cities land on: braid Medicaid + local BH tax so teams aren't hostage to biennial state grants.
Sources
- SPR — 8 co-response teams, options limited (Apr 2026) — https://www.spokanepublicradio.org/regional-news/2026-04-11/mental-health-co-responder-teams-want-to-help-the-whole-person-but-their-options-are-limited
- City — SFD CARES expansion (Apr 2025) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2025/04/02/spokane-cares-team-expands/
- Center Square — SCSO co-responder funding cut — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_f2619f51-0559-4520-a82c-3ba6698437ae.html
- KXLY — county 2025 budget $15M MH — https://www.kxly.com/news/spokane-county-approves-2025-budget-prioritizing-public-safety-and-mental-health/article_1a6a0d18-b32f-11ef-a483-f7e86e7c942b.html
- Vera — 911 call analysis — https://www.vera.org/publications/911-analysis
- Denver STAR results (Science Advances) — https://caring4denver.org/stories/news-events/social-workers-instead-of-police-denvers-911-experiment-is-a-promising-start/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Law Enforcement Contact (SPD / SCSO / Valley) N/A Criminal Justice & Courts
The most frequent government contact for people on the street. The rules changed fast: voters passed Prop 1 (2023), the WA Supreme Court struck it down (Apr 2025), and Council answered with a citywide misdemeanor camping ban (Oct 2025) — 83 citations in the first six days, with officer discretion to offer treatment instead. The county added private-property camping restrictions in May 2026. Each contact is a fork: jail, citation, co-responder handoff, or nothing.
Capacity: N/A — contact point. Diversion tools at this door: SPD CDU warning/citation/diversion path and SB 5177 misdemeanor MH diversion (first/low-level misdemeanor with an MH diagnosis — case management up to 1 year in lieu of prosecution) [SIM 2025]. Enforcement posture markedly more assertive since late 2025
Funding: City/county general funds
Steward: City / Valley / County
Where people go from here
- Spokane County Jail — Booking — The default when nothing else is open at 2 a.m.: book. The most expensive, least therapeutic door in the system.
- Community Court — Citation instead of custody: low-level offenses route to community court, where services attach to accountability.
- Co-Responder / Mobile Crisis Teams — Officers hand behavioral-health calls to the clinician team — arrest averted.
- The Enforcement Fork — Engage, Reconnect, or Move On — An enforcement contact is a fork moment: engage, reconnect, or move on.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What the call data shows — and what displacement costs
Across eight cities studied by Vera, 21–38% of 911 calls involve behavioral health, homelessness, or quality-of-life issues; ~63% of all calls are noncriminal. On the other side of the ledger, a 2023 JAMA 23-city analysis projected that continual involuntary displacement of unsheltered people who inject drugs would itself cause 15–25% of deaths in that population over a decade (interrupted treatment, infections, overdose). And after Grants Pass (2024), 350+ cities passed camping ordinances — while Grants Pass itself ended up settling litigation and agreeing to sanctioned camping spaces anyway.
Capacity & providers
The legal whiplash, 2023–2026
Voters passed Prop 1 (Nov 2023) banning camping within 1,000 ft of schools/parks/daycares. The WA Supreme Court struck it down (April 2025). Council answered with a citywide "Safe and Accessible Spaces" ordinance (July 2025), then unanimously toughened it in October 2025 — misdemeanor camping citywide, officer discretion to offer citation OR a ride to treatment. Police issued 83 citations in the first six days; street-level impact has been visible. Spokane County added private-property camping restrictions (May 2026). Spokane Valley contracts SCSO with one outreach deputy.
Why this node matters
Law enforcement is the highest-volume government touchpoint with the street population. Every contact forks the person's path: jail (if booking isn't red-lighted), citation into municipal court, co-responder handoff, or nothing. The quality of what's behind the officer — beds, stabilization, detox — determines whether enforcement is a doorway or a turnstile.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Unanimous council support means enforcement now has political durability
- Citation-or-treatment discretion builds a services offer into the law itself
- Post-Grants Pass legal environment gives cities more room
Weaknesses
- Jail red-light status regularly converts arrests into hours-later street releases
- Citations to people with no money or address collect in warrants, deepening the hole
- Three jurisdictions, three ordinance regimes — people cross a street and the rules change
Opportunities
- Wire every citation to a Community Court date with same-day services (the model already exists downtown)
- LEAD-style pre-booking diversion (Seattle: 58–60% lower recidivism odds) fits Spokane's scale
- Countywide ordinance harmonization through Safe & Healthy framework
Threats
- If treatment capacity lags, enforcement produces displacement and litigation, not resolution
- Officer time consumed by low-level BH calls that co-responders could take
Path forward & best practices
The national evidence (Miami-Dade CMHP, Seattle LEAD) says the win isn't softer or harder enforcement — it's enforcement with an immediate, real alternative. Miami-Dade cut jail bookings from 118K to 53K/yr and closed a jail by putting treatment at the point of police contact. Spokane's pieces (co-responders, Community Court, SRSC/PATH) exist; the work is making the treatment offer instant and the handoff warm at every single contact.
Funding
City/county/Valley general funds pay for enforcement itself. The unfunded piece is the alternative-to-arrest infrastructure at scale — which is what the 0.1% tax, settlement funds, and a potential 2026 justice measure are candidates to cover. A cost-per-contact analysis (officer time + jail booking + court) vs. diversion cost would clarify the fiscal case.
Sources
- KREM — WA Supreme Court strikes Prop 1 (Apr 2025) — https://www.krem.com/article/news/local/washington-supreme-court-rules-against-spokanes-proposition-1-on-public-camping/293-32989bba-6ae8-4d63-9011-bd0f0a0b9780
- Spokesman — council toughens camping ban (Oct 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/oct/27/spokane-city-council-unanimously-toughens-homeless/
- KXLY — 83 citations in six days — https://www.kxly.com/news/spokane-police-make-83-citations-under-new-camping-ban-as-more-homeless-accept-treatment/article_171d1771-3d61-494f-ae7c-5bfedb1c183a.html
- Spokesman — county private-property camping code (May 2026) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/may/12/spokane-county-leaders-enact-new-code-on-private-c/
- Miami-Dade CMHP (national model) — https://www.jud11.flcourts.org/docs/Jail_diversion_the_Miami_model%20CNS%202020.pdf
- King County LEAD evaluation — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28531654/
- Vera — 911 analysis — https://www.vera.org/publications/911-analysis
- JAMA 2023 — displacement mortality modeling — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37036716/
- ACLU — post-Grants Pass ordinance tracker — https://www.aclu.org/two-years-since-grants-pass-tracking-the-criminalization-of-homelessness
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Life on the Streets — the Survival Circuit N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
What daily life actually is for the unsheltered: a scheduled circuit of survival. Breakfast at Shalom (7:30–8:30 weekdays), lunch at House of Charity (11:00) or City Gate, dinner at UGM (~6:00) or Blessings Under the Bridge (Wednesdays under I-90). Between meals: the library or transit plaza for warmth, laundry windows at Our Place, clothing rooms on 30–60-day limits, mail pickup, plasma donation or flying a sign for cash, guarding possessions against theft and sweeps. Almost entirely faith- and donor-funded, and it consumes the whole day — keeping people alive, and often keeping them in place.
Capacity: ~10 regular meal operations, 5+ food banks, 4 clothing banks, 3 hygiene/laundry sites mapped; one ~400-person weekly outdoor dinner (BUTB); Jewels mobile outreach ~300 sandwiches/day
Funding: Overwhelmingly private: congregations, donors, volunteers, Second Harvest supply chain. Near-zero government money.
Steward: Faith / volunteer / informal
Where people go from here
- Street Outreach Teams — The circuit's stops — meal lines, day centers — are where outreach finds people reliably.
- Day Centers, Hygiene & Navigation Hub — The survival circuit runs through the day centers: hygiene, laundry, a safe daytime hour.
- Harm Reduction — Syringe Services & Naloxone — Survival includes staying alive while using; the circuit connects to syringes and naloxone.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — The circuit sustains — and circles back to the same camp each night. Survival is not exit.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
A day in the circuit
Survival on Spokane's streets runs on a timetable. A typical weekday: coffee at House of Charity at 7:30, or breakfast at Shalom Ministries (7:30–8:30, Mon–Fri, closed the first Friday of each month). Hot lunch at House of Charity 11:00–11:30 (Mon–Sat) or City Gate's lunch window (Tue–Fri 11:30–1:30). Afternoon: the downtown library or STA Plaza for warmth and a bathroom, Our Place's laundry window if it's a Tuesday/Wednesday/Thursday, the clothing room if the 30- or 60-day limit has reset, mail pickup at City Gate or House of Charity (an address is required for almost everything — ID, benefits, court dates). Dinner at UGM (~6:00, daily, open to non-residents) — or on Wednesdays, Blessings Under the Bridge serves ~400 people under I-90 at McClellan Street. Women and children have their own restaurant-style option (WCFR, Tue/Wed/Fri). Youth 14–24 have Cup of Cool Water (drop-in Mon–Thu 12–3).
The economy of the street
Cash comes from panhandling ("flying a sign"), plasma donation (twice weekly, one of the few legal income sources without ID hurdles), recycling scrap metal, day labor, and — for some — the drug economy or survival sex, each with its own dangers. Possessions are a constant crisis: everything owned must be carried or hidden, and camp sweeps under the 2025 enforcement ordinances can mean losing documents, medications, and tents in an afternoon — which restarts every bureaucratic process (ID, benefits, waitlists) from zero. Pets, partners, and shopping carts are the three classic reasons people cite for refusing shelter beds. Victimization rates are extreme: people experiencing homelessness are far more often victims of violence than perpetrators.
The victimization data: past-year physical or sexual assault prevalence among homeless populations runs 27–52% versus 1–2% housed (Lancet Public Health) — people on the street are overwhelmingly more likely to be victims than perpetrators, a fact that should sit under every public-safety debate this map informs.
Capacity & providers
Who runs the circuit
Meals: Shalom Ministries (~84,000 meals/yr, breakfast), House of Charity (coffee + lunch, Mon–Sat), City Gate (lunch + food bank + mail, Tue–Fri), UGM (public lunch & dinner daily, fully donor-funded), Blessings Under the Bridge (Wednesday outdoor dinner, ~400 served), Women & Children's Free Restaurant (restaurant-style, 3 days/wk), Mid-City Concerns (senior lunch, Mon–Fri), Crosswalk (youth). The Gathering House's downtown free-meal era has ended (now a Garland District church/café).
Food banks: Our Place (West Central; client-choice + Fresh Market Wednesdays), City Gate, Salvation Army "Hope Market" (client-choice grocery), Serve Spokane (north), supplied at wholesale by Second Harvest (~250 regional partner pantries).
Clothing: Our Place, Mission Community Outreach Center (every 60 days), Teen & Kid Closet (youth 0–21, referral required), House of Charity clothing room.
Hygiene/laundry/day space: House of Charity (showers, laundry, lockers, mail — the main downtown hub), Our Place laundry, Cup of Cool Water (youth), CAT's peer day space (E 3rd Ave). Mobile: Jewels Helping Hands street outreach (~300 sandwiches + 800 waters/day, hygiene kits, navigation).
De facto infrastructure nobody funds for this purpose: the downtown Central Library (warmth, bathrooms, internet, Community Court), STA Plaza (transit + weather refuge), hospital ERs and plasma centers. [Audited Jul 2026:] the Cannon Street site is now the day-use Housing Navigation Center (~80 capacity, ~8am–6pm) under the Coordinated Street Model — overnight beds ended Oct 2025, with Catholic Charities running coordinated street outreach and CHAS Street Medicine covering encampments.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Enormous, resilient, almost entirely privately funded capacity — thousands of meals weekly at ~zero taxpayer cost
- Volunteer relationships carry real trust — the currency government programs lack
- Redundancy: multiple providers means no single failure starves people
Weaknesses
- Completely uncoordinated: no shared calendar, no data, no referral protocol — the circuit exists only in word-of-mouth
- Weekend and evening gaps (most services are weekday-daytime)
- Survival logistics consume the time and energy that exits (treatment, housing paperwork, work) require
- Concentrated downtown — reinforces the geographic concentration visible on the asset map
Opportunities
- Put navigators/MAT outreach IN the meal lines — co-location at Shalom, UGM, and BUTB would touch nearly the whole street population weekly
- A printed/pocket "circuit card" and shared online calendar (cheap, immediate, respectful)
- A faith coordination table: providers keep autonomy, share schedule data and warm handoffs
- Meal-line headcounts as a real-time street census — better than annual PIT
Threats
- Donor fatigue and congregation aging/closure (Central UMC's closure already moved Shalom)
- Enforcement that scatters camps also scatters the circuit's reach and burns provider trust
- Well-meaning crackdowns on outdoor feeding (attempted in other cities) would sever the last contact point
Path forward & best practices
The strategic reframe: the survival circuit is not a parallel world to the service system — it IS the front door, operating at higher volume and higher trust than any government access point. Best practice is not to absorb it but to attach to it: San Francisco's and Houston's street teams schedule around feeding sites; several cities co-locate benefits enrollment and bupe starts at meal programs. Spokane's version could start with one navigator table at UGM dinner and BUTB Wednesdays — measurable within a quarter by coordinated-entry enrollments originating there.
Funding
Almost entirely private: congregational budgets, individual donors, volunteer labor, food-industry donations via Second Harvest (plus USDA commodities upstream). House of Charity blends CCEW philanthropy with its city shelter contract; Mid-City Concerns uses senior-nutrition funds; everything else on this node runs without government money. Policy implication: this is the highest-leverage, lowest-cost partnership surface in the entire map — the asset already exists, paid for by the community itself.
Sources
- Shalom Ministries (schedule, volume) — https://shalommeal.org/
- The City Gate (lunch, food bank, mail) — https://www.thecitygatespokane.org/
- UGM public meals (findhelp listing) — https://www.findhelp.org/union-gospel-mission-(ugm)--spokane-wa--public-meals/4808816688627712?postal=99201
- House of Charity (meals, showers, laundry, mail) — https://www.cceasternwa.org/house-of-charity
- Blessings Under the Bridge — https://www.butb.org/
- Women & Children's Free Restaurant — https://wcfrspokane.org/
- Our Place Community Outreach (food, clothing, laundry) — https://www.ourplacespokane.org/services
- Mission Community Outreach Center (clothing) — https://www.4mission.org/
- Teen & Kid Closet — https://www.teenkidcloset.org/store-hours
- Cup of Cool Water (youth drop-in) — https://www.cupofcoolwater.org/
- Mid-City Concerns / Meals on Wheels — https://www.mowspokane.org/senior-center
- Jewels Helping Hands (mobile outreach volumes) — https://www.jewelshelpinghands.org/
- Second Harvest (regional supplier) — https://2-harvest.org/
- City — Coordinated Street Model launch (Sept 2025; Cannon transition ⚠) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2025/09/25/city-launches-coordinated-street-model-transitions-navigation-center/
- Sen. Riccelli — Spokane food resources list (Nov 2025) — https://senatedemocrats.wa.gov/riccelli/2025/11/03/food-resources-available-in-spokane-during-snap-disruption/
- Lancet Public Health — victimization prevalence — https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpub/article/PIIS2468-2667(20)30075-X/fulltext
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
6 · Engagement & Triage
The system’s front doors: low-barrier shelter, coordinated entry, the emergency department, jail booking, and the courts. Where a person’s trajectory forks — toward treatment or back to the street.
The Enforcement Fork — Engage, Reconnect, or Move On N/A Criminal Justice & Courts
The three-mayor model (Boise, Portland, Houston, told to Gavin directly): when a city consistently enforces its rights-of-way AND pairs every contact with a real offer, people on the street face a genuine choice. Three paths out of the fork: reconnect with family and friends; engage treatment (detox, MAT, recovery); or move on — to the outskirts, or to cities where enforcement is laxer (as Spokane itself has been). The fork only works if the "engage" doors open same-day — otherwise enforcement just exports people and cost.
Capacity: Spokane's fork is half-built: enforcement scaled up (Oct 2025 ordinance) but same-day treatment entry is still bed-limited
Funding: Enforcement: city/county GF. The "engage" paths: see treatment nodes.
Steward: Policy dynamic
Where people go from here
- Withdrawal Management (Detox) — The engage door, version one: same-day detox. Only real if a bed exists tonight.
- Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT/MOUD) — The engage door, version two: start medication now — the fork's most life-saving branch.
- Community Court — The accountability track: obligations with a navigator attached.
- Leaving Spokane — Drift Outward — The 'move on' third: some choose to leave rather than engage. Read row 6's ⓘ before drawing conclusions from this line.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The model, and the stakes downtown
Bieter’s One-Third Rule, from Boise’s experience: with consistent enforcement, roughly a third reconnect with family and friends, a third engage the service system (including, where needed, through a criminal justice system properly built for recovery), and a third move on. Two of the three paths out of the fork are recovery paths — which is why the fork, humanely run, is a treatment strategy and not merely an enforcement one.
The fork is choice architecture: consistent enforcement makes the status quo unavailable; the offer makes a better path available; the person chooses among family reconnection, treatment, or departure. Spokane built half of it in 2025–26 — the unanimous camping ordinance, 83 citations in six days, visible street change — but the same-day engage-door (detox on demand, instant MAT starts, navigation at the point of citation) is still bed-limited. Meanwhile the stakes are existential for the urban core: downtown office vacancy is running ~30–40% (⚠ verify exact figure with DSP/JLL), and no downtown recovers while its sidewalks feel unsafe. The cities that got their downtowns back did BOTH halves of the fork.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Every street contact ends in one of three doors: jail, services, or nothing. SPD (with the Oct 2025 ordinance), sheriff’s deputies, co-responders, and prosecutors staff the fork; the ratio of doors chosen is the region’s real policy, whatever the ordinance says.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Post-Grants Pass legal clarity + Prop 1 mandate
- Co-response and SRSC give officers a non-jail door that exists
Weaknesses
- 125 citations vs 34 service acceptances — the offramp is losing
- No published citations-to-treatment dashboard
- Officer discretion varies by shift
Opportunities
- Miami-Dade model: treatment at point of contact halved bookings
- Make the ratio a managed public metric (this map’s rec #5)
Threats
- Enforcement-only drift if offramps stay short
- Court backlog turns citations into warrants into jail
Funding
Enforcement side: police/court/jail budgets (The Bill: ≈$31.9M+$3M+$1.5M). Offramp side: SRSC $11.3M + diversion slices. The imbalance between those two sentences is the whole argument.
Sources
- Spokesman — camping ordinance toughened, citations (Oct 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/oct/27/spokane-city-council-unanimously-toughens-homeless/
- KXLY — 83 citations, treatment acceptances — https://www.kxly.com/news/spokane-police-make-83-citations-under-new-camping-ban-as-more-homeless-accept-treatment/article_171d1771-3d61-494f-ae7c-5bfedb1c183a.html
- Houston model — https://www.governing.com/housing/how-houston-cut-its-homeless-population-by-nearly-two-thirds
- Downtown vacancy ~30–40% — Gavin/DSP estimate ⚠ verify — file: to document
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Leaving Spokane — Drift Outward N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
The other side of the fork: some people leave — to the county's edges, to Yakima, to whichever city currently hassles least. Honest accounting: this reduces Spokane's visible street population without solving anyone's problem, and it cuts both ways (Spokane has been the destination of exactly this drift). The regional answer is coordination, so cities compete on recovery outcomes rather than on who can be most unpleasant.
Capacity: Unmeasured ⚠ — exit interviews and by-name list closures would track it
Funding: N/A — cost transfers to the next jurisdiction
Steward: Outcome
Where people go from here
- Other Communities — Where the Outward Flow Lands — The drift completes somewhere: another town inherits the person and the cost. Nothing is solved; only the address changed.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The whack-a-mole problem
Displacement is enforcement's honest limitation: people who choose "move on" take their needs with them — to Spokane Valley, the county fringe, Yakima, or the next lax city. Regionally it is zero-sum until jurisdictions coordinate. Spokane has lived both roles: destination (when its enforcement was laxest in the region) and now, potentially, origin. Tracking outward drift (exit interviews, by-name list closures, comparing neighboring cities' counts) keeps the policy honest and arms Spokane for the regional coordination conversation the Safe & Healthy framework anticipates.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The exit nobody counts: people who leave Spokane — for family, treatment elsewhere, or just a different sidewalk. No agency tracks it; PIT declines partly reflect it; policy pretends it doesn’t exist.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Family reunification (bus-ticket-plus-call programs) genuinely works when done with verification
Weaknesses
- Zero data — departures are indistinguishable from housed exits in most counts
- Greyhound therapy without verification just exports crisis
Opportunities
- Verified reunification program (SF Homeward Bound model) is cheap and honest
- By-name list would make departures visible
Threats
- Other cities’ enforcement pushes arrivals here; ours pushes departures there — regional whack-a-mole without a compact
Funding
Essentially unfunded. A verified-reunification line item (a few hundred dollars per exit) would be among the cheapest real exits money can buy.
Sources
- Spokesman — enforcement street-level impact (Nov 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/nov/09/spokane-re-criminalizing-homelessness-has-had-quic/
- Safe & Healthy roadmap — regional coordination council — https://www.inlander.com/news/spokane-task-force-presents-14-ideas-to-improve-criminal-justice-and-behavioral-health-systems/article_2409d2fc-c536-48fe-a8ef-0d59a67c509d.html
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Low-Barrier & Scattered-Site Shelter PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
The front door of the sheltered system. Spokane pivoted after closing the 350-bed TRAC congregate shelter (Oct 2024, ~$20M spent, ~10% housing-exit rate) to a scattered-site model: smaller specialized sites plus the Housing Navigation Center on Cannon. House of Charity shelters up to 108 men. Hope House converted to a 44-bed referral respite (July 2026). Notably, 183 beds sat empty on the January 2026 count night while 643 were unsheltered — a barrier/match problem, not just a bed-count problem.
| Provider / site | Beds |
|---|---|
| Scattered-site network (Truth, Family Promise, CAT, Jewels — city contracts) | ~209 |
| House of Charity (CCEW) | 108 |
| The Way Out (Salvation Army, referral bridge) | ~60 |
| Hope House Respite (VOA, women, medical referral) | 44 |
| SUBTOTAL — adult system | ~421 |
| Crosswalk teen shelter (VOA, 12–17) | 18 |
| Young Adult Shelter (VOA, 18–24) | 44 |
| TOTAL low-barrier & referral beds | ~440+ |
Funding: City general fund + HEART (caps: $500K GF/$1M HEART per contract), ESG $268K, state CHG; scattered-site contracts ~$1M/quarter
Steward: City of Spokane / Nonprofit
Where people go from here
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — A shelter stay puts people in reach of coordinated entry — the cot is a waiting room for the housing queue.
- Program / Higher-Barrier Shelter (UGM) — Some step from a low-barrier cot into a structured program — rules, treatment, work-readiness.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — The revolving door: when nothing is available upstream, exits back to the street outnumber exits to housing. This loop is the shelter system's honest report card.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What Spokane spends — and what a bed "costs"
The city+county spent roughly $30M on homelessness in 2022 (city $26M, of which $19M was state/federal pass-through; only ~$3.8M local general fund/donations); city allocations reached $43M+ in 2023. The bed-inventory swings tell the churn story: capacity actually fell from 2015 to 2019 as transitional housing was cut nationally, ballooned with TRAC, then reset with the scattered-site pivot. TRAC — the 350-bed congregate experiment — consumed ~$20M of one-time money over two years with a ~10% housing-exit rate, the local data point that drove the scattered-site pivot. Statewide context: WA has spent ~$5B on housing/homelessness since 2013, yet statewide homelessness rose — the pattern (Governing, Cascade PBS analyses) that fuels "money isn't the problem" arguments. The sharper reading: one-time money built things that ongoing money couldn't operate.
Capacity & providers
The pivot: from mega-shelter to scattered sites
Spokane closed the ~350-bed Trent Resource & Assistance Center (TRAC) Oct 31, 2024 after spending ~$20M in one-time funds over two years with roughly a 10% housing-exit rate. A 2024 shelter audit pointed toward smaller, specialized sites. The current network: scattered-site contracts of ~209 beds across Truth Ministries, Family Promise, Compassionate Addiction Treatment and Jewels Helping Hands (~$1M/quarter); Catholic Charities' House of Charity (up to 108 men; $478,686 city contract FY25–26); the Housing Navigation Center (Jewels, $1.7M through March 2027); the Aurora Center (15 LGBTQIA+ beds, opened March 2026, co-located with North Hill Christian Church); and VOA's Hope House, converted July 2026 to a 44-bed healthcare-referral respite. Live availability: sheltermespokane.org.
The inventory, by provider
| Provider / site | Beds | Type / notes |
|---|---|---|
| House of Charity — CCEW | 108 | Low-barrier men; meals & day services; first-responder reserve |
| Truth Ministries | ~25 | Men 18+, faith-run, scattered-site contract |
| Aurora Center — Jewels / North Hill CC | 15 | LGBTQIA+, opened 2026, scattered-site contract |
| Family Promise Open Doors + scattered beds | ⚠ TBD | Families, 24/7, scattered-site contract |
| CAT & Jewels scattered-site beds (balance) | ⚠ TBD | Remainder of the ~209-bed contracted network |
| Scattered-site network subtotal (contracted) | ~209 | ~$1M/quarter, city GF + HEART |
| The Way Out — Salvation Army | ~60 | Referral-based bridge housing |
| Hope House Respite — VOA | 44 | Women, medical recuperative, referral-only (since Jul 2025) |
| SUBTOTAL — adult & family system | ~421 | |
| Crosswalk teen shelter — VOA | 18 | Ages 12–17, only licensed teen shelter in E. WA |
| Young Adult Shelter — VOA | 44 | Ages 18–24, nightly, 24/7 w/ case management [Audited Jul 2026] |
| TOTAL — low-barrier & referral shelter beds | ~440+ | vs. 643 unsheltered & 183 vacant on count night |
Program/faith shelter (UGM ~434, Anna Ogden) counts separately under the Program Shelter box; the day-use Bridge Center (~80) under Day Centers.
The uncomfortable fact
183 beds were empty on the January 2026 count night while 643 people slept outside. Reasons people refuse or can't use shelter — partners, pets, possessions, congregate trauma, sobriety rules, location — are now the binding constraint, not raw bed count.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Specialized scattered sites match subpopulations (youth, LGBTQIA+, women, medical respite) better than one mega-shelter
- Housing Navigation Center gives a stable front door
- Faith partners (Truth Ministries at ~$50K/yr of donations) deliver beds at a fraction of government cost
Weaknesses
- Contract churn — a lapse in late 2025 forced retroactive extensions; providers can't plan
- Vacancy amid street homelessness: the offer isn't matching the need
- City carries nearly all shelter cost; county and Valley contribute little to operations — a jurisdictional fairness issue
Opportunities
- HUD's NOFO rebalance grows exactly this category (shelter-adjacent services, outreach, treatment linkage)
- Per-bed cost transparency across sites would drive smart expansion
- Formal county/Valley cost-share negotiated through the Safe & Healthy framework
Threats
- One-time funds built the system; operating cliffs recur annually
- Enforcement (Oct 2025 camping ban) increases shelter demand pressure — if beds fill, citations lose their legal & moral footing
Path forward & best practices
Best practice is a portfolio: low-barrier beds for engagement, program beds for structure, respite for the medically fragile — with real-time availability data and unified intake. Spokane has the pieces; what's missing is a countywide operating compact (who pays, per what formula) and published per-site outcome data (exits to housing, returns to street). San Diego's shelter dashboard and Houston's unified system are reference points.
Funding
Shelter system funding (quantified lines)
| Line | Annual | Source / note |
|---|---|---|
| Scattered-site shelter contracts (~209 beds) | ≈$4.0M | City GF + HEART (~$1M/quarter); caps $500K GF / $1M HEART per contract |
| House of Charity contract | $478,686 | City (FY25–26) + CCEW philanthropy on top |
| Housing Navigation Center (Cannon St.) | ≈$567K | City $1.7M over 3 yrs through 3/2027 |
| Inclement weather | $1.0M | City (quadrupled under Mayor Brown) |
| SUBTOTAL — city shelter operations | ≈$6.0M/yr | Plus provider philanthropy on top of every line |
| State ESG (via city) | $267,764 | Shelter ops, outreach, RRH, HMIS |
| State CHG (city NOFA, shelter among uses) | ≈$3.85M | Commerce Consolidated Homeless Grant |
| County Homeless Services RFP | ≈$2.0M | CHG + recording fees; countywide, not city shelter ops |
| SUBTOTAL — state/county lines | ≈$6.1M/yr | |
| TOTAL quantified shelter-system funding | ≈$12.1M/yr | vs. ~$20M one-time spent on TRAC alone over 2 years — the episodic-money problem in one row |
Legacy money is gone: TRAC-era one-time funds (~$20M) and Right-of-Way funds (>$25M) both expired. The structural problem: shelter is funded on annual scraps while the need is permanent.
Sources
- City — TRAC closure (Oct 31, 2024) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2024/10/31/city-of-spokane-closes-trent-resource-and-assistance-center/
- City — 2024 shelter audit → scattered-site — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2024/05/13/shelter-audit-points-toward-scattered-site-model/
- Center Square — scattered-site contract lapse, $1M / 209 beds — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_dbaaa0f1-e30a-4af7-b400-d63e8f70e38a.html
- KHQ — Cannon St. navigation center permanent — https://www.khq.com/news/navigation-center-at-the-cannon-street-shelter-now-permanent/article_026a554e-883a-11ef-824f-1fc056901ba8.html
- City — Aurora Center scattered site (Mar 2026) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2026/03/04/city-of-spokane-to-open-new-scattered-site-shelter/
- Center Square — Hope House 44-bed respite conversion — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_cd0179ec-e995-11ef-80f5-e76e66b61254.html
- Gavin Cooley NOFO memos (House of Charity contract, provider funding) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- KREM/Boomtown — city homelessness spending by year (chart data) — https://www.krem.com/article/money/economy/boomtown-inland-northwest/how-much-money-does-spokane-spending-on-solving-homelessness-boomtown/293-92b83df9-65f9-4387-b470-4fef97325cd7
- Spokesman — city+county spending analysis (2023) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/jul/25/how-much-do-spokane-and-spokane-county-spend-on-ho/
- HUD Housing Inventory Count reports, WA-502 (bed inventory chart) — https://files.hudexchange.info/reports/published/CoC_HIC_CoC_WA-502-2023_WA_2023.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Program / Higher-Barrier Shelter (UGM) FUNDED Housing & Shelter
Shelters with expectations — sobriety, program participation, work therapy. Union Gospel Mission is the largest and takes no government money by design: men's shelter (~300 capacity, E. Trent), women & children's crisis shelter (capacity ~134, since 2016), and Anna Ogden Hall recovery residence. A major faith-community asset largely invisible in government inventories.
Capacity: UGM men's ~300 (E. Trent) + women & children's ~134 (E. Illinois, since 2016) + Anna Ogden Hall
Funding: Private donations — no government funds (by design)
Steward: Faith-based
Where people go from here
- Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses — Program graduates move to sober housing — the structure continues with more independence.
- Employment & Vocational Services — Work-readiness inside the program becomes a paycheck outside it.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The national scale of faith-based capacity
Baylor's 11-city study found 60% of emergency shelter beds are provided by faith-based organizations (ranging from a third in Portland to 90% in Omaha), plus billions in donated services — capacity that appears in no government plan because it takes no government money. Spokane fits the pattern exactly: UGM's ~434 beds, Truth Ministries, the parish rotations, and the meal circuit form a parallel system as large as the public one.
Capacity & providers
The faith-funded parallel system
Union Gospel Mission runs the region's largest program-shelter capacity — men's shelter on E. Trent (~300) plus the women & children's crisis shelter on E. Illinois (capacity ~134, a converted nursing home opened Dec 2016) — entirely on private donations, by policy taking no government money. Programs pair shelter with recovery, work therapy, and faith community. Truth Ministries (~14,000 bed-nights/yr on ~$50K of donations plus $2/night city bed fees) and the parish-rotation Mother Teresa's Haven model round out the faith shelter layer.
Why it matters to policy
Because it takes no public funds, this capacity is invisible in government inventories and planning — yet it may be the region's most cost-effective bed stock, and HUD's 2026 NOFO explicitly invites faith-based providers into the funded system.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Large, stable, donor-funded capacity at zero taxpayer cost
- Strong reported outcomes for participants who opt into structured recovery
- Women & children's crisis shelter (~134 capacity) addresses a documented gap
Weaknesses
- Sobriety/program requirements exclude the highest-acuity street population
- Outcomes not reported in HMIS — invisible to system planning
- Dependent on donor economy; a giving downturn hits capacity directly
Opportunities
- Data-sharing agreement (even aggregate) would complete the county's true capacity picture
- HUD NOFO opens funding doors if UGM or peers ever want them; even without funds, formal coordination (referrals, warm handoffs) is available
- Faith inventory project: map every congregation's beds, meals, volunteers
Threats
- Policy debates that pit Housing First against treatment-first models can alienate faith partners rather than integrate them
Path forward & best practices
The path forward is integration without absorption: keep the private funding independence that makes UGM durable, but bring its capacity into shared visibility (a simple nightly census feed) and into coordinated referral pathways. Cities like San Antonio (Haven for Hope) show how public systems and large faith providers can co-locate and coordinate while staying distinct.
Funding
UGM: 100% private donations by design — no government funds. Truth Ministries: ~$50K/yr donations + city $2/night bed-fee prepayments (also holds a scattered-site contract line). Mother Teresa's Haven: Diocese of Spokane and parish networks ($200K–$400K/yr est.). The policy insight: every faith-funded bed frees public dollars for the high-acuity population only government will serve.
Sources
- UGM women & children's shelter — 130 beds, fall 2025 — https://klewtv.com/news/local/union-gospel-mission-shelter-continues-to-make-progress-opening-in-fall-of-2025
- Union Gospel Mission — https://www.uniongospelmission.org/
- Truth Ministries profile — https://www.shelterlist.com/details/truth-ministries
- Gavin Cooley — Other Providers NOFO memo (Truth Ministries, faith funding) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Baylor ISR — faith-based share of shelter beds — https://www.baylorisr.org/wp-content/uploads/ISR-Homeless-FINAL-01092017-web.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Day Centers, Hygiene & Navigation Hub PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Somewhere to be during the day: showers, laundry, mail, storage, case worker access. The Housing Navigation Center — known locally as the Bridge Center on Cannon (Jewels Helping Hands, $1.7M contract through March 2027; Providence clinical partners) is the daytime hub — day-use only since Oct 2025 under the Coordinated Street Model, capacity ~80. Women's Hearth (Transitions) serves women downtown.
Capacity: Cannon St. Navigation Center (Jewels Helping Hands); other day services ⚠ TBD
Funding: City contract $1.7M through 3/2027 (Empire Health Foundation involvement); philanthropy
Steward: Nonprofit
Where people go from here
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — A shower and a mailing address come with a side door into coordinated entry.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Why "somewhere to be" is infrastructure
The research on drop-in centers is thin but consistent: they function as low-barrier engagement hubs where staff relationships drive later service uptake (one comparative study found youth referred to drop-ins reduced substance use and risk behavior more than shelter referrals). Their quiet function is spatial: without day space, the daytime city itself — libraries, the plaza, doorways — becomes the day center, with every conflict that follows.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Jewels Helping Hands runs the Housing Navigation Center on Cannon (day-use, ~80 capacity, Providence clinical on site); Transitions’ Women’s Hearth serves women downtown (~1,400/yr historically); Blessings and Beyond and the meal circuit fill the gaps. Day centers are where trust is built and paperwork actually gets done.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Bridge Center pairs day space with clinical + navigation
- Women’s Hearth: 30+ years of gendered safety done right
Weaknesses
- Nights remain uncovered — day model presumes somewhere to sleep
- Downtown siting concentrates impact (see low-barrier review)
Opportunities
- Every day-center contact is a warm-handoff opportunity (B4)
- Co-located FCS navigators can bill Medicaid for what volunteers now do free
Threats
- Funding churn: day centers are first cut as "non-essential"
- If linkage stays thin, day centers become waiting rooms for nothing
Funding
City scattered-site/navigation contracts (Jewels $1.7M), Transitions philanthropy + grants, donations. Modest budgets, outsized leverage — the cheapest real estate on the map for starting an exit.
Sources
- Drop-in vs shelter referral outcomes (youth) — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6450788/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Emergency Department N/A Behavioral Health & Treatment
The default — and most expensive — front door for untreated illness, injury, overdose, and psychiatric crisis. ERs can start buprenorphine and refer onward, but without respite or detox beds the exit is often back to the street. Note: Sacred Heart closed its 22-bed youth psychiatric unit in Sept 2024, leaving Eastern WA without that level of youth care.
Capacity: N/A — hospital systems
Funding: Medicaid / hospital systems
Steward: Private hospitals
Where people go from here
- Medical Respite Beds — Discharge to respite: heal indoors — cheaper than a readmission, kinder than a sidewalk.
- Withdrawal Management (Detox) — The ER visit becomes a detox admission — when a bed exists. This seam leaks when it doesn't.
- DCR Evaluation — the ITA Entry Point — Psychiatric emergencies in the ER trigger a DCR evaluation for an involuntary hold.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The most expensive front door, by the numbers
Homeless patients visit EDs at ~7× the rate of housed patients (310 vs ~42 visits per 100 persons/year, CDC), and frequent users — 3–8% of ED patients — account for 21–28% of all visits; one urban study put homeless "super-users" above $64,000/year in charges each. Psychiatric boarding compounds it: WA hospitals hold psychiatric patients in medical beds under 700–1,000 single-bed certifications monthly. Locally, Sacred Heart cut its 40-person psychiatric triage team in May 2026 — the ED's behavioral safety net thinned exactly as demand grew.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Providence Sacred Heart (48 psych beds + 8 psych-ED) and MultiCare Deaconess absorb the crisis volume nobody else can refuse: ≈3.1 ER visits per homeless person per year (CDC rate → ≈5,400 local visits). Providence Community Clinic (32 W 2nd) is the walk-in relief valve.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Never closed, never full enough to say no — the constitutional backstop
- Community clinic model diverts appropriately
Weaknesses
- $3,000/visit for what a clinic does for $200
- Discharge-to-sidewalk is the default (see prevention row)
- Psych boarding days burn scarce beds
Opportunities
- ED-based MAT induction + navigator handoff (evidence-backed, partially local)
- Hospital community-benefit $ into respite beds
Threats
- Uncompensated care ≈$16.2M/yr (The Bill) strains systems
- Sacred Heart psych-triage team cut (May 2026) — capacity moving backward
Funding
Medicaid, Medicare, commercial, and charity care — hospitals eat what’s left. The Bill’s ER + inpatient lines (≈$29M) are the receipts for treating housing failure as a medical emergency.
Sources
- CDC MMWR — homeless ED visit rates (7x) — https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/72/wr/mm7242a6.htm
- Frequent-user concentration study — https://emergencymedicine.wustl.edu/app/uploads/2018/09/PGY-4-Urban-Homeless-as-Superusers-of-the-ED-Pop-Health-Management-2014.pdf
- Spokesman — Sacred Heart psychiatric triage cut (May 2026) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/may/11/providence-sacred-heart-jettisons-40-person-psychi/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Crisis Stabilization — SRSC & the PATH Expansion PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
The behavioral-health alternative to ER and jail. The Spokane Regional Stabilization Center (Pioneer Human Services, W. Gardner Ave) offers 45 beds: 16 mental-health crisis stabilization + 14 detox + sobering. The $21M PATH expansion broke ground April 2026, adding a walk-in/drive-in 23-hour crisis relief center (opens spring 2027, total capacity ~60) — Spokane's version of the Tucson model. Operating funding is fragile: recent shortfalls required a ~$500K county bailout.
Capacity: SRSC: 46 beds (16 crisis stab + 14 detox + sobering) + FBH Calispel 23-hr stabilization; PATH: +23-hr crisis relief & sobering (~60 served), opens early 2027
Funding: Opioid settlement ($5.2M), 0.1% BH sales tax, state, federal ($3M Sen. Murray, Feb 2026); operations strained
Steward: Spokane County / Pioneer HS
Where people go from here
- Withdrawal Management (Detox) — Stabilized, then to detox — the sub-acute chain working as designed.
- DCR Evaluation — the ITA Entry Point — Those who can't be stabilized voluntarily go to the DCR.
- Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) — Discharge with a follow-up appointment — the connective tissue that keeps stabilization from becoming a revolving door.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The national crisis-care revolution Spokane is joining
Since 988 launched in July 2022 it has taken 18+ million contacts nationally (~600,000/month) — demand was always there; the number just gave it somewhere to go. The facility model Spokane's PATH follows has strong economics: Tucson's mobile teams resolve ~70% of crises without transport; a behavioral-crisis ED visit runs $500–700 plus ~$2,700/day boarding while an arrest costs $2,400+; Maricopa County's Crisis Now system attributes ~$260M in avoided inpatient spending to ~$100M in crisis investment.
Capacity & providers
Today: the Spokane Regional Stabilization Center
Operated by Pioneer Human Services at 1302 W. Gardner Ave — a 19,000 sq ft jail-diversion facility with 45 treatment beds: 16 mental-health crisis stabilization, 14 withdrawal management, plus sobering. It is where police and co-responders can bring someone instead of jail or the ER. Operations have been financially fragile: labor-cost shortfalls ($267K in 2025, $249K in Q1 2026) drove a ~$500K county bailout request.
Tomorrow: the PATH expansion
The $21M, 20,000 sq ft PATH Diversion and Recovery Center expansion broke ground April 2, 2026 (opens spring 2027): a walk-up/drive-in 23-hour crisis relief center and sobering unit, expanding total capacity to ~60. Funded by opioid settlement ($5.2M), the 0.1% BH sales tax, state funds, and $3M in federal money secured by Sen. Murray (Feb 2026). This is Spokane's version of the national crisis-center model.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- A real jail-diversion facility exists NOW — many regions have none
- PATH expansion fully funded on capital side, groundbreaking done
- Braided funding (settlement + tax + state + federal) is a model for other nodes
Weaknesses
- Operating funding fragile — bailouts within two years of opening
- 45 beds for a county generating thousands of BH crisis events/yr
- Not yet true no-refusal walk-in — that arrives with PATH 2027
Opportunities
- PATH gives law enforcement a genuine third option (not jail, not ER) — the linchpin of the whole diversion strategy
- Tucson/Connections model shows how 23-hour observation converts crises to treatment starts at scale
Threats
- Capital is funded; OPERATIONS are not guaranteed — the classic build-it-then-starve-it failure mode
- Workforce shortage (the cause of current shortfalls) will be worse at double capacity
Path forward & best practices
Tucson's Crisis Response Center (Connections Health Solutions) is the explicit national model: no-wrong-door, accepts all police drop-offs in under 10 minutes, 23-hour observation in recliners, direct step-down to stabilization. The lesson from Arizona: it works because Medicaid + a regional behavioral-health authority guarantee operating revenue. Spokane's assignment before spring 2027 is locking a durable operating model (Medicaid crisis rates + 0.1% tax + BH-ASO) so PATH opens fully staffed and stays that way.
Funding
Capital ($21M PATH): $5.2M opioid settlement, 0.1% BH sales tax, state, $3M federal (Murray). Operations (current SRSC): county contracts w/ Pioneer HS, Medicaid, SCRBH — with recurring shortfalls (~$500K bailout). The ask for policymakers: a published multi-year operating pro forma for the expanded facility before it opens.
Sources
- Spokane County — SRSC (45 beds) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/5717/Spokane-Regional-Stabilization-Center
- Spokesman — PATH groundbreaking (Apr 2, 2026) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/apr/02/spokane-county-breaks-ground-on-new-treatment-faci/
- Spokesman — Murray $3M (Feb 2026) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/feb/19/murray-secures-3-million-for-spokane-county-substa/
- Center Square — SRSC operating shortfalls/bailout — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_4183000f-e462-431b-8fc5-763a90e4d88e.html
- Connections Health Solutions — Tucson CRC (national model) — https://connectionshs.com/tucson
- KFF — 988 at three years — https://www.kff.org/mental-health/demand-for-988-continues-to-grow-at-third-anniversary/
- Milbank — Crisis Now cost avoidance — https://www.milbank.org/publications/building-state-capacity-to-address-behavioral-health-needs-through-crisis-services-and-early-intervention/
- Connections — crisis vs ED/jail costs — https://connectionshs.com/resource-library/understanding-the-true-costs-of-behavioral-health-crisis-care
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Spokane County Jail — Booking GAP Criminal Justice & Courts
The county jail (~470 functional beds downtown + ~130 at Geiger) is, by default, the region's largest behavioral health facility — and it is past capacity. "Red-light status" (booking closed) hit 15 times in one recent 30-day window; arrestees are regularly released under Critical Status. Measure 1 (a $1.7B/30-yr jail tax) failed in 2023; the Safe & Healthy roadmap now frames a possible 2026 compromise proposal.
Capacity: ~470 jail + ~130 Geiger functional beds; ~16,000 bookings/yr (15,891 in 2024, 16,283 in 2025 — county dashboard); ~830 combined ADP; frequent red-light/Critical status releases
Funding: County general fund; city per-booking fees ⚠ VERIFY; Mediko medical contract (Feb 2026)
Steward: Spokane County
Where people go from here
- Jail-Based Behavioral Health & MAT — Screening at booking routes people to in-custody treatment — where universal MAT would save more lives per dollar than anything else county government controls.
- Municipal & District Courts — Booking begets a court date; the courts decide the track — punishment or treatment.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Release to the sidewalk, often at night, no meds, no plan — the deadliest seam this map documents: 129× overdose-death risk in the first two weeks.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Built for a different century
The downtown jail was built in 1986 for 564 beds; double-bunking pushed nominal capacity toward ~790 with ~717 usable, and combined jail+Geiger population has run 700+. Roughly 60% of the jail population has previously been treated for behavioral health conditions (MacArthur Safety & Justice Challenge profile) — the statistic that makes the jail the region's largest de facto BH facility. Spokane participated in the MacArthur network precisely to reduce BH incarceration; the Safe & Healthy process is the successor conversation.
National context: jail populations are increasingly detox wards — and the first 72 hours post-release carry extreme overdose risk (the basis for the Rhode Island jail-MAT model's 61% death reduction).
Note what the trend actually shows: the jail population has declined ~13–15% since the mid-2010s (MacArthur-era diversion work) — yet red-light booking closures are more frequent than ever. The crunch is driven by usable capacity (aging facility, staffing, Geiger downsizing debates) as much as by demand. Today's live numbers: county Capacity Dashboard (linked in Sources).
The national frame
BJS surveys: 64% of jail inmates report a mental health problem; ~63% of sentenced jail inmates meet substance dependence/abuse criteria. The nation's three largest de facto mental-health facilities are jails (LA Twin Towers, Cook County, Rikers), and roughly 10× more people with serious mental illness are behind bars than in state hospitals. People homeless in the prior year make up ~15% of the U.S. jail population — 7–11× their population share. Spokane's "60% previously treated for behavioral health" figure sits squarely in the national pattern.
Capacity & providers
The region's largest de facto behavioral health facility — and it's full
Spokane County Jail: ~470 functional beds downtown plus ~130 at Geiger Corrections, both frequently over those numbers. "Red-light status" (booking center closed for overcapacity) hit 15 times totaling 18 hours in one recent 30-day window; the Sheriff's Office has repeatedly reported arrestees released under Critical Status since March 2025. Tiered booking restrictions refuse misdemeanor bookings at population thresholds. The county launched a public Capacity Dashboard. Measure 1 — a 0.2% sales tax (~$1.7B over 30 years) for a new jail and community corrections center — failed in Nov 2023. The county debated shrinking Geiger for budget reasons in 2025. Local leaders are now shaping a possible 2026 compromise measure, informed by the Safe & Healthy roadmap.
The homelessness connection
Booking restrictions mean camping/trespass arrests often end in hours-later releases — enforcement without consequence or connection. Meanwhile release-to-street is one of the map's biggest inflows. The jail is simultaneously too full to book and too poorly resourced to treat.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Public capacity dashboard is real transparency, rare nationally
- Political consensus (post-Measure 1, Safe & Healthy) that status quo fails everyone
- New Mediko contract added medical staff at lower cost
Weaknesses
- Physical plant undersized and aging; red-light closures routine
- Enforcement credibility undermined when arrests cannot stick
- High-acuity BH population in a facility never designed for it
Opportunities
- Miami-Dade model (studied by local leaders): treatment diversion shrank the jail population 7,200→4,200 and closed a facility — capacity by diversion, not just construction
- A 2026 measure blending right-sized facility + diversion infrastructure could pass where Measure 1 failed
- PATH/SRSC give bookable alternatives for BH arrests now
Threats
- Another failed ballot measure would freeze the issue for years
- Building big without diversion locks in operating costs for a generation
- Litigation risk over conditions/releases
Path forward & best practices
The evidence points to a both/and: a right-sized modern facility AND a diversion system that keeps the BH population out of it. Miami-Dade's arithmetic is the persuasive exhibit — every diverted booking is capacity you don't build. The 2026 measure's design question is whether treatment infrastructure (stabilization, SWMS beds, therapeutic courts) is inside the package or left to chance.
Funding
County general fund (largest county cost center); city per-booking fees ⚠ verify current schedule; Mediko medical contract (Feb 2026, added 9 staff at savings); state pays nothing for local jails. The open question: the structure of a 2026 sales-tax measure — rate, split between facility/diversion/treatment, and city-county revenue sharing. Watch the Safe & Healthy facilities recommendations as the blueprint.
Sources
- Spokesman — jail capacity, red-light status, 2026 tax prep (Nov 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/nov/09/in-preparing-for-2026-jail-tax-proposal-local-lead/
- KXLY — county jail capacity dashboard — https://www.kxly.com/news/new-dashboard-shows-daily-overview-of-spokane-county-jail-demographics/article_f55f703e-b80a-4368-9a67-41aa12e9e573.html
- County — Measure 1 FAQ (failed 2023) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/50785/Measure-No-1-FAQ-
- Spokesman — Mediko jail medical contract (Dec 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/dec/18/spokane-county-saves-money-staff-and-bolsters-serv/
- Miami-Dade CMHP (national model) — https://www.jud11.flcourts.org/docs/Jail_diversion_the_Miami_model%20CNS%202020.pdf
- MacArthur Safety & Justice Challenge — Spokane profile (60% BH; −13% population) — https://safetyandjusticechallenge.org/our-network/spokane-county-wa/
- Spokesman — 2016 jail population/funding — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2016/apr/13/spokane-county-jail-receives-an-additional-175-mil/
- Spokesman — 2023 population (~820) & new jail concept — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/apr/20/new-county-jail-proponents-unveil-concept-for-new-/
- BJS — mental health problems of jail inmates — https://bjs.ojp.gov/content/pub/pdf/mhppji.pdf
- TAC — jails as largest MH facilities — https://www.tac.org/reports_publications/serious-mental-illness-prevalence-in-jails-and-prisons/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Municipal & District Courts N/A Criminal Justice & Courts
Misdemeanor courts where most homelessness-related charges land. Each jurisdiction runs its own. The fork here — jail, probation, therapeutic court, community court, dismissal — sets the person's trajectory. Warning light: state AOC funding for the city's therapeutic courts has been cut from $738K (FY24) to $430K, and the DV court already closed (Sept 2025).
Capacity: Tools per the 2025 intercept map: Stipulated Orders of Continuance (SOC), weekend review, pretrial CJS monitoring, electronic home monitoring; Alpha Court problem-solving docket (scope ⚠ verify) [SIM 2025]. City therapeutic court state funding: $738K→$430K since FY24
Funding: City/county general funds; state AOC grants (shrinking)
Steward: City / Valley / County
Where people go from here
- Community Court — Low-level cases step down to community court's service-first model.
- Therapeutic Courts — Drug / Veterans / DUI — SUD-driven cases can opt into drug court: treatment under a judge who knows your name.
- Mental Health Court — Mental-illness-driven cases route to MH court — supervision built around a treatment plan.
- Community Supervision (Probation / DOC) — The conventional track: supervision with conditions — and jail waiting behind every technical violation.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Where volume meets consequence
Misdemeanor courts process the system's highest human volume with its least analytic attention. Two facts frame this box: nationally, supervision violations feed nearly half of prison admissions (technical violations alone ~25%, costing $2.8B/yr) — the downstream cost of court conditions people can't meet while homeless; and Spokane's own therapeutic-court funding (the humane fork in this courthouse) has been cut from $738K to $430K since 2023 by the state AOC, closing the DV court outright.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Spokane Municipal Court processes the street-level docket — camping, trespass, theft under $750 — plus the therapeutic Community Court (WSU-evaluated, works) at the library. Judges, prosecutors, defenders, and probation staff the box; the docket is the city’s street policy in robes.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Community Court’s own evaluation shows reduced recidivism
- Court is a reliable contact point for the hardest-to-reach
Weaknesses
- AOC grant cuts ($738K→$430K) shrank therapeutic capacity
- FTAs cascade into warrants (jail lap on The Bill)
- Volume up post-ordinance (83 citations first 6 days)
Opportunities
- Central relicensing/warrant-quash events clear backlog cheaply
- SHTF C3: universal screening at first appearance
Threats
- Enforcement wave without court capacity = assembly-line justice
- Grant-dependence makes the best programs the most fragile
Funding
City general fund + AOC grants + 0.1% therapeutic-court money. The Bill’s courts line (≈$3M) counts the BH-linked share — bought mostly as process, not outcomes.
Sources
- CSG — Confined & Costly (violations = 45% of admissions) — https://csgjusticecenter.org/publications/confined-costly/
- Center Square — AOC therapeutic court cuts — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_3846724b-3a8a-4e91-a846-0355d5a3ced1.html
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Community Court PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
Meets Mondays at the downtown Central Library since 2013: low-level offenses resolved by connecting defendants to co-located services instead of jail. Judge Gloria Ochoa-Bruck took over July 1, 2026 amid city pressure for more accountability. Spokane Valley has no equivalent.
Capacity: Weekly docket; annual participants ⚠ TBD
Funding: City, court grants ⚠ VERIFY
Steward: City of Spokane
Where people go from here
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — Community court's real sentence is a navigator: obligations paired with coordinated entry.
- Intensive Case Management / Wraparound — Cases with deeper needs leave community court with wraparound attached.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Spokane's own program has published proof
The model's flagship, Brooklyn's Red Hook Community Justice Center, showed adult recidivism 10% lower and jail sentences down 35% versus traditional court — driven by procedural fairness, not harsher sentences. But Spokane doesn't need to borrow evidence: a WSU evaluation of 1,166 Spokane Community Court participants (2013–2018) found they "consistently possessed lower odds of recidivism" than both historical and contemporary comparison groups.
Capacity & providers
The model
Spokane Community Court (est. 2013) meets Mondays at the downtown Central Library: low-level, quality-of-life offenses resolved by connecting defendants to services co-located in the room — housing navigators, treatment providers, benefits enrollment — instead of jail. Judge Gloria Ochoa-Bruck took the bench July 1, 2026, succeeding founding Judge Mary Logan, amid city-hall pressure for more accountability in the model. Spokane Valley has no equivalent; the county's misdemeanant population outside city limits has no comparable off-ramp.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Thirteen years of institutional experience; nationally recognized early model
- Services-in-the-courtroom design solves the referral-failure problem directly
- Natural landing place for the new camping-ban citations
Weaknesses
- Volume/outcome data not published — accountability critique fills the vacuum
- One city, one docket, one day a week
- Participation incentives weaken when warrants/consequences are inconsistent
Opportunities
- New judicial leadership is the moment to publish outcomes and rebuild credibility
- Extend the model countywide (Valley/district court satellite docket)
- Wire every camping citation to a same-week community court date with a real completion incentive
Threats
- If accountability reforms swing to pure sanction, the service-connection engine that defines the model gets lost
- State AOC therapeutic-court funding collapse hits the whole city docket family
Path forward & best practices
Center for Court Innovation research is clear: community courts work when the service offer is immediate and the consequence for blowing it off is certain but proportionate. The 2026 opportunity is to make Community Court the designed destination of the enforcement system — every citation lands here within days, every completion clears the record, every no-show has a predictable response — and to publish the numbers quarterly.
Funding
City general fund + court budgets; state AOC grants (shrinking — city therapeutic courts cut $738K→$430K since FY24); services in the room are largely providers' own grant/Medicaid funding. Modest direct cost; the co-located services are the real budget.
Sources
- Spokane Public Library — Community Court — https://www.spokanelibrary.org/community-court/
- Center for Court Innovation — Spokane profile — https://www.innovatingjustice.org/articles/downtown-library-welcomes-spokane-community-court-open-arms
- Center Square — judicial transition (Jun 2026) — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_e0c8252e-e07e-4ccf-bde8-07f611428bf1.html
- Center Square — AOC therapeutic court funding cuts — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_3846724b-3a8a-4e91-a846-0355d5a3ced1.html
- WSU evaluation of Spokane Community Court (2019) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2019/09/05/evaluation-of-spokane-municipal-community-court-released/
- Red Hook evaluation (NCSC/CJI) — https://www.innovatingjustice.org/publications/community-court-brooklyn-lowers-recidivism-researchers-find
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
7 · Stabilization & Treatment
The clinical core: detox, medication-assisted treatment, residential treatment, the psychiatric bed system, and Washington’s involuntary-treatment ladder (ITA) — plus the therapeutic courts that blend justice with treatment.
Other Communities — Where the Outward Flow Lands N/A Regional Outflow — Who Leaves & Why
Some journeys end outside Spokane County — and honest accounting requires this box, exactly as it required “Arriving for Services” on the inflow side. People leave for good reasons: family willing to take them in, a job, a treatment bed, a fresh start. And for hard ones: drifting toward whichever city currently hassles least. Two principles keep this box honest. First, a departure is never a success metric — the person’s needs travel with them; only the address changes, and no community should quietly count on outflow as policy. Second, there is a right way and a wrong way for a departure to happen: a voluntary, verified reconnection to family or support somewhere else — with a warm handoff on the receiving end — is a legitimate, sometimes excellent outcome. An ejection down the interstate is not, and Spokane knows the difference intimately, because Spokane has been on the receiving end of both kinds. The hub dynamic runs in both directions, and the fix is the same in both: regional coordination, so that cities compete on recovery outcomes rather than on who can be most unpleasant.
Capacity: Unmeasured ⚠ — “left the area” is currently a data black hole; exit destinations belong on the by-name list
Funding: N/A — the cost does not disappear; it transfers
Steward: Regional dynamic
Withdrawal Management (Detox) GAP Behavioral Health & Treatment
The narrow doorway to everything downstream. Spokane County's voluntary detox capacity: 14 beds at the Stabilization Center (Pioneer), ~13 Medicaid beds at STARS (plus sobering), 12 private-pay at Sequoia — roughly 40 beds for a county with 344 annual overdose deaths. ABHS's 24-bed facility closed in 2022. When no bed is available the moment someone says "I'm ready," the window closes.
Capacity: AUDITED Jul 2026 — better than earlier estimate: SRSC 14 + STARS 38 (+6 lower-intensity, +16-bed wing funded) + Pioneer Center East 5 + Sequoia 12 (private) + Royal Life (private) ≈ 75+ beds; waits ⚠ TBD; sobering unit runs as CAR 50 (STARS-operated) [SIM 2025]
Funding: Medicaid, state HCA, opioid settlement ($400K/yr walk-in MAT/treatment), county
Steward: County / Nonprofit / Private
Where people go from here
- Inpatient / Residential SUD Treatment — Detox is days; treatment is months. This handoff is where recovery either starts — or stalls in the gap between beds.
- Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT/MOUD) — Detox plus medication beats detox alone; starting MAT before discharge cuts the relapse cliff roughly in half.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The national context: treatment is the exception
Of 48.5 million Americans with a substance use disorder, only ~15% received any treatment in 2023 (NSDUH). The research on why is unambiguous: waiting kills willingness — attrition rises steeply with every day between "I'm ready" and a bed, which is why low-barrier "bridge" models matter (in one study, 72-hour bridge methadone starts led to a secured ongoing-care plan in 89% of episodes). Spokane's ~75 beds are the doorway for a county with 344 annual overdose deaths.
Capacity & providers
The bed math
Voluntary detox in Spokane County totals roughly 40 beds: 14 medically monitored beds at the Regional Stabilization Center (Pioneer Human Services), ~13 Medicaid beds at STARS (5 women/8 men per 2022 reporting, plus a 23-hour sobering unit at 628 S. Cowley), and 12 private-insurance beds at Sequoia Detox Centers in the Valley. ABHS's 24-bed Spokane facility closed in 2022 after losing certification. Context: 344 overdose deaths in 2025 and 404 people in the homeless count reporting SUD.
Why this is the system's narrowest door
Readiness for treatment is perishable — often measured in hours. A person who asks for detox and is told "call back Thursday" is usually gone. Every downstream box (inpatient, MAT retention, recovery housing) starves when this door is too narrow.
The beds, by provider
| Provider | Beds | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| STARS (628 S Cowley) | 38 + 6 | Withdrawal mgmt + lower-intensity; sobering unit; Medicaid |
| Regional Stabilization Center (Pioneer) | 14 | Co-located with crisis stabilization; law-enforcement drop-off |
| Pioneer Center East | 5 | Detox wing of 53-bed residential campus |
| SUBTOTAL — public/Medicaid detox | ~63 | |
| Sequoia Detox (Spokane Valley) | 12 | Private insurance / self-pay |
| Royal Life Centers | ⚠ TBD | Private detox + residential |
| TOTAL current detox beds | ~75+ | vs. 344 OD deaths/yr countywide |
| Coming: STARS inpatient wing | +16 | $775K county opioid settlement |
| Secure withdrawal (involuntary) | 0 | Zero in county; 57 statewide (see Secure Withdrawal box) |
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Three operators across payer types (Medicaid, county, private)
- Detox is co-located with crisis stabilization at SRSC — the right architecture
- PATH expansion adds sobering/relief capacity in 2027
Weaknesses
- ~40 beds for a county of 560K with a top-tier overdose death rate
- No published wait-time or refusal data — the gap is invisible
- Fentanyl-era withdrawal (plus meth psychosis) is clinically harder than the system was built for
Opportunities
- Opioid settlement is the natural funding source for bed expansion
- Same-day "no wrong door" detox intake linked to every OD reversal and exchange contact
- Track and publish the single most important metric: % of detox requests seated same day
Threats
- Workforce (detox nursing) shortages closed ABHS and strain STARS/SRSC — beds without staff are furniture
- Detox without immediate MAT/inpatient linkage has high relapse-to-overdose risk
Path forward & best practices
Best-practice systems treat detox as an entry ramp, not a destination: same-day access, buprenorphine started during withdrawal, and a warm handoff to residential or outpatient MAT before discharge. Spokane's move is to fund enough beds that "same-day" is real (a published standard, e.g., 90% seated within 24 hrs), and to wire EMS/ER/exchange referrals directly into intake slots.
Funding
Medicaid (primary payer, STARS/SRSC), county (SRSC contract, settlement dollars — $400K/yr committed to walk-in access), state HCA, private insurance (Sequoia). Expansion capital candidate: opioid settlement (county $29.2M lifetime) + state behavioral health capital grants.
Sources
- Pioneer HS — SRSC withdrawal management (14 beds) — https://pioneerhumanservices.org/treatment/spokane-regional-stabilization-center/
- STARS Spokane — https://spokanerecovery.org/services/
- Spokesman — detox bed shortage, ABHS closure (2022) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2022/oct/18/with-few-detox-beds-available-in-spokane-state-hea/
- Spokesman — county opioid settlement allocations (May 2024) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2024/may/08/spokane-county-announces-plans-for-intial-72-milli/
- SAMHSA 2023 NSDUH (~15% treatment rate) — https://www.samhsa.gov/data/report/2023-nsduh-annual-national-report
- Bridge methadone starts — 89% linkage (Drug & Alcohol Dependence 2022) — https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0376871622002344
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Secure Withdrawal (Ricky's Law — involuntary SUD) GAP Behavioral Health & Treatment
Washington law has allowed involuntary commitment for substance use disorder since 2018 — but only to designated secure facilities, and Spokane County has ZERO adult beds. Statewide: 57 beds at 4 facilities (nearest: Wenatchee), while Eastern WA generates ~55% of admissions. Spokane's own 24-bed secure facility closed in 2022. This is why "just commit them" usually isn't possible for addiction here.
Capacity: 0 adult SWMS beds in Spokane County; 57 statewide at 4 facilities; E. WA ≈55% of admissions
Funding: State HCA / Medicaid
Steward: State of WA
Where people go from here
- Inpatient / Residential SUD Treatment — Ricky's Law: involuntary detox flows into residential treatment.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
How rare involuntary SUD treatment really is
Washington is one of the few states with a true involuntary-commitment pathway for addiction — used ~900 times statewide in a year, against tens of thousands who qualify clinically. The constraint is physical: 57 secure beds statewide, none in Spokane County. Massachusetts' Section 35 (the nation's largest program, ~5,000+ commitments/yr) shows both the demand and the warning: outcomes depend on whether facilities are clinical or custodial.
Capacity & providers
The law that can't be used here
Ricky's Law (2018) lets a Designated Crisis Responder involuntarily commit someone for substance use disorder — but only to a certified Secure Withdrawal Management & Stabilization (SWMS) facility. Spokane County has ZERO adult SWMS beds. Statewide there are just 57, at four facilities (Chehalis, Wenatchee, Vancouver, Kent) — while Eastern Washington generates ~55% of admissions. Spokane's own 24-bed secure facility (ABHS Cozza) closed in 2022, largely over nurse staffing. Excelsior in Spokane announced 8 youth SWMS beds (status to verify).
What this means on the street
When family, police, or a DCR see someone dying of addiction in plain sight, the involuntary tool exists on paper and fails in practice: even when the person qualifies, there is usually no bed within 200 miles. This single fact answers much of the public's "why don't we just commit them?"
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- The legal framework already exists — no legislation needed to act locally
- Statewide data proves Eastern WA demand (55% of admissions) — a ready-made case for siting beds here
Weaknesses
- Zero local adult beds; nearest is Wenatchee
- Secure-facility staffing economics are brutal (what closed Cozza)
- Average statewide daily census 30–32 in 57 beds suggests operational friction, not absent demand
Opportunities
- Site SWMS beds in the PATH/SRSC campus orbit where clinical staffing is already concentrated
- State capital budget + opioid settlement braid for a 16-bed Eastern WA facility
- A Spokane mayor making this THE regional ask of Olympia would fill an obvious statewide equity gap
Threats
- Without local beds, Ricky's Law remains a dead letter here while overdoses continue
- Litigation/civil liberties concerns rise if commitment expands without treatment quality behind it
Path forward & best practices
The path is concrete: a certified 16-bed adult SWMS facility in Spokane County, operated by an experienced secure-care provider, funded by state capital dollars plus settlement funds, with staffing wages set to actually hire nurses. Massachusetts (Section 35) shows both the demand for involuntary SUD treatment and the cautionary lessons on treatment quality — build it clinical, not custodial.
Funding
State HCA/Medicaid funds SWMS operations statewide; the missing piece is capital + workforce premium for an Eastern WA site. Candidates: state behavioral health capital program, opioid settlement (county + state shares), and the 0.1% tax as local match. This node is arguably the cleanest "gap with a nameable fix" on the entire map.
Sources
- HCA — Ricky's Law annual report (57 beds, 4 facilities, E. WA 55%) — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/rickys-law-annual-report-202507.pdf
- Spokesman — ABHS Cozza secure detox closure — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2022/oct/18/with-few-detox-beds-available-in-spokane-state-hea/
- Excelsior — youth SWMS beds announcement — https://excelsiorwellnesscenter.org/excelsior-to-treat-patients-under-rickys-law/
- HCA Ricky's Law report (~900 uses/yr; 57 beds) — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/rickys-law-annual-report-202507.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT/MOUD) PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone — the gold standard for opioid use disorder, cutting overdose death roughly in half. Access points: SRHD's Opioid Treatment Program (new clinic 2023; also doses in the jail), Acadia's Comprehensive Treatment Center, CAT's low-barrier same-day buprenorphine for homeless clients, CHAS Health, and mobile MAT. County commits $400K/yr of settlement funds to walk-in MAT.
Capacity: 2 OTPs (SRHD, Acadia) + CAT low-barrier + CHAS + mobile; patient counts ⚠ TBD vs. est. OUD population
Funding: Medicaid, HCA, opioid settlement, city Mobile MAT contract (~$200K, CAT)
Steward: SRHD / Nonprofit / Private
Where people go from here
- Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) — Medication plus counseling: MAT patients continue in outpatient care.
- Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses — Stability on MAT makes sober housing workable — though some houses still wrongly refuse MAT residents.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The strongest evidence base on this map
People on methadone die at roughly one-third the rate of those out of treatment (11.3 vs 36.1 deaths per 1,000 person-years; overdose deaths 2.6 vs 12.7 — BMJ meta-analysis). After a nonfatal overdose, methadone cuts death risk 59%, buprenorphine 38%. Yet nationally only ~25% of adults who need it receive medication (CDC 2024), and roughly half discontinue within a year — which is why retention, hours, and same-day starts matter more than clinic count.
Capacity & providers
Access points
Two opioid treatment programs: SRHD's OTP (operating since 1990; new W. 8th Ave clinic opened Oct 2023; mostly Medicaid/Medicare; also doses methadone/bupe inside the county jail; the Board approved a feasibility study on spinning the OTP off) and Acadia's Spokane Comprehensive Treatment Center (E. Trent Ave, walk-in intakes, plus a Deer Park mobile unit). Low-barrier buprenorphine: Compassionate Addiction Treatment (same-day starts, free for homeless clients ≤200% FPL, jail reentry bridge program) and CHAS Health. The city funds mobile MAT (~$200K contract with CAT); the county commits $400K/yr of settlement funds to walk-in MAT.
The gap
MAT roughly halves overdose death — the single most effective tool the system has. The unknown is coverage: patients-in-treatment vs. the estimated OUD population, and the hours/geography where no low-barrier start exists (nights, weekends, the Valley, north county).
Access points, in one table
| Provider | Patients | Model / hours |
|---|---|---|
| SRHD Opioid Treatment Program (W 8th) | ⚠ | Methadone/bupe OTP; doses in jail; M–Sa early hours |
| Acadia CTC (E Trent) | ⚠ | OTP, walk-in intakes + Deer Park mobile |
| CAT (S Division + E 3rd day space) | ⚠ | Low-barrier same-day bupe; free ≤200% FPL; jail bridge; mobile |
| Ideal Option (5th Ave, Francis, Valley) | ⚠ | Office-based bupe/naltrexone, weekdays |
| CHAS Health (Denny Murphy + clinics) | ⚠ | FQHC primary-care MAT + street medicine |
| TOTAL in treatment vs. est. OUD population | ⚠ UNKNOWN | The coverage rate nobody publishes — a named data gap |
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Genuine low-barrier same-day access exists (CAT) — rare and precious
- Jail dosing (SRHD) attacks the deadliest window: post-release
- Mobile MAT extends reach; multiple payer types covered
Weaknesses
- Coverage rate unmeasured; likely well under half the OUD population
- SRHD spin-off study injects uncertainty into the region's oldest OTP
- Methadone regulation still requires near-daily visits — brutal for unhoused patients
Opportunities
- Settlement funds ($400K/yr already committed) can buy true 24/7 low-barrier induction
- Start bupe at every touchpoint: ER (already possible), EMS on-scene, exchange, shelter, jail booking
- Federal telehealth/methadone flexibility trends favor expansion
Threats
- Fentanyl makes induction clinically harder (precipitated withdrawal) — protocols must keep up
- If the OTP spin-off wobbles, the jail dosing line wobbles with it
Path forward & best practices
The benchmark is "MAT within the hour, anywhere": Rhode Island's statewide jail MAT program cut post-release overdose deaths ~61% and is the model for the jail-to-street handoff. For Spokane: publish a coverage estimate, guarantee jail continuation through the Mediko transition, and fund one 24/7 induction site (PATH is the natural host in 2027).
Funding
Medicaid/Apple Health (primary), HCA, opioid settlement ($400K/yr county walk-in commitment; city $1.5M plan includes treatment), city (mobile MAT ~$200K), Medicare (OTP). Funding is comparatively strong here — the constraints are hours, geography, and workforce more than dollars.
Sources
- SRHD Opioid Treatment Program (incl. jail dosing) — https://srhd.org/programs-and-services/opioid-treatment-program
- Spokesman — SRHD new OTP clinic (Oct 2023) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2023/oct/30/spokane-regional-health-district-opens-new-clinic-/
- Acadia — Spokane CTC — https://www.acadiahealthcare.com/locations/spokane-comprehensive-treatment-center/
- CAT Spokane (low-barrier MAT, jail reentry) — https://catspokane.org/
- Spokesman — county settlement: $400K/yr walk-in MAT — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2024/may/08/spokane-county-announces-plans-for-intial-72-milli/
- Sordo et al., BMJ — mortality in vs out of MAT — https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28446428/
- CDC MMWR 2024 — only 25% receive MOUD — https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/wr/mm7325a1.htm
- NIH — post-overdose mortality reduction — https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/methadone-buprenorphine-reduce-risk-death-after-opioid-overdose
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Inpatient / Residential SUD Treatment PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Residential treatment beds. ABHS operates large regional capacity (~550 beds across facilities incl. Spokane Valley); CCEW's Rising Strong keeps parents and children together during treatment. Waitlists and insurance friction lose people between detox discharge and a residential bed.
Capacity: AUDITED Jul 2026: ABHS Mission (Valley) + ABHS Cozza (women) ~550 systemwide; Pioneer Center East 48; Rising Strong (~75-unit family campus); Royal Life (private). Daybreak Youth CLOSED since 2023.
Funding: Medicaid, private insurance; Rising Strong: Commerce, DCYF, Apple Health
Steward: Nonprofit / Private
Where people go from here
- Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses — The evidence-backed sequence: residential treatment into a recovery residence. Relapse rates drop when this line holds.
- Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) — Step-down: residential graduates continue in outpatient care.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Why residential beds bottleneck recovery
The research is consistent: time-on-waitlist is the enemy — attrition climbs with every waiting day, and people lost between detox discharge and a residential bed frequently resurface in this map's crisis columns. Washington's residential capacity runs waitlists as a norm; no authoritative statewide gap count exists (itself a data failure). Spokane's stock (ABHS's regional complex, Pioneer Center East's 53 beds, Rising Strong's family campus, private-pay Royal Life) is real but unindexed — nobody publishes same-day availability.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Sacred Heart’s psychiatric units (48+8) and regional medical inpatient absorb what E&Ts can’t; Inland Northwest Behavioral Health (private, 100 beds) added capacity; Eastern State (~300) holds the long-term civil/forensic population. Inpatient is where the sickest finally stop moving — briefly.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Real stabilization capacity exists for acute weeks
- INBH added private beds the public system lacked
Weaknesses
- ≈13 psych beds/100k vs 50 recommended — quarter-strength
- Discharge planning is the weakest link (see prevention row)
- ESH admissions gated by forensic backlog (Trueblood)
Opportunities
- IMD-waiver financing can support residential expansion
- Step-down (respite/PSH) investment shortens stays system-wide
Threats
- Psych-triage cuts at Sacred Heart signal retrenchment
- Boarding pressure discharges people at stabilization, not recovery
Funding
Medicaid/Medicare/commercial + state (ESH). The Bill’s inpatient line (≈$13M homeless share) is deliberately conservative — benchmark studies say it’s the biggest single cost in the crisis.
Sources
- Wait-time attrition research — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3205308/
- RAND behavioral health bed-need framework — https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_briefs/RBA1824-1.html
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
DCR Evaluation — the ITA Entry Point PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Everything involuntary in Washington runs through a Designated Crisis Responder (Frontier BH staffs them here) under RCW 71.05. The DCR must find "likelihood of serious harm" or "grave disability" — a demanding legal standard — AND there must be a bed. Families can petition court review of a DCR decision under Joel's Law. This single box explains most of "why don't we just commit people": strict criteria, DCR staffing limits, and chronic bed shortages downstream.
Capacity: DCR investigations/yr: not published ⚠; detention rate ⚠
Funding: SCRBH BH-ASO (state/Medicaid)
Steward: Regional (SCRBH) / State law
Where people go from here
- 120-Hour Emergency Detention (E&T beds) — The DCR finds grave disability or danger: a 120-hour hold begins — if an E&T bed exists to receive it.
- Less Restrictive Alternative (Outpatient Commitment) — The lighter path: outpatient commitment instead of a locked bed.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
How Washington's involuntary treatment compares
Washington's "grave disability" standard is actually broader than most states': it covers both failure to provide for essential needs AND "severe deterioration in routine functioning," and since Ricky's Law includes substance use disorder. California only reached comparable breadth with SB 43 (all counties by Jan 2026); New York had no grave-disability standard at all until August 2025. So Washington's law is not the constraint people assume — beds and workforce are.
The volumes: ~3,100 people civilly committed statewide in 2024, one-fifth of whom had been committed the prior year (the revolving door, quantified). Joel's Law petitions are up 266% since 2020 — families increasingly forcing the question. Ricky's Law was used ~900 times statewide Oct 2023–Sep 2024, constrained by the 57-bed secure capacity. Spokane-specific DCR volumes remain unpublished.
Capacity & providers
How involuntary treatment actually starts in Spokane
Every Involuntary Treatment Act action begins with a Designated Crisis Responder — in this region, staffed by Frontier Behavioral Health under the Spokane County Regional Behavioral Health BH-ASO. The DCR must personally evaluate and find, by legal standard, "likelihood of serious harm" (to self, others, or property) or "grave disability" (unable to provide for essential needs due to a behavioral health disorder). Since Joel's Law (2015), families can petition superior court to review a DCR's decision not to detain. Since Ricky's Law (2018), the same framework covers SUD — if a secure bed exists (see Secure Withdrawal: Spokane has none).
The three-way bottleneck
(1) The legal standard is demanding — dangerousness in the moment, not "obviously deteriorating." (2) DCR staffing limits how many evaluations happen and how fast. (3) Even when a DCR agrees, detention requires a bed at a certified facility — and beds are the binding constraint. Spokane's DCR investigation volumes and detention rates are not published — a transparency gap worth fixing.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Experienced regional DCR operation under a single agency (Frontier)
- 2020s reforms (Joel's Law, expanded grave-disability interpretation) give more legal room than most assume
Weaknesses
- No public data on investigations, detention rates, or wait times
- DCR workforce is small, burned out, and hard to recruit
- Bed scarcity makes some evaluations academic
Opportunities
- Publish quarterly ITA dashboards (investigations → detentions → outcomes) — sunlight would transform this debate
- 2023's HB 1134 and crisis-system buildout add tools upstream of detention
Threats
- Public frustration ("why don't we commit people?") turns on this box; unexplained, it corrodes trust in the whole system
- Expanding commitment without expanding beds just reshuffles the queue
Path forward & best practices
For Spokane the honest framing is: the ITA pipeline is bed-limited, not will-limited. The forward path is (1) transparency — publish DCR volumes and outcomes; (2) capacity — E&T and SWMS beds locally; (3) alternatives — robust LRA supervision so commitment isn't the only serious tool. New York's experience expanding involuntary removals without matching beds is the cautionary tale.
Funding
DCR operations are funded through the SCRBH BH-ASO (state general fund + Medicaid). This is a state-policy-heavy node: the local lever is advocacy plus regional bed capacity; the state lever is DCR workforce funding and commitment-standard clarity.
Sources
- RCW 71.05 (ITA statute) — https://app.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=71.05
- SCRBH Crisis Services Provider Guide (July 2025) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/50172/SCRBH-ASO-BH-Crisis-Services-Provider-Guide-07012025
- Frontier BH — crisis response / DCR dispatch — https://fbhwa.org/programs/crisis-response/24-7-regional-behavioral-health-crisis-line
- HCA — Ricky's Law report — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/rickys-law-annual-report-202507.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
120-Hour Emergency Detention (E&T beds) PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Initial involuntary hold (120 hours excluding weekends/holidays) at an evaluation & treatment facility. Regional capacity rests heavily on Inland Northwest Behavioral Health (100 beds; 75 adult), plus Sacred Heart adult psychiatry and Frontier E&T services. Many people are stabilized on medication and released — sometimes straight back to the street, restarting the cycle.
Capacity: AUDITED Jul 2026: INBH 100 (75 adult/25 adolescent) + Sacred Heart 48 adult + 8 psych-ED + FBH E&Ts: Calispel 16 + Foothills 16 = ~188 regional psych/E&T beds
Funding: Medicaid / state via SCRBH
Steward: State law / Regional beds
Where people go from here
- 14-Day Commitment — Still unsafe at 120 hours: the court extends to fourteen days.
- Less Restrictive Alternative (Outpatient Commitment) — Stepping down from the hold into outpatient commitment.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — The hold expires, no placement exists, and discharge is to nowhere — a psychiatric bed to a sidewalk in one signature.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The bed famine behind every hold
America ran 340 state psychiatric beds per 100,000 people in 1955; today it runs ~11 — a 94% decline that community care never fully replaced. Washington sits at ~13 beds/100k (recommended minimum: 40–60), and the shortage surfaces as psychiatric boarding: WA issues 700–1,000 "single bed certifications" a month — legal permission to hold someone in a regular hospital bed because no psychiatric bed exists — a decade after the state Supreme Court ruled boarding-without-treatment unconstitutional (In re D.W., 2014).
Capacity & providers
Where the held actually go
A 120-hour emergency detention (excluding weekends/holidays) requires an Evaluation & Treatment bed. The regional workhorse is Inland Northwest Behavioral Health — a 100-bed UHS psychiatric hospital opened 2018 (75 adult, 25 adolescent). Providence Sacred Heart maintains adult inpatient psychiatry (bed count to verify) but closed its 22-bed youth psychiatric unit in Sept 2024, leaving Eastern WA without that level of youth care. Frontier operates E&T services (count to verify). Many detentions stabilize on medication within days and discharge — sometimes to no address, which is how the 120-hour hold becomes a revolving door to the street.
The regional psychiatric bed ledger
| Facility | Beds | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Inland Northwest Behavioral Health (UHS) | 100 | 75 adult + 25 adolescent; opened 2018 |
| Providence Sacred Heart — adult psych | 48 | Incl. 17 geropsych; +8 psychiatric-ED beds; triage team cut May 2026 |
| Frontier BH — Calispel E&T | 16 | + 23-hr crisis stabilization |
| Frontier BH — Foothills E&T | 16 | |
| SUBTOTAL — local acute/E&T beds | ~188 | ~34 per 100k county residents |
| Eastern State Hospital | ~300 | Civil + forensic, all of Eastern WA; long-term commitments |
| Context: recommended minimum | 40–60 /100k | WA runs ~13/100k; 700–1,000 single-bed certifications/mo |
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- INBH added 100 modern psychiatric beds the region simply didn't have before 2018
- Multiple facilities across hospital and community settings
Weaknesses
- Discharge-to-street from psychiatric holds recycles the crisis
- Youth acute psychiatric care gone from Eastern WA since 2024
- Bed counts vs. demand not publicly tracked
Opportunities
- Discharge-to-housing protocols (respite, PSH priority, LRA + housing) at every E&T exit
- Medicaid FCS can pay for the tenancy-support side of psychiatric discharge
Threats
- Private-operator economics can close units fast (Sacred Heart youth unit as precedent)
- Boarding in ERs returns whenever E&T beds tighten
Path forward & best practices
The measurable goal: no discharge from an involuntary hold to the street. That requires respite beds, a PSH priority lane for post-ITA patients, and LRA orders paired with housing. Track "ITA discharges to homelessness" as a named metric — what gets measured gets fixed.
Funding
Medicaid + state via SCRBH for E&T stays; private/commercial at hospital units. The unfunded seam is the discharge handoff — a housing-linkage worker inside each E&T is cheap relative to the readmission cycle it prevents.
Sources
- NAMI Spokane — INBH profile (100 beds) — https://namispokane.org/a-growing-local-gem-inland-northwest-behavioral-health/
- InvestigateWest — Sacred Heart youth psych unit closure — https://www.investigatewest.org/investigatewest-reports/former-staff-at-spokane-youth-psychiatric-unit-blame-providence-for-closure-17784579
- Frontier BH — E&T services — https://fbhwa.org/programs/inpatient-stabilization-services/evaluation-and-treatment-e-t-services
- Treatment Advocacy Center — beds per 100k, 94% decline — https://www.tac.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/bed-supply-need-per-capita.pdf
- HCA — Single Bed Certification quarterly report — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/single-bed-certification-quarter-1-2025.pdf
- In re Detention of D.W. (boarding ruling) — https://jaapl.org/content/43/2/218
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
14-Day Commitment PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
If the facility petitions and the court agrees, detention extends 14 days. Requires a hearing with counsel; the person may instead accept voluntary treatment or a Less Restrictive Alternative.
Capacity: Constrained by same E&T bed pool ⚠
Funding: Medicaid / state
Steward: State law / Superior Court
Where people go from here
- 90 / 180-Day Commitment (Eastern State Hospital) — The long-term line: 90/180-day commitment at Eastern State Hospital.
- Less Restrictive Alternative (Outpatient Commitment) — Fourteen days stabilizes many people enough for outpatient commitment.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Where the ladder either holds or drops
The 14-day hearing is the system's inflection point: courts weigh continued detention against a Less Restrictive Alternative, inside a state running ~13 psychiatric beds per 100k (a quarter of the recommended minimum) and 700–1,000 single-bed certifications a month. Statewide, a fifth of people civilly committed in 2024 had been committed the year before — the revolving door, measured at exactly this rung.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The 14-day commitment: after a 120-hour hold, DCRs petition and Superior Court commits to an E&T — Frontier’s Calispel or Foothills (16 beds each). Two facilities, 32 beds, six counties: the arithmetic of the whole ITA lane.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Local E&Ts exist (many regions have none)
- Court process protects rights while enabling treatment
Weaknesses
- 32 beds gate the entire involuntary system
- 6–8-day average stays: stabilization, not treatment
- Single-bed certifications (700-1,000/mo statewide) = system running on waivers
Opportunities
- PATH facility (2027) adds the missing front porch
- LRA (outpatient commitment) underused locally vs national AOT results
Threats
- Bed loss anywhere upstream backs into ERs and jail
- Workforce shortage limits even funded beds
Funding
HCA crisis contracts via SCRBH + Medicaid. Fund’s fine print: the constraint isn’t the hearing — it’s 32 beds. Everything else is queueing.
Sources
- HCA — Single Bed Certification reports — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/single-bed-certification-quarter-1-2025.pdf
- InvestigateWest — WA commitments & recommitment rate — https://www.investigatewest.org/wa-families-are-using-joels-law-for-involuntary-commitments-more-than-ever-is-it-working/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
90 / 180-Day Commitment (Eastern State Hospital) GAP Behavioral Health & Treatment
Long-term civil commitment, typically at Eastern State Hospital (~367 beds, civil/forensic mix). Forensic (criminal competency) demand under the Trueblood litigation has long squeezed civil capacity; the state added 86 forensic beds in 2024 and reached timeline compliance, but civil bed availability remains the constraint felt in Spokane.
Capacity: ESH ≈367 beds total; civil/forensic split ⚠ VERIFY; +86 forensic beds added statewide 2024
Funding: State general fund
Steward: State of WA
Where people go from here
- Less Restrictive Alternative (Outpatient Commitment) — Eastern State discharge with an outpatient commitment order.
- Adult Family Homes & Guardianship — Those who can't live independently step down to adult family homes — when a home accepts the referral.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
From 2,274 patients to ~300 beds
Eastern State Hospital opened in 1891 and peaked at 2,274 patients in 1954; today it operates roughly 300 beds (375 licensed) for all of Eastern Washington — the local face of national deinstitutionalization. The state's civil bed shortfall hit 386 beds in 2023 and is projected to remain ~168 short in 2026, as civil capacity keeps converting to Trueblood forensic use. This is the ceiling every 90/180-day commitment petition bumps against.
Capacity & providers
Eastern State Hospital and the Trueblood squeeze
Long-term civil commitments (90/180-day) go primarily to Eastern State Hospital in Medical Lake (~367 beds, civil and forensic). For a decade, the Trueblood litigation over jail-based competency waits forced the state to prioritize forensic admissions; civil capacity absorbed the squeeze. The state added 86 forensic beds in 2024 (Eastern, Western, Maple Lane) and reached timeline compliance — a genuine improvement — but civil bed availability remains the constraint Spokane feels when a 14-day commitment needs to step up and no state bed exists.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Trueblood compliance reached — forensic pressure easing for the first time in years
- ESH is local (Medical Lake) — Spokane is not shipping patients across the state
Weaknesses
- Civil/forensic split not transparently published
- Long-term commitment ends without a housing plan more often than anyone will defend
Opportunities
- State's shift toward smaller community-based long-term beds could land facilities in Spokane County
- Pioneer's 10 downtown Trueblood-class apartments show the discharge-housing model in miniature
Threats
- State budget cycles govern everything here; local control is minimal
- Forensic demand growth could re-tighten civil access at any time
Path forward & best practices
Spokane's lever is downstream: guarantee that every ESH civil discharge to Spokane County has housing + FCS-funded tenancy support waiting. Upstream, the region should press DSHS to publish civil bed availability and wait times by county — the data that would make this gap governable.
Funding
State general fund (DSHS) entirely. Local dollars don't buy state hospital beds — but they do buy the discharge infrastructure that keeps people from returning.
Sources
- DSHS — Eastern State Hospital overview — https://www.dshs.wa.gov/bha/division-state-hospitals/eastern-state-hospital-overview
- Seattle Times — Trueblood compliance, +86 beds (Sept 2024) — https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/mental-health/was-state-hospitals-are-admitting-patients-on-time-whats-needed-to-keep-it-up/
- DSHS — Trueblood case page — https://www.dshs.wa.gov/bha/trueblood-et-al-v-washington-state-dshs
- ESH history (1891; peak 2,274) — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_State_Hospital_(Washington)
- WA Standard — civil bed shortfall 386→168 — https://washingtonstatestandard.com/2023/10/16/washington-faces-steep-path-closing-mental-health-bed-gap-for-jailed-defendants/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Less Restrictive Alternative (Outpatient Commitment) GAP Behavioral Health & Treatment
Court-ordered outpatient treatment instead of (or stepping down from) a locked bed. On paper, the tool for "revolving door" cases; in practice, enforcement and intensive outpatient capacity are thin, so violations often go unaddressed until the next crisis.
Capacity: Active LRAs & monitoring capacity: not published ⚠
Funding: SCRBH / Medicaid
Steward: State law / SCRBH
Where people go from here
- Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) — An outpatient commitment is, in practice, mandated outpatient treatment.
- Adult Family Homes & Guardianship — Some on outpatient commitments need housing with care built in: adult family homes.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The evidence for making outpatient commitment real
New York's Kendra's Law — assisted outpatient treatment with actual teeth and services — reported hospitalization down 77%, arrests down 83%, incarceration down 87%, homelessness down 74% among participants versus their prior three years (pre/post design; Duke's independent evaluation confirmed reduced hospitalization and better medication adherence). The catch: those results came from funded ACT-level services attached to the order. An LRA without a team behind it is a court order and nothing more.
Capacity & providers
The tool that should work and mostly doesn't
A Less Restrictive Alternative order is court-ordered outpatient treatment — the step-down from commitment or the alternative to it. On paper it is exactly the instrument for the "revolving door" person everyone in Spokane can name: repeated holds, stabilization, release, deterioration, repeat. In practice, LRAs are only as strong as the supervision and intensive-outpatient capacity behind them, and enforcement of violations is inconsistent. Active LRA counts and revocation data for Spokane are not published.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Legal authority already exists and courts use it
- Far cheaper and less restrictive than hospital beds
Weaknesses
- Thin monitoring capacity; violations often unaddressed until the next 911 call
- No assertive community treatment (ACT) capacity data published for the region
Opportunities
- Pairing every LRA with ACT-level wraparound + housing is proven (AOT programs in NY/OH show reduced hospitalization and arrest)
- A Spokane "LRA+ housing" pilot would be a visible, fundable innovation
Threats
- An unenforced court order teaches the system's hardest cases that nothing is real
- Civil liberties litigation risk if enforcement expands without treatment quality
Path forward & best practices
Assisted Outpatient Treatment done well (Kendra's Law evaluations in New York) pairs the order with an ACT team, housing, and swift, predictable response to noncompliance. Spokane's version: fund 1–2 ACT teams dedicated to the LRA/high-utilizer caseload, wired to PSH units. Fifty people managed this way would visibly change downtown.
Funding
SCRBH/Medicaid for outpatient treatment; Medicaid FCS for tenancy supports; 0.1% BH tax as the natural local funder of ACT-team capacity. Modest dollars, high leverage.
Sources
- RCW 71.05 — LRA provisions — https://app.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=71.05
- SCRBH Crisis Services Provider Guide — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/DocumentCenter/View/50172/SCRBH-ASO-BH-Crisis-Services-Provider-Guide-07012025
- Kendra's Law / AOT evaluation literature (national) — https://omh.ny.gov/omhweb/resources/publications/aot_program_evaluation/
- NY OMH Kendra's Law evaluation (2005) — https://my.omh.ny.gov/analyticsRes1/files/aot/AOTFinal2005.pdf
- Duke/Swartz AOT evaluation — https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/ps.62.5.pss6205_0504
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Therapeutic Courts — Drug / Veterans / DUI PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
Intensive supervision plus treatment instead of incarceration, charges dismissed on graduation. County Superior Court runs felony Therapeutic Drug Court; the city runs DUI, Veterans, and Community courts. Strong evidence base — but state AOC funding for city therapeutic courts has been cut 40%+ since 2023 and the city has warned it may shutter most of them.
Capacity: Slots ⚠ TBD; city court state funding $738K→$430K; DV court closed Sept 2025
Funding: 0.1% BH sales tax (county), state AOC grants (shrinking), city/county general funds
Steward: County Superior + Municipal
Where people go from here
- Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT/MOUD) — Drug court orders treatment, not just testing — MAT is the evidence-based core.
- Inpatient / Residential SUD Treatment — Higher-acuity participants complete residential treatment as part of the program.
- Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses — Participants live in sober housing while completing — structure on both ends of the day.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Thirty years of evidence
Drug courts are among the most-studied interventions in criminal justice: NIJ's multisite evaluation found recidivism cut from ~50% to ~38%, sustained three-plus years; GAO's systematic reviews confirm significant rearrest reductions in most programs; cost-benefit runs ~$2.21 saved per $1 (higher when victimization costs count). Roughly 4,000 treatment courts now operate nationally with graduation rates around 59%.
Capacity & providers
The portfolio
Spokane County Superior Court operates felony therapeutic courts including Therapeutic Drug Court and the Regional Mental Health Court (≈50 participants, funded by the 0.1% BH sales tax). The City of Spokane Municipal Court runs DUI Court, Veterans Court, Mental Health Court, and Community Court. The evidence base for drug courts is among the strongest in criminal justice — meaningful recidivism reductions for graduates versus comparable defendants.
The crisis
State Administrative Office of the Courts funding for the city's therapeutic courts has been cut more than 40% since July 2023 — $738K (FY24) → ~$712K → $594K → $430K — and the city has warned it may shutter most of them. The DV Intervention Treatment Court already closed (Sept 2025). This is a quiet dismantling of the region's diversion infrastructure at exactly the moment enforcement is scaling up.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Strong national evidence base; decades of local operating experience
- County courts have a dedicated funding stream (0.1% tax) — a structural advantage
- Aligned with both HUD's NOFO direction and Safe & Healthy recommendations
Weaknesses
- City courts exposed to a collapsing state grant line
- Slot counts and outcomes not published locally
- Eligibility rules exclude many of the highest-need defendants
Opportunities
- Fold therapeutic-court capacity into any 2026 justice ballot measure — cheaper than jail beds by an order of magnitude
- Backfill AOC cuts from the 0.1% tax (county) and settlement funds where SUD-related
- Publish a simple annual scorecard: entries, graduations, recidivism, cost per participant vs. incarceration
Threats
- City courts may close dockets within a budget cycle or two
- Losing therapeutic courts makes camping-ban enforcement a pipeline to warrants, not treatment
Path forward & best practices
The math argument wins this one: a therapeutic-court slot costs a fraction of a jail bed-year and produces better recidivism outcomes. The path is stabilizing city dockets with local funds through the state retreat, then expanding capacity as part of the 2026 measure so that every treatment-appropriate felony/misdemeanor defendant has a therapeutic-court option rather than a cell.
Funding
County: 0.1% BH sales tax (RCW 82.14.460) funds Regional MH Court and supports therapeutic courts — durable. City: general fund + state AOC grants in freefall ($738K→$430K). Federal: BJA drug-court grants episodically. Candidate fixes: 0.1% backfill, settlement funds, 2026 measure line-item.
Sources
- Spokane County — therapeutic courts — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/2719/Therapeutic-Courts
- Spokane County — Regional Mental Health Court (0.1% tax funded) — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/481/Spokane-Regional-Mental-Health-Court
- City — municipal therapeutic courts — https://my.spokanecity.org/courts/municipal-court/therapeutic/
- Center Square — AOC cuts, DV court closure — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_3846724b-3a8a-4e91-a846-0355d5a3ced1.html
- NIJ — drug court multisite findings — https://nij.ojp.gov/topics/articles/do-drug-courts-work-findings-drug-court-research
- GAO — adult drug court reviews — https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-12-53
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Mental Health Court PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
Diversion docket for defendants whose offenses are driven by mental illness. The felony Regional Mental Health Court (est. 2013) serves close to 50 participants and is funded by the county's 0.1% behavioral health sales tax; the city runs a municipal MH court under funding pressure.
Capacity: Felony MH court ≈50 participants; municipal court slots ⚠ TBD
Funding: 0.1% BH sales tax (RCW 82.14.460); state AOC (shrinking)
Steward: County (Regional) + City
Where people go from here
- Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) — MH court's engine: treatment attendance as the condition of staying out.
- Intensive Case Management / Wraparound — Court-linked wraparound: the case manager is the court's eyes and the participant's advocate.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What mental health courts can and can't do
The meta-analytic verdict (17 studies, Psychiatric Services 2018): a modest overall effect on rearrest — but strong, significant reductions in jail days. Read properly, MHCs are a harm-reduction tool: they reliably shrink incarceration time for people whose offenses stem from illness, even where they don't cure recidivism. Spokane's felony Regional MH Court (~50 participants, funded by the 0.1% tax) fits that evidence profile.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Spokane County Mental Health Court (a 0.1%-tax flagship) diverts defendants with SMI into supervised treatment plans instead of jail — judge, prosecutor, defense, and Frontier clinicians at one table, the meta-analysis-backed model working locally.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Evidence: MH courts cut jail days significantly (meta-analyses)
- Dedicated 0.1% funding = rare stability
- Cross-system team is a working miniature of integration
Weaknesses
- Slots ⚠ unpublished — capacity likely far below eligible population
- Housing instability sabotages compliance (the seam again)
Opportunities
- SHTF C3/C4 expansion + central docket for city/county cases
- Graduation stories are the best public education the system has
Threats
- Grant/tax politics could squeeze slots as bookings rise
- Without housing attached, court success decays after graduation
Funding
County 0.1% BH tax primarily — the tax’s proof-of-concept. Cost per participant runs far below a jail year; publishing slots and outcomes would strengthen the renewal case.
Sources
- Lowder et al. — MHC meta-analysis — https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.201700107
- Spokane Regional MH Court — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/481/Spokane-Regional-Mental-Health-Court
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Jail-Based Behavioral Health & MAT PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
Screening, psychiatric care, and MAT inside the jail. Turbulent: NaphCare quit mid-2025; Mediko took over Feb 2026 (adding 9 staff at lower cost). SRHD's OTP provides methadone/buprenorphine dosing in custody. Continuity at release is the life-or-death handoff — post-release overdose is a leading killer.
Capacity: Mediko medical (Feb 2026); SRHD OTP doses in jail; % of OUD inmates on MAT ⚠ TBD
Funding: County general fund; SRHD OTP; grants
Steward: Spokane County
Where people go from here
- Reentry Programs & Housing — In-custody treatment hands off to reentry programs — meds in hand, appointment made. Where this line is thin, the release-to-street loop runs thick.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The deadliest two weeks in Spokane's system — measured here, in Washington
The landmark study was done on 30,237 Washington State releasees (Binswanger, NEJM 2007): in the first two weeks after release, all-cause death risk ran 12.7× the general population — and overdose death risk ran 129×. The proven countermeasure is equally clear: when Rhode Island made MAT universal in its correctional system, post-release overdose deaths fell 60.5% in a year (JAMA Psychiatry). In-custody MAT continuity isn't a program nicety; it is the highest-leverage overdose-prevention intervention available to county government.
Capacity & providers
Care behind the walls
Jail medical/behavioral care has been turbulent: NaphCare (provider since 2016, including monitored buprenorphine dosing) terminated its contract mid-2025 over legal concerns; Mediko took over February 2026 at lower cost with nine added staff. SRHD's Opioid Treatment Program provides methadone/buprenorphine dosing and admissions inside the jail plus counseling coordination. The percentage of OUD inmates actually receiving MAT is unpublished — nationally, jail transitions are where treatment continuity dies and post-release overdose spikes.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- OTP-in-jail dosing exists — many county jails have nothing
- Provider transition added staff while cutting cost
Weaknesses
- Provider churn disrupts clinical continuity and institutional knowledge
- MAT coverage rate inside unknown; forced withdrawal still likely for some
- Release timing (often night, red-light chaos) defeats careful discharge planning
Opportunities
- Rhode Island model: universal screening + all three MAT medications + guaranteed community handoff cut post-release OD deaths ~61%
- CAT's jail reentry bridge is the warm-handoff seed to scale
- Medicaid 1115 reentry waivers now allow pre-release coverage — Washington is implementing; Spokane should be first in line
Threats
- Post-release overdose is likely among the county's deadliest single windows — unmeasured locally
- Any lapse during provider transitions is measured in lives
Path forward & best practices
Adopt the Rhode Island standard explicitly: screen every booking for OUD, offer methadone/bupe/naltrexone, continue existing prescriptions without interruption, and hand every release to a community prescriber with meds in hand. Publish the MAT coverage rate quarterly. This is the single highest-leverage overdose-death intervention available to county government.
Funding
County general fund (Mediko contract); SRHD OTP (Medicaid + grants) for dosing; MacArthur Safety & Justice grant history (CAT reentry). Coming: Medicaid reentry waiver dollars for pre-release services — a genuine new funding stream worth planning for now.
Sources
- Spokesman — NaphCare departure (Jul 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/jul/29/naphcare-splits-with-spokane-county-on-jail-health/
- Spokesman — Mediko takeover (Dec 2025) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2025/dec/18/spokane-county-saves-money-staff-and-bolsters-serv/
- SRHD OTP — jail services — https://srhd.org/programs-and-services/opioid-treatment-program
- Rhode Island jail MAT outcomes (JAMA Psychiatry) — https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2671411
- Binswanger NEJM 2007 — WA releasee mortality (129x overdose) — https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmsa064115
- Rhode Island MAT — JAMA Psychiatry (−60.5%) — https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/fullarticle/2671411
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Medical Respite Beds GAP Housing & Shelter
Beds where homeless patients recover after hospital discharge with nursing support. Cheap compared to readmission; chronically undersupplied in Spokane.
Capacity: ⚠ PLACEHOLDER — beds TBD
Funding: ⚠ VERIFY — Medicaid FCS, hospital community benefit
Steward: Nonprofit / Hospitals
Where people go from here
- Intensive Case Management / Wraparound — Respite's exit plan is a case manager.
- Coordinated Entry & Navigation — Healed enough to plan: respite connects to coordinated entry.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Proven, cheap, and missing
Medical respite is one of the field's clearest wins: Boston's program cut 90-day hospital readmission odds roughly in half, and the national literature consistently shows reduced ED use, inpatient days, and costs. Programs tripled nationally from 43 (2012) to 145+ (2023). Spokane's count remains effectively zero dedicated beds — while its hospitals discharge to the street and absorb the readmissions anyway.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Hope House respite (VOA, 44 beds, July 2025, Medicaid-waiver-funded) and Healing Hearts (30 beds, Providence clinical + Jewels operations) give discharged patients a bed to heal in — the evidence-backed fix for hospital-to-sidewalk.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Two real programs where zero existed two years ago
- Respite evidence: readmissions drop by half
- Medicaid waiver = sustainable rail
Weaknesses
- 74 beds vs thousands of homeless discharges/yr
- Hope House conversion consumed 100 women’s shelter beds — zero-sum
- Referral-only: street can’t self-present
Opportunities
- Hospital community-benefit co-funding expansion
- Respite as MAT-start + housing-navigation window (captive weeks)
Threats
- Waiver rules shift with federal winds
- Without step-down housing, respite discharges recreate the original problem
Funding
Medicaid (FCS/waiver) + hospital partnership + city contracts. One of the few boxes whose funding model is actually modern — the shortage is beds, not mechanism.
Sources
- NIMRC — medical respite literature review — https://nimrc.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/NIMRC_Medical-Respite-Literature-Review.pdf
- ASPE 2024 — medical respite brief — https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/documents/4b6fd2ef7551721ccbbc0782a8f61b79/medical-respite-programs-experiencing-homelessness.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
8 · Recovery & Transition
The climb out: outpatient care, sober recovery housing, transitional housing, and reentry from jail — the fragile middle passage where support decides whether recovery holds or the dashed red lines pull people back.
Outpatient Treatment (IOP / counseling) PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Where most treatment actually happens: intensive outpatient, counseling, medication management. Frontier Behavioral Health is the region's dominant provider ($70–95M agency). Retention is the battle — housing instability is the #1 reason people fall out.
Capacity: FBH + CAT + CHAS + private providers; slot data ⚠ TBD
Funding: Medicaid (Apple Health), private insurance
Steward: Nonprofit / Private
Where people go from here
- Ongoing Outpatient MH / SUD Care — Stabilized in intensive outpatient, people continue in ongoing care.
- Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses — Outpatient treatment works better with sober housing underneath it.
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Miss appointments while homeless and the case quietly closes — housing instability is the strongest predictor of treatment dropout.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Retention is the whole ballgame — and the workforce is the constraint
Across programs, staying in treatment predicts survival better than any other modifiable factor; buprenorphine discontinuation is followed by spikes in overdose and acute care, and six-month retention ranges wildly (3–88%) depending on program design. The binding constraint is people: Washington's behavioral health agencies reported 29% vacancy and 32% turnover among advanced-degree clinicians; Spokane's Frontier cut outpatient vacancies from 50% to 30% only through deliberate wage/model reform. Most of the county carries federal mental-health shortage designations.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The largest treatment layer: Frontier (16,000 clients), CAT (walk-in, free under 200% FPL), MultiCare/Providence clinics, ABHS, Ideal Option MAT, STARS OP, Revive, LCSNW, NATIVE Project. If it’s billable to Medicaid, it happens here.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Genuine breadth and Medicaid financing
- Low-barrier walk-in options exist (CAT) — rare nationally
Weaknesses
- Waitlists at traditional providers; workforce turnover 44%
- No-show economics punish serving the unstably housed
- Coverage churn breaks care mid-course
Opportunities
- FCS lets outpatient providers add housing/employment services
- Contingency management (the meth evidence) barely deployed
Threats
- Federal Medicaid cuts are aimed at this box’s spine
- Fentanyl-era acuity outruns weekly-appointment models
Funding
Medicaid via five MCOs (the biggest flow on the map), SABG/MHBG block grants, sliding-scale philanthropy. Funded at volume — the mismatch is model-vs-acuity, not dollars alone.
Sources
- Retention range & discontinuation risk (JGIM review) — https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11606-020-06448-z
- WA BH workforce vacancy/turnover — https://www.spokanejournal.com/articles/8-guest-commentary-investment-in-behavioral-health-is-long-overdue-in-washington-state
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Recovery Residences / Oxford Houses PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
Sober, peer-accountable housing during early recovery — the bridge between treatment and independence. Spokane County has 27 Oxford Houses (212 beds) plus operators like Reclaim Project, Revive, and UGM's Anna Ogden Hall. Supply vs. treatment graduations is a key ratio to measure.
Capacity: AUDITED Jul 2026: 27 Oxford Houses / 212 beds countywide + Reclaim Project + Revive + Anna Ogden Hall
Funding: Resident fees, state HCA recovery residence support ⚠ VERIFY
Steward: Nonprofit / Peer-run
Where people go from here
- Transitional & Bridge Housing — From sober house to bridge housing.
- Employment & Vocational Services — Recovery residences push work — many require it.
- Independent Living — The Oxford model's endpoint: independence, typically after 12–18 months of democratic sober living.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Oxford House: the best evidence nobody talks about
A randomized trial (DePaul/Jason et al.) followed 150 people leaving treatment: at 24 months, substance use was 31% for those assigned to Oxford Houses versus 65% for usual aftercare; monthly income more than doubled ($989 vs $440); incarceration fell to a third (3% vs 9%). With high 12-step involvement, abstinence hit 87.5%. Roughly 3,500 houses operate nationally on a self-governing, self-funding model — Spokane County holds 27 of them (212 beds), plus registered residences on the state WAQRR registry.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
27 Oxford Houses (212 beds, RCT-validated model), Reclaim Project (recovery + construction social enterprise), Revive’s houses, UGM’s Anna Ogden Hall. The bridge between treatment and a lease — peer-governed, cheap, chronically undercounted.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Oxford model: self-funded by residents, evidence-backed
- Lived-experience operators (Reclaim, Revive) with real credibility
Weaknesses
- Supply vs treatment-graduation volume unmeasured (⚠ flagged)
- Quality varies outside chartered models; no local registry
- Fentanyl relapse lethality raised the stakes of every house
Opportunities
- HCA recovery-residence support + WAQRR certification growth
- Every new detox/inpatient bed needs a matched recovery bed — plan them together
Threats
- NIMBY + rental-market pressure on group houses
- One overdose in-house can close a good operator
Funding
Resident fees mostly (Oxford ~$120-150/wk), state HCA support ⚠, philanthropy. Barely touches public budgets — which is why nobody plans it, and why it’s the quietest shortage in the recovery chain.
Sources
- Jason et al. — Oxford House RCT — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2888149/
- WA HCA — recovery residence registry — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/program/fact-sheet-recovery-residences.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Transitional & Bridge Housing PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
Time-limited housing with services. CCEW's Catalyst Project (87 rooms, former Quality Inn) is the flagship; Salvation Army's "The Way Out" Bridge Housing Center serves single adults; VOA's Aston-Bleck houses young mothers. Historically ~1% of national CoC awards, transitional housing is the category HUD's 2026 NOFO is set to grow dramatically — Spokane's existing TH book is suddenly a competitive asset.
Capacity: Catalyst 87 rooms; Way Out (60 beds; 167 exits FY2024, ~70% to stable housing); Aston-Bleck; St. Margaret's (18 family units)
Funding: WA Commerce CHG, Right-of-Way funds (legacy), city, HUD CoC TH (growing), philanthropy
Steward: Nonprofit / Faith / CoC
Where people go from here
- Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) — The bridge to permanent supportive housing, for those who need services long-term.
- Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8) — The bridge ends at a voucher — when one exists; the waitlist runs years.
- Affordable / Workforce Housing Supply — Bridge housing into affordable units — supply permitting, which is the catch.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The nuanced evidence — and why HUD's reversal matters here
For typical families, Family Options found TH the most expensive option with no better outcomes — the finding that gutted national TH funding to ~1% of CoC awards. But the same literature holds carve-outs: DV survivors in TH show reduced abuse severity and financial dependence, and youth/recovery-oriented TH remains promising though under-evaluated. HUD's 2026 NOFO now swings the pendulum back toward TH — which makes disciplined design (defined program, defined exit) the difference between Spokane's Catalyst model and expensive limbo.
Capacity & providers
Spokane's quiet strength — suddenly strategic
CCEW's Catalyst Project (87 rooms, former Quality Inn, opened Dec 2022 to absorb Camp Hope) is the flagship; Salvation Army's "The Way Out" Bridge Housing Center serves single adults seeking to exit street life; St. Margaret's (18 family units), VOA's Aston-Bleck (young mothers) and Cannon Hall (youth) round out the book. Nationally, transitional housing has been ~1% of CoC awards; HUD's 2026 NOFO is expected to grow it dramatically. Spokane, unusually, already knows how to run it.
The unit ledger
| Program | Units/rooms | Population |
|---|---|---|
| Catalyst Project — CCEW | 87 | Adults, bridge (ex-Quality Inn) |
| St. Margaret's — CCEW | 18 | Families |
| Cannon Hall (Crosswalk 2.0) — VOA | 18 | Youth 16–20 in school/work |
| Miryam's House — Transitions | 9 | Single women |
| Aston-Bleck — VOA | ⚠ TBD | Young mothers |
| TLC + EduCare — Transitions | ⚠ TBD | Women with children |
| NAOMI (Spokane Valley) | ⚠ TBD | Women & families |
| TOTAL — known transitional units | 132 + ⚠ | Full HIC reconciliation pending |
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Real operating experience across populations (adults, families, youth, mothers)
- Exactly the category HUD is about to fund heavily — Spokane can compete from strength
- Hotel-conversion model proven locally (fast, cheap per unit)
Weaknesses
- Time-limited stays require exits — which the affordable-supply gap blocks
- Legacy Right-of-Way money that built Catalyst is gone; operating base is patchwork
Opportunities
- Aggressive FY2026 NOFO applications: expand TH/bridge capacity with new federal dollars
- Treatment-linked TH (Rising Strong model — parents + children through recovery) fits both HUD direction and Spokane's need
- Position TH explicitly as the jail/hospital/detox discharge destination this map shows missing
Threats
- TH without exit options becomes long-stay shelter under another name
- Rebalance is litigated/political — plan for NOFO volatility either way
Path forward & best practices
The design principle that separates good TH from warehousing: a defined program (treatment, work, education), a defined timeline, and a pre-identified exit. Spokane's move is to grow TH as the system's connective tissue — the discharge destination for jail, detox, and hospital flows — while pairing every expansion with exit capacity (RRH slots, voucher priority, recovery housing).
Funding
Today: WA Commerce CHG, city contracts, philanthropy, legacy Right-of-Way capital, HUD CoC TH lines (St. Margaret's $67,755 FY23, Alexandria's House $76,201 FY23). Tomorrow: the NOFO's rebalanced TH/SSO categories are the biggest new-money opportunity on this map — worth a coordinated multi-provider Spokane application strategy.
Sources
- Gavin Cooley — CCEW NOFO memo (Catalyst, St. Margaret's) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Gavin Cooley — VOA NOFO memo (Aston-Bleck, Cannon Hall) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- HUD No. 26-031 — TH expansion signal — https://www.hud.gov/news/hud-no-26-031
- Commerce — Right of Way funds / Camp Hope closure — https://www.commerce.wa.gov/spokanes-camp-hope-permanently-closing-as-final-individuals-transition-into-new-housing-options/
- NAEH — Family Options implications — https://endhomelessness.org/resources/research-and-analysis/findings-and-implications-of-the-family-options-study/
- DV transitional housing outcomes study — https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10511482.2021.1947865
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Rapid Rehousing PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
Short-term rent subsidy plus case management to move people quickly to a lease. SNAP, CCEW (families, $525K FY23), and Family Promise hold the main RRH lines. Works for lighter-need households; struggles when rents outrun the subsidy cliff. RRH sits inside the "permanent housing" category HUD's 2026 NOFO would cap at ~30%.
Capacity: SNAP, CCEW ($524,687 FY23 confirmed), Family Promise RRH lines; households/yr ⚠ TBD
Funding: HUD CoC/ESG, state CHG — exposed to NOFO rebalance
Steward: CoC / Nonprofit
Where people go from here
- Affordable / Workforce Housing Supply — Rapid rehousing's exit: an affordable unit the subsidy tapers into.
- Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8) — RRH households often transition to vouchers before the subsidy ends.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What the gold-standard study actually found
The Family Options Study (2,282 families, randomized) is the field's benchmark: permanent subsidies prevented returns to homelessness; rapid rehousing — though the cheapest option — did not outperform usual care, and ~28% of RRH families returned to homelessness within a year of exit (~36% by month 37). Translation: RRH is a genuinely good tool for households whose only problem was a financial shock, and a set-up-to-fail tool where rents outrun wages or needs run deeper.
Capacity & providers
The lines
Rapid rehousing — short-term rent subsidy plus case management — is held locally by SNAP (RRH, $200K–$500K est.), CCEW (family RRH, $524,687 confirmed FY23), and Family Promise (family lines). It works well for households whose crisis is primarily economic; it struggles when the subsidy cliff meets Spokane rents, or when behavioral health needs outrun light-touch case management. RRH sits inside the "permanent housing" category HUD's NOFO would cap at ~30% — directly exposed.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Cheapest housing intervention per household; strong fit for the eviction-inflow population
- Experienced local operators across singles and families
Weaknesses
- Subsidy cliff into a 25,000-unit-short market recycles failures
- Success rates by household type unpublished locally
Opportunities
- Target RRH tightly to economic-crisis households (its evidence-based sweet spot) and route higher-acuity cases to TH/PSH
- Pair with employment services (the NOFO's self-sufficiency emphasis) for durable exits
Threats
- NOFO cap threatens the funding line itself — SNAP's and Family Promise's lines are the region's most exposed after PSH services
- Rent inflation shortens what a fixed subsidy buys
Path forward & best practices
Defend RRH with evidence: publish 12- and 24-month retention by household type. Nationally, RRH shows strong results for families and economic-crisis households — exactly Spokane's eviction inflow. The NOFO fight is winnable where the data shows the tool matched to the right population.
Funding
HUD CoC (NOFO-exposed), ESG, state CHG. If the cap lands hard, candidates for backfill: CHG flexibility, recording fees, and HEART — but the honest answer is prioritization, not full replacement.
Sources
- Gavin Cooley — Other Providers NOFO memo (SNAP, Family Promise RRH) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Gavin Cooley — CCEW NOFO memo (family RRH $524,687) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- HUD No. 26-031 — https://www.hud.gov/news/hud-no-26-031
- HUD — Family Options Study — https://www.huduser.gov/portal/family_options_study.html
- HUD — RRH returns supplemental analysis — https://www.huduser.gov/portal/sites/default/files/pdf/supplemental-analysis-rapid-re-housing.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Reentry Programs & Housing PARTIAL Criminal Justice & Courts
Housing, employment, ID, and treatment linkage after release. Revive Reentry (founded by formerly incarcerated Spokane residents) runs DOC-approved transitional/recovery housing; DOC operates Brownstone Reentry Center and Eleanor Chase House (women, ~55 beds); CAT runs a jail reentry MAT bridge. The difference between a release plan and a recidivism statistic.
Capacity: Revive (DOC-approved housing); Brownstone + Eleanor Chase (~55 beds); CAT jail reentry
Funding: DOC, Medicaid FCS, county, MacArthur grant (CAT)
Steward: County / DOC / Nonprofit
Where people go from here
- Transitional & Bridge Housing — Reentry programs place people into bridge housing.
- Employment & Vocational Services — A job is reentry's strongest anti-recidivism tool.
Where the system leaks
- Spokane County Jail — Booking — Recidivism: without housing and income, the system re-arrests what it failed to house.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Housing is the recidivism intervention
The national curve is brutal — 68% of released prisoners rearrested within three years, 83% within nine — but Washington beats it (22.2% three-year return-to-prison, among the nation's lower rates). The lever is housing: formerly incarcerated people are ~10× more likely to be homeless; Ohio's reentry supportive-housing participants were 40% less likely to be rearrested; and WSU's evaluation of Washington's own Reentry Housing Pilot found significantly reduced new convictions and readmissions.
Capacity & providers
Who's doing the work
Revive Reentry Services / Center for Returning Citizens — founded 2015 by formerly incarcerated Spokane residents — runs DOC-approved transitional and recovery housing with SUD treatment, peer support, case management and employment help (heavily Medicaid FCS and DOC funded). WA DOC operates two Spokane reentry centers: Brownstone (223 S. Browne) and Eleanor Chase House (women, ~55 beds) with work release and treatment. CAT runs the jail reentry MAT bridge. County jail-side release planning scope: to verify. The Safe & Healthy roadmap names formalized warm handoffs at release as a core recommendation.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Lived-experience leadership (Revive) — credibility money can't buy
- DOC facilities embed work release + treatment locally
- Reentry aligns with both HUD NOFO priorities and Medicaid waiver expansion
Weaknesses
- Jail (not prison) releases — the higher-volume flow — have the weaker planning infrastructure
- Housing is the choke point: landlords screen out records
- No published recidivism-by-pathway data locally
Opportunities
- Medicaid reentry waiver will pay for pre-release case management — build the program now
- "Reentry housing first": dedicated transitional beds for jail releases (the inflow node this map shows feeding the street)
- Fair-chance landlord incentives via HEART or county funds
Threats
- A night release under jail Critical Status defeats every careful plan upstream
- DOC budget cycles can shrink center capacity without local say
Path forward & best practices
The measurable goal mirrors the ITA node: no release to the street. Sequence: universal in-custody release planning (ID, Medicaid activation, MAT bridge, housing referral) → guaranteed same-day bed for homeless releases → 90-day peer-navigated follow-through. Every element exists in Spokane in miniature; the work is universalizing it.
Funding
DOC (centers, supervision, Revive contracts); Medicaid FCS (housing/employment supports); county + MacArthur grant history (CAT); coming: Medicaid reentry waiver. Philanthropy underweights this space — a pitchable gap.
Sources
- Revive Reentry — https://revivereentry.com/
- WA DOC — reentry centers (Brownstone, Eleanor Chase) — https://doc.wa.gov/about-doc/locations/reentry-centers/about
- CAT — jail reentry program — https://catspokane.org/
- Safe & Healthy roadmap coverage (warm handoffs) — https://www.inlander.com/news/spokane-task-force-presents-14-ideas-to-improve-criminal-justice-and-behavioral-health-systems/article_2409d2fc-c536-48fe-a8ef-0d59a67c509d.html
- BJS — 9-year recidivism follow-up — https://bjs.ojp.gov/library/publications/2018-update-prisoner-recidivism-9-year-follow-period-2005-2014
- Lutze et al. — WA Reentry Housing Pilot (WSU) — https://s3.wp.wsu.edu/uploads/sites/436/2014/11/Criminal-Justice-and-Behavior-2014-Lutze-471-91.pdf
- Prison Policy — 10x homelessness risk — https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/housing.html
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Community Supervision (Probation / DOC) N/A Criminal Justice & Courts
Court-ordered supervision after conviction. Can be a lever into treatment — or a revolving door back to jail on technical violations, especially for people without housing (hard to make appointments with no address).
Capacity: N/A
Funding: City/county/state
Steward: City / County / State
Where people go from here
- Reentry Programs & Housing — Supervision done right connects people to reentry supports.
Where the system leaks
- Spokane County Jail — Booking — Technical violations — a missed check-in, a failed UA — recycle people into jail at full custody prices.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The technical-violation trap
Nationally, ~280,000 people sit in prison on any given day for supervision violations — a quarter of them purely technical (missed appointments, failed check-ins), at $9.3B a year. For someone without an address, standard conditions are a scheduled failure. Washington runs comparatively lean (3-year return-to-prison fell to 22.2%), but the mechanism operates in every county, including this one, wherever supervision meets homelessness.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
City probation (municipal) and county/state supervision manage the conditions layer: check-ins, UAs, treatment mandates. Done well it’s structured accountability; done to the unhoused it’s a compliance obstacle course with jail at the bottom.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Leverage: supervision can require and fund treatment linkage
- CSG data shows violations are a manageable cost center
Weaknesses
- Conditions assume an address, a phone, a calendar
- Technical violations recycle people to jail ($150/day) without new crimes
Opportunities
- Housing-first probation pilots (report-in + navigator) cut violations
- Align conditions with warm-handoff standard (B4)
Threats
- Caseload growth from enforcement wave
- Violation-driven jail days quietly inflate The Bill
Funding
City/county general funds. Cheap per head, expensive per failure — each technical-violation jail lap costs more than a month of the supervision that produced it.
Sources
- CSG — supervision violations & cost — https://csgjusticecenter.org/publications/confined-costly/
- WA DOC recidivism measure — https://doc.wa.gov/sites/default/files/2026-03/400-RE010.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Intensive Case Management / Wraparound PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
One accountable human helping navigate everything else on this map. Frontier BH is the services backbone across partner PSH buildings; Apple Health Foundational Community Supports (FCS) — Washington's first-in-nation Medicaid benefit — pays for supportive-housing and supported-employment services.
Capacity: FBH services backbone; ACT team slots ⚠ TBD
Funding: Medicaid FCS, SCRBH, HUD CoC supportive services (NOFO-exposed)
Steward: Nonprofit / SCRBH
Where people go from here
- Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) — Case managers shepherd the PSH application; the paperwork alone defeats people who face it unaided.
- Benefits Enrollment / SOAR / Payee Services — The Master Key work: SSI/SSDI, Medicaid, SOAR — unlocking the federal money a person is already owed.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The connective tissue, evidence edition
High-fidelity wraparound — ACT teams for the most acute, critical-time intervention at transitions — is among the best-evidenced structures in community mental health (the AOT results in the LRA box are really ACT results wearing a court order). Washington's FCS Medicaid benefit was built to pay for exactly this tenancy-support layer, making case management the rare box with a durable funding mechanism already in statute.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The connective tissue: SNAP coordinated assessment, FCS navigators (Revive, CCEW, Frontier, CAT), shelter case managers, CARES, Hot Spotters (ConsistentCare). Every successful exit on this map has one of these people behind it.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- FCS made navigation Medicaid-billable — sustainable at last
- Hot Spotters model = SHTF C4, already local
Weaknesses
- Caseloads swamp fidelity; turnover resets relationships
- No shared record: each navigator rediscovers the same person
- Coordinated entry queues without enough units to assign
Opportunities
- B1 data system would multiply every navigator’s reach
- By-name high-utilizer roster (a few hundred people) is finishable work
Threats
- Burnout (90%+ reported) hollows the workforce
- Grant churn severs relationships mid-journey
Funding
Medicaid FCS + CHG/city contracts + CoC supportive services. The best-leveraged workforce dollars in the system — and the first ones grant cycles destabilize.
Sources
- HCA — Foundational Community Supports — https://www.hca.wa.gov/billers-providers-partners/program-information-providers/foundational-community-supports
- AOT/ACT evaluation (Duke) — https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/ps.62.5.pss6205_0504
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
9 · Housing & Stability
Where people land and stay: permanent supportive housing, vouchers, adult family homes, affordable housing — and the supports (peers, employment, benefits, faith community) that keep them there. For many, stability here IS success.
Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
Permanent housing with embedded services for the highest-need individuals. Spokane's stock: CCEW ~472 Haven units across 7 buildings, VOA ~110 units (Marilee 50, Hope House 31, scattered 29), ~822 PSH beds countywide (approx.). Every building sits on a stack: SHA project-based vouchers + HUD CoC services dollars + Apple Health FCS + state capital. HUD's 2026 NOFO cap on permanent housing (~30% vs today's 87–90%) threatens the services layer — a potential ~$3M local loss starting Aug 2027.
Capacity: ≈822 PSH beds countywide (⚠ verify vs HIC); CCEW ~472 units; VOA ~110 units
Funding: HUD CoC ($6.33M line, at risk), SHA PBVs, Apple Health FCS, LIHTC/HTF capital, philanthropy
Steward: CoC / CCEW / VOA / SHA
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Does PSH work? Spokane's own numbers
Spokane's PSH stock grew ~41% from 2015 to 2023 — the Haven buildings, the Marilee, and voucher-layered projects — which is part of why chronic street homelessness didn't grow even faster through the same period.
The city's 2025 LSA shows PSH-to-independent-housing exits jumped from 37% to 57% year over year — unusually strong (nationally, PSH is judged mostly on retention, where ~90%+ one-year retention is typical of good programs). Returns to homelessness system-wide fell 7%→4%. The national evidence base: PSH reliably ends homelessness for the chronically homeless disabled population and reduces ER/jail utilization, with cost offsets that typically cover much (not always all) of program cost.
Capacity & providers
The stock
Roughly 822 PSH beds countywide (approximate — verify against the Housing Inventory Count). Catholic Charities Eastern Washington: ~472 units across seven Haven buildings ($10–14M/yr operations + $3–5M onsite services). VOA: ~110 units (Marilee 50, Hope House PSH 31, scattered-site 29). Every building sits on a stack: SHA project-based vouchers + HUD CoC services dollars + Apple Health FCS + LIHTC/HTF capital + philanthropy + diocesan land. Frontier BH staffs services in partner buildings.
The NOFO threat, precisely
HUD's FY2026 NOFO is expected to cap permanent housing (PSH + RRH) near 30% of CoC funds versus today's 87–90%. The buildings don't vanish — capital is already sunk — but the services layer that makes PSH work for disabled, chronically homeless tenants is exactly what CoC renewals fund. Estimated local exposure ≈$3M starting with Aug 2027 contracts. If services collapse, PSH becomes unsupported affordable housing with the same tenants and none of the support — and SHA's vouchers are layered on every one of those buildings.
The unit ledger, by building
| Building / program | Units | Operator |
|---|---|---|
| Gonzaga Family Haven | 73 | CCEW — family PSH |
| The Sisters Haven | 75 | CCEW (⚠ campus overlap w/ Mother Teresa pin) |
| Pope Francis Haven (Valley) | 51 | CCEW |
| Father Bach Haven | 50 | CCEW |
| Buder Haven | ~50 | CCEW |
| Mother Teresa Haven | 48 | CCEW |
| Donna Hanson + remaining Haven stock | ~125 ⚠ | CCEW — balance to reported ~472 |
| SUBTOTAL — CCEW Havens | ~472 | |
| The Marilee | 50 | VOA |
| Hope House PSH apartments | 60 | VOA |
| Scattered-site PSH | 29 | VOA |
| Vets on Lacey (2026) | 12 | VOA — veterans |
| SUBTOTAL — VOA | ~151 | |
| Other operators (Salem Arms, Pioneer Trueblood units…) | ⚠ TBD | |
| TOTAL — countywide PSH | ~822 ⚠ | 2023 HIC shows 1,122 PSH beds — reconcile units-vs-beds & vintage |
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Substantial, professionally operated stock with diversified capital
- CCEW's non-HUD revenue base and treatment-linked programs cushion the shock
- FCS (Medicaid) already pays part of the services bill — the replacement mechanism exists in embryo
Weaknesses
- Services layer hostage to a single federal competition
- No published outcome data (retention, exits, deaths) to defend the model locally
- Concentrated downtown footprint fuels neighborhood politics
Opportunities
- Shift services financing from CoC grants toward Medicaid FCS billing — the durable fix regardless of NOFO outcome
- State/local bridge fund for the 2027 services cliff (HEART, 0.1%, settlement candidates)
- Publish PSH outcomes to defend what works
Threats
- ≈$3M services cliff Aug 2027
- SHA referral pauses/waitlist closure choke tenant income streams
- If PSH destabilizes, its tenants have nowhere to go but this map's far-left boxes
Path forward & best practices
Two moves, in order. Defensive: quantify the exact services exposure building-by-building (your NOFO memos already frame this) and pre-negotiate the FCS/Medicaid conversion plus a local bridge. Offensive: use the NOFO's new categories to fund what Spokane actually lacks (transitional, treatment-linked, outreach) rather than fighting only to preserve shares. The provider mix that wins is the one that can do both.
Funding
The PSH funding stack (per your NOFO memos, directional)
| Line | Est. annual | Source / note |
|---|---|---|
| CCEW PSH portfolio operations (Havens) | $10–14M | SHA project-based vouchers, HUD CoC renewals, Apple Health FCS, tenant rent |
| CCEW onsite supportive services | $3–5M | HUD CoC services, FCS, city/county contracts, philanthropy — the NOFO-exposed layer |
| VOA PSH (Marilee, Hope House PSH, scattered) | $2.1–3.2M | Incl. confirmed FY23 CoC lines: Samaritan $849,735 + WA0111 $364,518 |
| SUBTOTAL — PSH operations & services | ≈$15–22M/yr | Across ~582 CCEW+VOA units (≈822 beds countywide incl. others) |
| Capital stacks (sunk) | one-time | LIHTC equity + state HTF + city HOME + philanthropy + donated diocesan land |
| AT RISK — FY2026 NOFO permanent-housing cap | ≈$3M/yr | Services layer, from Aug 2027 contracts — the number to defend or replace |
Sources
- Gavin Cooley — CCEW NOFO memo (472 units, funding stack) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- Gavin Cooley — VOA NOFO memo (~110 units) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- City — 2026 update (NOFO ~$3M exposure) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2026/06/15/city-provides-update-on-housing-and-homelessness-initiatives/
- HUD No. 26-031 — CoC rebalance — https://www.hud.gov/news/hud-no-26-031
- HUD Exchange — WA-502 awards — https://www.hudexchange.info/grantees/wa-502/
- HUD Housing Inventory Count, WA-502 (PSH bed trend chart) — https://files.hudexchange.info/reports/published/CoC_HIC_CoC_WA-502-2023_WA_2023.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Housing Choice Vouchers (Section 8) PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
Spokane Housing Authority administers 5,749 vouchers (~$75–95M/yr federal flow) — the region's biggest housing subsidy by far. But all waitlists are CLOSED (last opened Aug 2024, no reopening announced), and SHA paused voucher referrals in Oct 2024 amid budget concerns. A voucher in hand still needs a landlord willing to take it.
Capacity: 5,749 HCVs; waitlists closed since Aug 2024; referrals paused Oct 2024
Funding: HUD Section 8 appropriations (~$75–95M/yr through SHA)
Steward: Federal via SHA
Where people go from here
- Independent Living — Voucher in hand, an apartment becomes a home.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
A lottery dressed as a program
Nationally, only ~1 in 4 eligible households receives federal rental assistance; average waitlist ~2.5 years. Even a voucher in hand isn't housing: national lease-up success fell to ~57–61%, and paired-testing studies found landlords refusing voucher holders at 67–78% in cities without source-of-income laws (Washington has one — RCW 59.18.255 — which helps but doesn't cure). Spokane's own history: the waitlist closed for eight years after ~5,000 applied in three days in 2016; ~10,000 applied at the 2024 reopening.
Capacity & providers
The biggest housing program nobody can get into
Spokane Housing Authority administers 5,749 Housing Choice Vouchers (~$75–95M/yr of federal money — dwarfing every other stream on this map) plus HUD-VASH, emergency vouchers, and the project-based vouchers layered on nearly every PSH building. But: all waitlists are closed (last opened one week in Aug 2024; no reopening announced), and SHA paused voucher referrals in Oct 2024 amid budget concerns. SHA owns no public housing — vouchers are the whole game.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Enormous, recurring federal flow with local administrative control
- PBV layering makes SHA the silent partner in every PSH success
Weaknesses
- Closed waitlists mean the main exit ramp from homelessness is roped off
- Federal appropriations set voucher counts; local control is at the margins
- Landlord acceptance is a second gate even with a voucher in hand
Opportunities
- Landlord incentive fund + risk mitigation (damage guarantees) measurably raise acceptance — proven in Seattle/King County
- Project-basing more vouchers converts waitlist lottery into targeted supply
- SHA transparency: publish utilization, referral status, and PBV commitments
Threats
- Federal voucher funding volatility (2025 referral pause is the local preview)
- Rising rents erode voucher purchasing power against payment standards
Path forward & best practices
Locally, the levers are utilization and acceptance: every funded-but-unused voucher is free money left on the table, and every landlord refusal shrinks effective supply. A city/county landlord-partnership fund plus SHA data transparency are cheap, immediate wins while federal appropriations set the ceiling.
Funding
HUD Section 8 appropriations (~$75–95M/yr through SHA) — separate statutory authority, untouched by the CoC NOFO. HUD-VASH (VA referrals), Emergency Housing Vouchers (expiring nationally), Mainstream vouchers. The regional policy question: is SHA's allocation fully deployed, and what would it take to reopen a waitlist?
Sources
- SHA — waitlists (closed) — https://www.spokanehousing.org/housing-choice-vouchers/waiting-lists/
- Affordable Housing Online — SHA profile (5,749 HCVs) — https://affordablehousingonline.com/housing-authority/Washington/Spokane-Housing-Authority/WA055
- KHQ — SHA referral pause (Oct 2024) — https://www.khq.com/news/spokane-housing-voucher-referrals-paused-amid-budget-concerns/article_2c5e30d0-82ab-11ef-98d5-6b061c28fec1.html
- Gavin Cooley — Other Providers NOFO memo (SHA analysis) — file: Homelessness/NOFO 2026/
- CBPP — 1 in 4 eligible assisted; waitlists — https://www.cbpp.org/research/housing/families-wait-years-for-housing-vouchers-due-to-inadequate-funding
- Furman — voucher success rates — https://www.furmancenter.org/publication/success-rates-in-the-housing-choice-voucher-program-2018-2022/
- Urban — landlord voucher refusal testing — https://www.urban.org/policy-centers/metropolitan-housing-and-communities-policy-center/projects/housingchoicevoucherdiscrimination
- Spokesman — SHA 2024 reopening after 8 years — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2024/apr/29/thousands-expected-to-apply-for-housing-vouchers-i/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Affordable / Workforce Housing Supply GAP Housing & Shelter
The system's exit ramp — and its biggest gap. Spokane is short ~25,000 housing units; the county needs ~28,552 more over the coming decade, including ~4,400 units at 0–30% AMI in the city alone. The county produced only 57% of needed low-income units 2020–2023. Every upstream program backs up when there is nothing affordable to exit into.
Capacity: ≈25,000-unit shortage; 28,552 needed/decade; 4,400 deeply-affordable units needed (city)
Funding: LIHTC, state HTF, HOME ($1.14M), city HEART (~$2.5M latest round, 70 units), Valley ~$8M allocated
Steward: All jurisdictions
Where people go from here
- Independent Living — The quiet ending the whole map wants: a lease, a key, a life.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The market that makes the map necessary
Rent up ~39% in seven years. Vacancy tells a more hopeful recent story: ~2.8% (2019) loosening toward a projected 8%+ in 2025 as new supply delivers — and rent growth has cooled accordingly. HB 1217 (2025) now caps annual increases (2026: 9.68%), with new construction exempt 12 years. The research consensus (GAO, Zillow studies): regional homelessness rates track rents and vacancy more tightly than they track poverty, weather, or drug use — market-level supply is the strongest single lever.
Capacity & providers
The exit ramp that isn't there
Spokane is short roughly 25,000 housing units. The county needs ~28,552 more over the coming decade (~2,855/yr); the city's PlanSpokane 2046 must accommodate ~4,400 units at 0–30% AMI — the tier that homeless households actually exit into. The county produced only 57% of needed low-income units 2020–2023. Every upstream box on this map backs up against this wall: RRH subsidies end into unaffordable rents, voucher holders can't find units, PSH can't graduate anyone.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Broad political recognition across party lines that supply is THE issue
- City zoning reforms (middle housing) already moving
- HEART fund + Valley's ~$8M show local capital willingness
Weaknesses
- Deeply-affordable (0–30% AMI) units don't pencil without subsidy — the market alone will never build them
- LIHTC/HTF pipelines are slow, competitive, and oversubscribed
- Construction costs and interest rates against a modest local tax base
Opportunities
- HB 1406/1590-style local sales-tax credits for affordable housing (verify current utilization)
- Faith-owned land ("yes in God's backyard") — diocese/congregation parcels + HTF is a Spokane-shaped opportunity
- Conversion plays (hotels, nursing homes) proved out locally by Catalyst and UGM
Threats
- Population growth outpacing production locks in the deficit
- Every year of undersupply feeds the eviction inflow at the far left of this map
Path forward & best practices
The honest frame for a mayoral platform: homelessness response without housing supply is a treadmill. Targets that matter: units/year at 0–30% AMI (the homeless-exit tier), permitting time, and public-land/faith-land parcels activated. Houston's exit-driven system worked because units existed to exit into.
Funding
Capital: LIHTC equity, state HTF, city HOME ($1.14M/yr) + HEART (~$2.5M latest round → 70 units), Valley ~$8M allocated, county HHAA capital share. The gap: deeply-affordable operating subsidies — which is what vouchers/PBVs (see Section 8) exist to cover, closing the circle between these two nodes.
Sources
- KXLY — 25,000-unit shortage — https://www.kxly.com/news/local-news/packed-in-spokane-s-housing-supply-still-limited-short-25-000-housing-units/article_96d4684a-883f-5d04-85b6-4fab4512db82.html
- PlanSpokane 2046 — affordable housing needs — https://my.spokanecity.org/planspokane/housing-needs/accommodating-affordable-housing/
- Center Square — county low-income production 57% of need — https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_69a0364a-116e-11ef-8b30-e7b1595fb65f.html
- City — HEART round, 70 units (Jun 2026) — https://my.spokanecity.org/news/releases/2026/06/15/city-provides-update-on-housing-and-homelessness-initiatives/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Adult Family Homes & Guardianship PARTIAL Housing & Shelter
A large, quiet piece of the stability system: small state-licensed homes (up to 6–8 residents) scattered across Spokane's neighborhoods, housing adults with qualifying disabilities — elderly, developmental disabilities, serious mental illness — funded by Medicaid waivers plus the resident's SSI. Roughly 2,200 Spokane County adults live under court-appointed guardianship or conservatorship, many of them in these homes. Specialty-contract AFHs (ECS/SBS rates up to ~$420+/day) are where Eastern State Hospital discharges land — making this network the invisible back door of the involuntary-treatment system.
Capacity: VERIFIED from live DSHS data (Jul 2026): 612 licensed AFHs in Spokane County ≈ 3,500+ licensed beds — larger than the entire shelter system. ~2,200 under guardianship countywide (Dec 2025). See them all: Regional Asset Map → Adult family homes (live layer)
Funding: Medicaid daily rates $126–$242 (CARE level) + behavioral add-ons (ECS $254/day; SBS +$165/day); resident pays $885/mo room & board from SSI, keeps $108.74/mo personal allowance
Steward: State-licensed / County courts
Where the system leaks
- Unsheltered — Streets, Camps, Vehicles — Placement breakdown: an adult family home discharge with no next placement puts the most vulnerable people back outside.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The quiet network
Adult Family Homes are ordinary houses, licensed by DSHS for up to 6 residents (expandable to 8 after two years and clean inspections, RCW 70.128.066), scattered through residential neighborhoods. Statewide the sector is booming — 3,337 homes (2020) → 4,844 (2024), +45%. Spokane's exact count needs a pull from the DSHS locator, but directory listings suggest roughly 300–450 homes in the Spokane area — on the order of 2,000 beds, which would make this network bigger than the county's entire shelter system.
How the money works (the "flexibility" that makes it grow)
| Line | Amount | Source / note |
|---|---|---|
| Medicaid daily rate to the home (CARE level A-Low → E-High) | $125.67–$242.05/day | ALTSA waivers (COPES, New Freedom, Residential Support) + Community First Choice; Spokane = "Standard" geographic tier (7/1/2025 rates) |
| Expanded Community Services (ECS) behavioral rate | $254.33/day | For state-hospital dischargees / diversions |
| Specialized Behavior Support add-on | +$165/day | ECS + 6–8 hrs/day 1:1 staffing — the hardest-to-place clients |
| HCA 1915(i) intensive behavioral tiers | $36–$528/day | MCO-paid; plus Meaningful Day +$40/day |
| What the resident pays | $885.26/mo | Room & board from their SSI check; they keep a $108.74/mo personal needs allowance (2026) |
| Annualized public cost per behavioral-specialty bed | ≈$93K–$153K/yr | ECS to ECS+SBS range — comparable to a state hospital step-down at a fraction of ESH's cost |
The guardianship layer
Many AFH residents cannot direct their own care or finances, so courts appoint decision-makers under RCW 11.130 (since 2022: guardians for the person, conservators for the estate). Professional guardians are certified by the state Supreme Court's CPG Board (UW certificate program, background checks); indigent adults get the Office of Public Guardianship — which meets only ~9–11% of estimated statewide need. Spokane County has ~2,200 people under guardianship or conservatorship, audited by the Superior Court's Guardianship Monitoring Program (est. ~2000; 2 staff + volunteer auditors + EWU accounting students — a nationally noted model). Guardian fees for Medicaid clients are capped at $235/mo, paid from the client's own participation.
Capacity & providers
Who's in the system
The homes: hundreds of small, mostly family-run licensed businesses (DSHS locator lists specialties: dementia, developmental disability, mental health). The specialty tier: ECS/SBS-contracted homes take state-hospital dischargees under ALTSA contracts (the GOSH program was restricted in 2023 to state-hospital dischargees only). The guardians: certified professional guardians and the Office of Public Guardianship (Spokane was an original 2007 pilot site); Spokane Superior Court's Guardianship Monitoring Program audits annual reports. The pipeline: ESH/E&T discharge planners, hospital social workers, and DSHS HCS caseworkers place clients; placements can take months for behavioral clients even at premium rates.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Large, distributed, neighborhood-integrated capacity — no NIMBY mega-facility fights
- Premium behavioral rates (ECS/SBS) actually exist — the funding tool is built
- Spokane's court monitoring program is a 25-year national model
- Sector growing fast statewide (+45% in 4 years)
Weaknesses
- Nobody publishes a Spokane bed count or vacancy data — invisible to system planning (like UGM, but Medicaid-funded)
- Discharges/evictions happen without court process or appeal rights — a documented homelessness inflow
- Guardianship oversight is thin: 81 grievances statewide in 2024, zero sanctions
- Public guardianship meets ~10% of need — people with no family and no funds wait
Opportunities
- Add AFH capacity to the by-name/coordinated-entry picture: a live vacancy registry for behavioral-specialty beds
- Use ECS/SBS contracting as the step-down engine for the ITA/LRA population this map shows recycling to the street
- Expand OPG contracting in Spokane — guardianship is often the missing key that unlocks an AFH placement
- Fold AFH discharge notification into the warm-handoff protocols (Safe & Healthy B4)
Threats
- A single WAC/rate change in Olympia can destabilize hundreds of small operators at once
- Workforce: 1:1 SBS staffing at $178/day add-on competes with fast food wages
- Discharge-rights reform died in the legislature (HB 1859) — the eviction leak continues
Path forward & best practices
Three moves: (1) count it — a DSHS locator pull gives Spokane's exact home/bed inventory in an afternoon; (2) connect it — a behavioral-bed vacancy registry linking E&T/ESH discharge planners, the jail, and coordinated entry to specialty AFH openings; (3) protect the exits — local warm-handoff agreements so no AFH discharge lands on the street unannounced. The state already pays premium rates; Spokane's job is wiring this capacity into the rest of the map.
Funding
See the rate table in Background & data. Stack summary: Medicaid (ALTSA waivers + CFC + 1915(i)) pays the home's daily rate; SSI pays the resident's $885/mo room & board; guardian fees ($235/mo cap for Medicaid clients) come from the resident's participation; state general fund covers OPG for the indigent. Every dollar is state or federal — country and city budgets barely touch this system, which is partly why local planning forgets it exists.
Sources
- DSHS AFH Locator (for the definitive Spokane count — ⚠ to pull) — https://fortress.wa.gov/dshs/adsaapps/lookup/AFHAdvLookup.aspx
- DSHS — About Adult Family Homes — https://www.dshs.wa.gov/altsa/residential-care-services/about-adult-family-homes
- 2025–27 AFH Council CBA (daily rates, ECS, SBS) — https://ofm.wa.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/default/files/public/labor/agreements/25-27/nse_afhc.pdf
- HCA — income standards (room & board $885.26, PNA $108.74) — https://www.hca.wa.gov/assets/free-or-low-cost/income-standards.pdf
- DSHS — specialty contracts (ECS/SBS; state hospital discharge pipeline) — https://www.dshs.wa.gov/altsa/home-and-community-services/residential-long-term-care-facilities-specialty-contracts
- Columbian — AFH/ALF discharges creating homelessness; +45% sector growth — https://www.columbian.com/news/2025/jan/18/vulnerable-people-quietly-kicked-out-of-clark-countys-adult-family-homes-and-assisted-living-facilities/
- SPR — Spokane Guardianship Monitoring Program 25 years; ~2,200 under guardianship — https://www.spokanepublicradio.org/regional-news/2025-12-13/spokane-county-marks-25-years-of-protecting-vulnerable-individuals
- Spokane County — Guardianship Monitoring Program — https://www.spokanecounty.gov/1162/Guardianship-Monitoring-Program
- RCW 11.130 — Uniform Guardianship Act — https://app.leg.wa.gov/rcw/default.aspx?cite=11.130&full=true
- CPGC Board 2024 Annual Report (81 grievances, 8 Spokane) — https://www.courts.wa.gov/content/PublicUpload/CPGB%20Annual%20Reports/2024%20CPGCB%20Annual%20Report.pdf
- Office of Public Guardianship FAQ (caseload caps, ~10% of need) — https://www.courts.wa.gov/content/publicUpload/Office%20of%20Public%20Guardianship/Office%20of%20Public%20Guardianship%20-%20FAQs.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Independent Living N/A Housing & Shelter
Market or subsidized housing without ongoing program involvement — the fullest version of the far right edge, reached by fewer than the map might imply. Many people land, and stay, one box to the left — and stability there still counts as success.
Capacity: N/A — outcome
Funding: N/A
Steward: Outcome
Where people go from here
- The Destination: a Clean, Safe & Healthy Community — Every person housed is also a sidewalk, storefront, and neighborhood recovered — the destination is mutual.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
What "success" honestly looks like
The far right edge is real but smaller than hoped: even strong systems graduate a minority to fully unsupported living, and Spokane's best local number — PSH residents stepping up to independent housing at 57% of exits (2025 LSA) — is exceptional precisely because it's rare. For many with severe disabilities, permanent supportive settings ARE the destination, and stability there is victory, not failure.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The graduation box: people housed without subsidy — working, renting, gone from every caseload. The system’s only true exit, and its least-measured outcome.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- It happens constantly — most homelessness ends here, quietly
- Family Promise/Way Out style programs graduate people here on purpose
Weaknesses
- No system tracks post-exit stability beyond 12 months
- Benefits cliffs punish the last step into full independence
Opportunities
- Alumni supports (Village model) are cheap insurance on every prior dollar
- Publishing returns-to-homelessness by program would reward what works
Threats
- Rent market can un-graduate people faster than programs graduate them
- Success invisibility starves the political case for what produced it
Funding
Unfunded — definitionally. The policy ask is measurement money: HMIS follow-up so the region knows which investments actually land people here.
Sources
- Spokane 2025 LSA (PSH→independent 57%) — https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2026/jan/30/spokane-reports-more-homeless-people-are-getting-i/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Peer Support & Recovery Community PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
People with lived experience supporting others: recovery cafés, peer navigators, 12-step networks. The Safe & Healthy roadmap explicitly calls for peer involvement and warm handoffs across systems. Cheap, credible, and central to preventing the loop back.
Capacity: ⚠ PLACEHOLDER — TBD
Funding: HCA peer supports, philanthropy
Steward: Peer-run / Nonprofit
The full deep-dive
Background & data
Lived experience as clinical infrastructure
Systematic reviews find peer support improves engagement, housing retention, and provider relationships while reducing substance-related harm and inpatient use — modest effect sizes, exceptional cost profile, unmatched credibility. Washington was an early adopter (Medicaid-reimbursable peer services since 2005) and professionalized the field July 2025 with the new DOH Certified Peer Specialist credential. The Safe & Healthy roadmap's B3 ("integrate peers at each step") is this box, written into regional policy.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Peer Spokane (1222 N Post), Recovery Café, CAT’s peer staff, MHA’s Speakout — certified peer specialists and recovery community where lived experience is the credential. WA certifies peers; Medicaid bills them; the model’s evidence keeps growing.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Credibility no clinician can buy
- Medicaid-billable = real jobs ladder for people in recovery
- Integrates across every lane (SHTF B3 names it)
Weaknesses
- Peer wages near poverty; burnout high
- Supervision/career-path infrastructure thin
Opportunities
- B3: peers embedded at every transition point
- Peer workforce as recovery-to-employment pipeline itself
Threats
- Medicaid cuts hit peer billing first
- Tokenism risk: peers added without authority
Funding
Medicaid peer-support billing + BH-ASO contracts + philanthropy (Recovery Café model). Cheap, evidence-backed, expandable — the classic underfunded high-ROI box.
Sources
- Peer support systematic review (BMC Public Health) — https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-020-8407-4
- WA DOH — Certified Peer Specialist credential (2025) — https://doh.wa.gov/licenses-permits-and-certificates/professions-new-renew-or-update/peer-support-specialist
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Employment & Vocational Services PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Job readiness, supported employment, second-chance hiring. The breakout local model is Dignified Workday (2024): no-barrier day labor at ~$20/hr with a peer-leadership ladder — ~60 on payroll and 500+ on the waitlist, with 23 housed, 15 sober, and 13 in full-time jobs from its first 70+ participants. Also: Goodwill SSVF/FCS employment, UGM work therapy, WorkSource, New Leaf. Income is the ultimate homelessness prevention — and the 500-person waitlist is the demand study.
Capacity: Dignified Workday: ~60 working, 500+ waitlisted (the binding constraint is contracted work, not willing workers); Goodwill, WorkSource, New Leaf, UGM work therapy
Funding: WorkSource/WIOA, DVR, Medicaid FCS (supported employment), VA SSVF, philanthropy
Steward: Nonprofit / State
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The evidence: work works — when it's designed right
Across ~30 randomized trials, Individual Placement and Support (rapid placement in real jobs with support, no prerequisites) achieves ~55% competitive employment versus ~25% for traditional train-then-place programs. Low-barrier day work shows the same logic at street level: Albuquerque's "There's a Better Way" logged 6,600+ day jobs and hundreds of service connections. Spokane's Dignified Workday is the local proof — ~60 working, 23 housed, 15 sober from its first 70+ participants, and a 500-person waitlist that measures unmet demand for work better than any survey.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The Spokane Workforce Council — the region’s WIOA board — anchors the public side: WorkSource, the Next Generation Zone, and the Spokane Resource Center (a HUD EnVision Center co-locating ~20 agencies — integration, built). Around it: Goodwill (workforce + SSVF), Dignified Workday (60 paid slots, 300+ waiting), Pioneer Industries (aerospace jobs for the justice-involved), Career Path Services, New Leaf (culinary), and IPS supported-employment via FCS. Work is treatment, income, identity, and exit — all four at once.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- IPS evidence: ~2× employment success (55% vs 25%)
- Local proof at every barrier level: Dignified (day one) → Pioneer (career)
Weaknesses
- Dignified’s 5:1 waitlist = demand unmet at the lowest rung
- Benefits cliffs tax the first paycheck
- Employer participation still boutique-scale
Opportunities
- FCS supported-employment billing barely tapped locally
- SBA network could organize a fair-chance employer compact (What-can-you-do layer)
Threats
- Recession would hit this rung first
- Programs funded as charity, not workforce policy
Funding
FCS Medicaid billing, WIOA/WorkSource, Goodwill retail engine, Avista-style philanthropy (Dignified). The 300-person waitlist is the shovel-ready expansion this map keeps pointing at.
Sources
- IPS evidence base (~30 RCTs) — https://ipsworks.org/index.php/evidence-for-ips/
- Albuquerque — There's a Better Way — https://www.cabq.gov/mayor/news/city-program-provides-dignity-and-jobs-to-the-homeless
- Dignified Workday — https://www.dignifiedworkday.org/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Benefits Enrollment / SOAR / Payee Services PARTIAL Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Getting eligible people onto SSI/SSDI, Medicaid, and food assistance — and managing money for those who need a payee. Disability income is what makes PSH rents work.
Capacity: ⚠ PLACEHOLDER — TBD
Funding: SSA SOAR, state, nonprofit
Steward: Nonprofit / SSA
The full deep-dive
Background & data
SOAR: paperwork as a housing intervention
Disability income is the rent behind most PSH tenancies — and the application process is where eligible people fail. SAMHSA's SOAR model (trained caseworkers assembling medical evidence) wins 65% of initial SSI/SSDI applications versus ~31% for standard applications, in about 177 days. Every approval converts a person from unfundable to houseable — roughly $11,000/year of federal income per person, forever.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
SNAP (the agency) navigates benefits (the programs): SSI/SSDI via SOAR-trained case managers, Basic Food, ABD/HEN, Medicaid enrollment — washingtonconnection.org made one door of many. Income is the load-bearing wall of every housing plan.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- SOAR doubles disability approvals (65% vs 31%)
- One-portal state infrastructure actually good
Weaknesses
- 6–24-month SSI timelines strand people in shelters
- Redetermination churn knocks the housed off coverage
- SOAR capacity ⚠ — trained staff count unknown
Opportunities
- SOAR training for every shelter case manager = highest-ROI training dollar
- Presumptive-eligibility expansions
Threats
- Federal benefits tightening lands here first
- Documentation requirements vs street reality
Funding
Program dollars are federal/state entitlements; the local money is navigation staffing (SNAP, agencies). Every SOAR-won SSI award converts a local charity case into federally-funded stability — arbitrage the region underinvests in.
Sources
- SAMHSA SOAR outcomes (65% vs ~31%) — https://soarworks.samhsa.gov/about-the-model/oat-and-outcomes
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Faith & Community Reintegration FUNDED Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Congregations as long-term community: belonging, mentorship, furniture ministries, welcome-home teams. The relational infrastructure no government program replicates. Spokane examples run from UGM's privately funded system to Truth Ministries (~$50K/yr of donations) to parish shelter rotations (Mother Teresa's Haven).
Capacity: ⚠ Faith inventory needed — congregations, beds, meals, volunteers
Funding: Congregational giving, diocese, donations
Steward: Faith-based
Where people go from here
- The Destination: a Clean, Safe & Healthy Community — Congregations and community are the after-system: belonging is what makes recovery stick.
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The 60% nobody budgets
Baylor's 11-city study found faith-based organizations provide ~60% of America's emergency shelter beds and estimated $9+ in social value per government dollar in their recovery programs (methodology generous, direction unmistakable). The deeper contribution resists metrics: congregations supply what no contract can purchase — belonging, welcome-home teams, someone who notices when you're gone. Spokane's inventory (UGM's system, parish rotations, the meal circuit, Truth Ministries on $50K a year) awaits the full accounting this project keeps flagging.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
The largest volunteer army in the system: UGM’s shelters, Truth Ministries, Shalom’s 84K meals, congregation warming centers, Family Promise’s church roots, and the ~60% of emergency beds nationally that are faith-based. Essential fabric — the map’s collaboration section says it plainly.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Capacity, credibility, buildings, and donors government can’t replicate
- Independence = resilience when public funding whipsaws
Weaknesses
- Full congregational inventory still unbuilt (⚠ biggest survey gap)
- Linkage varies: some deeply integrated, some isolated (low-barrier review)
Opportunities
- Host a navigator, adopt a recovery house, partner the meal line (What-can-you-do)
- Fig Tree directory as the base layer for a real inventory
Threats
- Volunteer aging + donor fatigue
- Post-fentanyl acuity exceeds hospitality-era models
Funding
Donations, congregational budgets, denominational grants — an estimated ≈$17M/yr private layer countywide. The system’s matching funds for civic will, already committed.
Sources
- Baylor ISR — faith-based provision study — https://www.baylorisr.org/wp-content/uploads/ISR-Homeless-FINAL-01092017-web.pdf
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
Ongoing Outpatient MH / SUD Care PARTIAL Behavioral Health & Treatment
Long-term medication management and counseling that keeps recovery durable. Continuity of the same prescriber and counselor matters more than any single program feature.
Capacity: ⚠ PLACEHOLDER — TBD
Funding: Medicaid, insurance
Steward: Nonprofit / Private
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The maintenance phase nobody funds gladly
Long-term continuity — same prescriber, same counselor, uninterrupted medication — is what converts a treatment episode into a changed life; discontinuation is reliably followed by acute-care spikes. Yet this is the least glamorous box on the map, delivered by an outpatient workforce running ~30% vacancies statewide, in a county designated a federal mental-health shortage area.
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Long-term behavioral-health maintenance: Frontier’s outpatient and WISe/New Journeys continuums, med management, ACT-style intensive teams, LRAs — the unglamorous forever-care that keeps stabilized people stabilized.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- Continuity infrastructure exists at scale (Frontier ~24 sites)
- FCS + PSH pairing is the proven chronicity-breaker
Weaknesses
- ACT/intensive slots ⚠ unpublished; likely far under need
- Care plans collapse at coverage churn and address loss
Opportunities
- B1 data spine would flag disengagement before crisis
- Embed med management in housing (the AFH/PSH lesson)
Threats
- Workforce exodus (44% turnover) breaks longitudinal care
- Federal cuts to the Medicaid spine
Funding
Medicaid managed care overwhelmingly, with state non-Medicaid slices. Cheap per month, priceless per crisis avoided — the box where "maintenance" is the whole treatment.
Sources
- Discontinuation → acute care research — https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7002204/
- HRSA shortage-area lookup — https://data.hrsa.gov/topics/health-workforce/shortage-areas/hpsa-find
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.
10 · The Destination — a Clean, Safe & Healthy Community
The second pillar — and the entire point. A clean, safe, healthy community is not the reward that comes after everything else is fixed; it is the soil everything else grows in. On a nuts-and-bolts level, it is where livelihoods live: businesses open where customers feel safe, employers stay where workers can raise families, and a healthy tax base quietly pays for the parks, the police, the courts, and the treatment beds this whole map depends on — prosperity and compassion are not rivals here; one funds the other. But a community is more than an economy with sidewalks. It is the widest circle of care we know how to build — the thing neighbors make together so that no one faces age, illness, addiction, or plain bad luck entirely alone. Every box on this map is, at bottom, neighbors organizing to catch neighbors. So when downtown fills again, when the overdose count falls, when the street count drops — those numbers will be the measurable shadow of something larger: a city that decided to take care of itself, and of its own. Success is measured in falling counts and a recovering downtown. It is felt as home.
The Destination: a Clean, Safe & Healthy Community N/A Community, Faith & Economic Supports
Where the whole map is trying to arrive — and why it exists at all: a clean, safe community where people can raise a family, walk downtown, build a business, and afford to grow old feeling satisfied with their community and the life they’ve lived there. Every recovered life on this map is also a recovered sidewalk, storefront, and park. The map begins with the forcing function (far left) and ends here, because that is how the cities that succeeded describe their own story: enforce humanely, offer genuinely, and the community itself is what comes back.
Capacity: Measured by: street counts falling, overdose deaths falling, downtown vacancy recovering, and citizens’ #1 Pulse-survey concern receding
Funding: N/A — the return on everything else on this map
Steward: Outcome — everyone’s
The full deep-dive
Background & data
The bookend
This map begins, at its far left, with the forcing function the successful cities swear by — and ends here, with what their citizens got back: streets that feel safe, downtowns that fill instead of empty, parks that belong to families again, and neighbors in recovery instead of in doorways. The sequence between the bookends is everything this map documents; the bookends are why anyone should care. GSI’s Pulse surveys say Spokane’s citizens rank this crisis as their #1 concern — this box is the survey answer, granted.
Why the whole region owns this box
The stakes are not city limits. An SBA comparative study of 75 years of American urban history found no case of a metro region thriving long-term while its core city failed — short-term suburban gains, then regional decline, in every cautionary case from Detroit to Youngstown; recovery only where leadership deliberately recommitted to the core (Pittsburgh), and the best outcomes where governance and taxation were structurally aligned with the core’s health. That is the economic case under this map’s political one: Spokane Valley, Liberty Lake, and the North Side cannot indefinitely outrun a failing downtown. Urban Core & Regional Economic Performance — comparative memo (May 2026)
Not a finish line — a specification
One discipline note that changes everything: this box is not the finish line you hope a good process eventually reaches. It is the specification you engineer backward from — defined first, dated, measured, and never surrendered to the process along the way. Start here, then walk left. (The full argument lives in the Hard Questions tab: “How would we know it’s working?”)
Capacity & providers
Who’s doing the work
Everyone and no one: this box is owned by the voters, councils, businesses, congregations, and neighbors of the region. Its staff is civic will; its budget is trust. The map’s whole argument is that this box is purchasable — at ≈$13.4M/yr for the chronic core, against a $90-100M status-quo bill.
SWOT & path forward
Strengths
- GSI Pulse: this is citizens’ #1 concern — mandate exists
- Spokane’s civic-collaboration muscle is real (Expo, parks, stadium)
Weaknesses
- No standing regional body owns delivery (A1 unbuilt)
- Trust depleted by Measure 1, Camp Hope, TRAC whiplash
Opportunities
- SHTF framework + 0.2% capacity = the actual purchase order
- Visible downtown wins compound: every recovered block funds the next
Threats
- One more failed measure could freeze regional will for a decade
- Fragmented taxes spend the capacity without buying the outcome
Funding
Funded by everything else on this map working — or by nothing, if it doesn’t. The two bookends share one budget: the region’s willingness to act together.
Sources
- GSI Pulse surveys — public health & safety as #1 concern — https://greaterspokane.org/
Compiled July 2026. Figures marked ⚠ remain to be verified with providers or primary documents. Analysis and SWOT are draft interpretations for review, not official positions.