Urgent Call To Action
Dear Friends,
There's an urgent issue coming before Seattle City Council tomorrow, Tuesday, 9/17, and our neighbors need your help.
We are deeply frustrated and disturbed by the escalation in violent crime along Aurora in recent months. City Council is working to address this crime and commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) along Aurora Ave. But despite improvements made to the original bill, we are also deeply concerned that the city's approach will cause more harm to our neighbors at Aurora Commons without addressing the real problems.
City Council is taking up Council Member Moore's revised Stay Out of Area Prostitution (SOAP) bill on Tuesday, September 17, and it's critical that your city council members hear from you before they move forward with this legislation.
We urge you to contact your council members right away. We are including a draft email you can copy and paste below. We strongly encourage you to add a personal appeal based on your own experience, values and perspective. You can look up your council members and find their contact information here.
Here's more background on what's happening, and why we're asking you to act.
Over the past 18 months, there has been a sharp rise in violent crime along Aurora, which some believe to be associated with CSE and the traffickers who exploit vulnerable populations for profit. To tackle this problem, Councilmember Moore proposed legislation re-instating loitering laws and instituting a SOAP Zone along seven miles of Aurora.
Aurora Commons, along with our referral partners, CSE survivors, and allies of survivors in the gender-based violence community, worked together to submit suggested revisions to Councilmember Moore's proposed legislation. We appreciate Councilmember Moore's willingness to meet with us and incorporate some of these revisions into a package of amendments to address commercial sexual exploitation.
These revisions include:
limiting potential SOAP orders to buyers and promoters (by removing sellers)
requiring the development of training and protocols for Seattle Police Department officers working with individuals experiencing CSE based on trauma-informed best practices in consultation with the Adult Survivors Collaborative Task Force whose members will include CSE service providers and survivors
creating arrest policies that explicitly state diversion and referral to services are the preferred approach for prostitution loitering
While the original intent of this bill was to address the escalating violence on Aurora, there is significant uncertainty about how this legislation will impact our neighbors at Aurora Commons, particularly the reinstatement of prostitution loitering laws. Many of the individuals accessing support at the Commons were victims of sex trafficking as minors and are still experiencing CSE as adults or are at high risk of becoming CSE victims.
Although the bill indicates an intention to improve services, including a new emergency shelter, there is no guarantee that these improvements will be made before SPD can arrest "sellers" (individuals experiencing CSE). Additionally, there has been no assessment of the current continuum of CSE services to identify existing gaps, no plan for expanding the capacity of existing services or developing new services, and no allocated financial investment. With the City of Seattle facing a projected $260 million deficit in 2025, without knowing the costs of improved services and no plan for development and implementation, there will be immediate impacts on our neighbors in interim period while these details are worked out.
We support the development of comprehensive, wraparound services for individuals experiencing CSE and victims of sex trafficking and a corresponding network of care, as well as legislation that facilitates connections to this network. However, as currently drafted, the bill before the Council tomorrow lacks the specificity to ensure the City effectively offers intervention to CSE victims and survivors without causing further harm.
Additionally, the proposed legislation and the debate around it has overlooked the role of SPD's staffing shortage in this escalation. According to our sources, the North Precinct, which covers more zip codes than any other precinct in Seattle, previously had 8 detectives and its own vice unit before COVID. Currently, it has neither detectives nor a vice unit. At a recent North Precinct Advisory Council meeting, a sergeant from SPD's Gun Violence Reduction Unit reported that the unit has 10 detectives for all of Seattle, while it should have 18 for full staffing.
On Tuesday, 9/10, Seattle Council's Public Safety Committee voted to pass the legislation through for a full Council vote on Tuesday, 9/17. We urge you to contact your councilmembers using the draft email below, and to make it even more powerful by adding your own perspective and experiences.
Please be sure to include your name and address in your email so that your councilmembers will know you are a constituent. Thank you for lending your voice to support our advocacy for and with our neighbors.
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DRAFT EMAIL TO COUNCIL
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Dear Councilmembers,
I am writing to urge you to amend or reject Councilmember Moore's Stay Out of Area Prostitution (SOAP) bill that Council is considering on September 17.
While I strongly support the bill's intent to reduce gun violence and sex trafficking along Aurora Ave, I am deeply concerned that the bill as written will have unintended consequences for the people it aims to help, while failing to address the issues of gun violence and trafficking.
Specifically, this bill does not provide resources for increased diversion and support services that victims of trafficking and others involved in the commercial sex trade will need. As written, I am concerned that too many victims of sex trafficking will end up in the criminal justice system — including many who live along Aurora if they were engaged by law enforcement but are unable or unwilling to enter diversion.
In addition to the lack of dedicated resources, it's important to recognize that many of those in the sex trade have had negative experiences with law enforcement or social services and may view diversion with deep suspicion. It is very likely that many of those engaged by officers will be unwilling to enter diversion unless they have seen or heard from trusted sources that the diversion programs offer a real way out, which simply is not possible unless the council invests in diversion with proven harm-reduction practices from the outset.
Further, I understand that Seattle's North Precinct is already understaffed and overworked. The precinct doesn't even have a dedicated vice squad, and is often unable to respond in a timely fashion or investigate crimes thoroughly. Without additional resources dedicated to enforcement of a proposed SOAP zone, I don't understand how a force that's already stretched thin can possibly add this new enforcement responsibility or do it in a way that's consistent with the council's intent.
I understand that Councilmember Moore has engaged advocates and amended the bill, and I appreciate her willingness to engage with the community. I'm particularly grateful that she's focused the bill to target buyers and sellers, added training for officers as a requirement, and prioritized diversion and referral to services. However, as I've stated above, without additional committed resources to improve and expand services and law enforcement capacity, I'm deeply concerned that this bill will do more harm than good.
I urge you to either amend the bill to commit meaningful resources so it can succeed, or to reject it at this time.
Sincerely,
{YOUR NAME}
{Constituent in District X}
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Thank you for joining us in advocating for our neighbors at Aurora Commons.
Elizabeth Dahl Helendi
Executive Director
Updates at the Commons: Renovation, ED parental leave, and more!
Updates at the Commons from Executive Director, Elizabeth Dahl Helendi
Dear friends,
My husband and I are expecting our first child (any day now!) and before I officially go on parental leave for the next few months, I wanted to share some exciting news and updates with you all.
Throughout the past year and a half of wildly unexpected and challenging times, Aurora Commons has continued to be a place of compassion and connection. We have served over 20,000 hot meals; our advocates have helped hundreds of people access resources like getting ID, stimulus checks, and benefits; they have supported over 40 people in connecting to permanent housing and shelter.
The depth of support from the Commons community that has made all of this possible is truly humbling. I especially want to thank our dear friends and community at Bethany Community Church (BCC).
BCC stepped in to fill many gaps this year. Volunteers from BCC have been making breakfast burritos and breakfast sandwiches for our unhoused neighbors three days a week for over a year. They have held clothing & supply drives and put together hygiene packages. In addition to the many ways they have stepped in to support the Commons and our unhoused neighbors, the BCC community recently raised over $1 million dollars for Aurora Commons to invest in our permanent home.
Very soon we will be able to realize an expansion of the Commons that has been a year in the making. Last summer we took over the lease of the space next door. Since then, Andy Carlson and volunteers have been working to transform that space into a beautiful expansion of the Commons. For those of you who have been connected to the Commons for a while, you’ll especially appreciate the newly installed air conditioning(!!). The expansion will provide two private exam rooms for our SHE (Safe Healthy Empowered) Clinic & later this summer will be home to the expanded Aurora Clinic, offering a wider array of primary care services for all of our neighbors who need them.
While we plan to stay at our site for the duration of our lease, we are also evaluating our options beyond the term of the lease. We have the incredible opportunity to purchase property with generous support from Bethany Community Church, and with a match from the Heartsprung Fund, State and City funding, and other partners.
Whether we are here at our current location for the next few years or for the next 20, our commitment is to this neighborhood and to our precious community who continue to find belonging on our stretch of North Aurora Ave.
I am very excited for this next season as much of the groundwork has already been laid, and I am confident that Aurora Commons is in great hands while I’m away. The way the Commons staff support each other and our community with compassion, authenticity, and grit is remarkable. In addition to our incredible staff, please join me in welcoming our Interim Executive Director, Laura Skelton, who will be with us until I return in early December. Laura has stepped in and already proven to be a fantastic fit and a skilled leader, we are lucky to have her on the team.
Thank you to all who have held Aurora Commons in your hearts and prayers this season, and for those who have been able to support us with your time, gifts in kind, and financial support, it has carried us through. Looking forward to seeing you soon!
Gratefully,
Elizabeth Dahl Helendi
Updated COVID-19 Resource Guide
SUBS Clinic Update & Story
A reflection from Luke Sumner, Community Advocate at Aurora Commons:
As a Community Advocate at Aurora Commons, some days, it is easy to feel down. There are so many needs that it is impossible to meet them all. People need housing and jobs and healthcare and hundreds of other small things on top of the constant trauma of the street, and the reality is that, although we do all we can, we cannot fulfill all these needs, and indeed, we are working within a system that makes it seem all but impossible sometimes.
On those hard days I often find myself going back to one of the core values of the Commons: That “building relationships and giving our authentic attention must remain the heartbeat at our center and woven through everything that we offer and build.” At the end of the day, if we have been true to that part of our work, we have done what we are called to do.
As we commit to building relationships and community, real and tangible good things can happen, I was able to see that this last season in the lives of two of our community members.
Both Shadow and Tiger were not looking good the first time I saw them. They each were living on the street, had numerous health concerns, and struggling with addiction. Not surprisingly, they both could be challenging to work with, as all they were going through would break anyone. I can remember once, another friend on the street who knew Tiger said very casually, “I love him, but let’s be honest, he is probably going to die on the street.” It was heartbreaking.
Aurora Commons continued to welcome them in with open arms. We got to know these two wonderful people, they became our friends, and then they both were able to connect to our low barrier Suboxone clinic. Hosted at the time in partnership with Sound Health, the SUBS Clinic is an accessible way for people who wanted to stop using opioids to connect with care in the Commons space.
Healthcare is often a huge barrier to people living outside and struggling with addiction, due to stigma and transportation and a host of other issues. Watching the SUBS Clinic work was truly amazing. Lisa, helped to begin a clinic that met needs while being welcoming in every way. Nada Jean Willis, our nurse, was a beam of sunshine, helping people feel comfortable and safe, and answering any questions about the clinic. Dr. John Olson was warm and easy to talk to, and had zero judgment as he did his work. I saw people that were obviously wary of doctors, leaving ten minutes later, shaking hands with him like they were old friends. Rick and Cinnamon helped people connect with mental health and more intensive substance use treatment. Katie Ross - our amazing host and beating heart of the SUBS Clinic - helped facilitate a space where people could navigate an incredibly challenging part of their lives with care and compassion.
Through that space, I watched Shadow and Tiger begin to take control of their health. They stayed on Suboxone, talked with people at the clinic about other health issues, and worked with case managers at REACH about other things like housing. It was within a few weeks of one another that I heard both Tiger and Shadow had found housing.
I have seen them both in the last few weeks, and it is so wonderful to see them. Shadow is smiling and happy and his usual suave self, charming all those around him. Tiger has a skip in his step, and the few times he has come around since getting housing, I see him making the rounds, checking in with everyone, and flashing his trademark smile.
This is something all of us at the Commons should be proud to celebrate. But it didn’t come out of the blue. It came out of our commitment to the values this community has carried for almost a decade. To welcome people in with open arms regardless of their circumstances. To build a community where people are defined not by their drug use or sex work or any of the other labels are friends on the street received, but by their inherent worth as human beings, who each have something to bring not only to our community but to our world.
This is made possible by everyone that makes Aurora Commons a reality. From our amazing staff and donors to those who share about our work in Seattle. I have been working with neighbors living outside for over a decade, and I can tell you unequivocally that Aurora Commons is a special place, and that the work we do is holy and beautiful.
And in the midst of these uncertain times, I am so thankful to be a part of this community and this work.
Luke Sumner
Community Advocate at Aurora Commons
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We are excited to announce the SUBS Clinic will now be partnering with Neighborcare Health!
We are be re-launching our low barrier Buboxone clinic for male identifying and gender non-conforming guests with Neighborcare Health on Wednesdays from 2-4p.
What's Happening at Everspring Inn?
A note from Lisa, Co-Founder & Director of Programs, regarding the Everspring Evictions:
Maybe some of you have been privy to Aurora Commons on the ground advocacy work with and for the tenants of Everspring motel over the last two weeks? If you are not aware - then I want to encourage you to click on the links below to catch up. But - most importantly - we want to share this with you because this work is absolutely an extension of YOU, of all of us. And we are grateful for your continued support and advocacy.
Here are a few news stories that amplified the stories of our people and brought to light the reality of the illegal eviction activities that went down and are continuing to unfold at Everspring.
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/mass-mid-pandemic-eviction-creates-chaos-at-a-seattle-motel-thats-a-refuge-for-homeless-populations/
https://crosscut.com/news/2020/08/motel-eviction-exposes-gaps-seattles-low-income-housing-options
https://thecisforcrank.com/
Now, to offer you the update that I have shared with neighbors, partner agencies and our board:
The whole Everspring situation has been very confusing and disheartening on all fronts. First, I want to assure you, that we (Public Defender Association/PDA, Commons, etc...) do not want the Everspring to remain open, nor do the tenants. We just want to assure that 50 people are not all the sudden displaced in our already over-populated area of displaced people. Originally, our main concerns were:
1.) Is this even legal?
2.) If it is, has due diligence been done (courts, process, support etc)?
The answer to these questions, we found, were no.
Even more problematic was the fact that no one (Human Services, SPD, Fire Department, SDCI) seemed to know what was going on or be in communication with one another, let alone us at Aurora Commons. The tenants, the Everspring - everyone was just turning their backs. So, now - we are working to try and get relocation assistance so that the 15+ individuals still there, and the 20ish that left out of fear are supported and not displaced. This is proving to be challenging. We have been greasing the wheel for a number of weeks now with very slow traction.
As far as offering some kind of case mgmt and referrals, LEAD, NAV team and Aurora Commons have been on the ground and will continue to be there trying to relocate folks.
We have been in contact with SDCI but they are saying that relocation assistance isn’t available for this situation for technical reasons about the cause of the impending homelessness. I am flabbergasted by this, as many of the Tenants have lived there for 2-4 years and were illegally evicted during an Eviction Moratorium. This currently is our #1 pressure point, the relocation support, then, and I feel like- only then- will we be able to get folks out, safe and then finally the owner can legally close and shutter the "Nuisance" that is the Everspring.
Additionally, PDA, myself (Aurora Commons) and LEAD are in constant contact with tenants who are not being allowed back into the Everspring, even though, the owner and his attorney said they would allow Tenants who have stayed there more than 14+ days back in to pay rent/and or retrieve belongings until the Eviction notice has gone through the proper channels. We are also providing additional rental assistance for tenants that are willing to go to another motel while we continue to push for a moral long term solution.
UPDATED COVID-19 RESOURCE GUIDE
A Reflection on KOMO's Seattle is Dying
Last month when KOMO 4 aired Seattle is Dying, it became a story that quickly spread across the city. References proliferated online, in my email, and in conversations before I even had a chance to see it. The title, the tone of the narration, and the music gives one a sense of fear and foreboding. Within the first minute of the video, the journalist establishes his premise: Seattle is “a beautiful jewel that has been violated…[by]…lost souls who wander our streets, untethered to home or family, or reality, chasing a drug which in turn chases them.” Dying is suggesting that Seattle doesn’t have a homelessness problem, we have a drug problem.
The danger with the message in Dying is that it blames the issue on our neighbors who are experiencing homelessness (using drugs or not), those who have the least amount of power to change our broken system. It perpetuates disdain and fear for our neighbors who are forced to sleep outside that only makes their lives more unbearable and more unsafe. It is clear that the message in Dying struck a nerve; the people in this city and surrounding areas are desperate for homelessness to be solved. But blaming the people suffering the most isn’t a solution.
First and foremost, Seattle has a housing crisis. Seattle’s homelessness crisis is mirrored in other cities that have experienced the same kind of exponential growth. Real Change nailed it in their response to Dying: “Four years ago, Seattle ranked sixth in the nation on the GINI Index, a measure of income inequality. But in 2017, we went to the top of the list, in a dead heat with San Francisco for most unequal city in America. Seattle is not “dying.” Seattle is splitting. …The prosperity at the top makes the anguish in the streets all the more galling.”[1]
Seattle has experienced a 12% average fair market rent (FMR) increase every year since 2014. According to a McKinsey study commissioned by the Greater Seattle Chamber of Commerce “…homelessness has risen in line with the fair-market rent (FMR).”[2] There is simply not enough housing for people who can’t keep up with Seattle’s high rents and high skilled jobs. Eighty-three percent of people experiencing homelessness who were surveyed by the Point in Time count in 2018 said the last place they were housed before they became homeless was King County.[3] The majority of the people living outside were already here when they became homeless, but to get back into housing they are required to do a housing assessment. The waiting list has been frozen for 4 months so no matter who fills out the housing assessment, they can’t even go on a waiting list.
We also know from both history and research that jailing people with mental health or substance use disorders does not solve homelessness, especially when there is no actual housing to bridge people to when they get out of jail or prison. We have 40 years of evidence that turning people who use drugs into criminals does not solve addiction. In 1971, President Nixon declared a war on drugs.[4] Incarceration has increased by almost 700% since the war on drugs was declared, while our US population has only increased by 51%.[5] Opioid use and deaths, instead of decreasing after the war on drugs was declared, spiked until it became a crisis.
We need more resources for people who are experiencing homelessness and using drugs. In some states people can get into treatment in a matter of hours. Though Seattle is working towards a “treatment on demand” model, due to staffing shortages attributed to lack of funding it can still take weeks, or even months. Seattle is Dying concluded the answer to homelessness is medication-assisted treatment (MAT). We have had MAT in Seattle for over 46 years thanks to organizations like Evergreen Treatment Services (ETS) . MAT is the use of medications with counseling and behavioral therapies to treat substance use disorders and prevent opioid overdose.[6] Aurora Commons is one of many organizations connecting people to this treatment. The Commons has been working with Harborview, ETS, and Community Psychiatric Clinic (CPC) to bring MAT access to our unhoused neighbors on site, every week. The challenge with MAT is that when someone is connected to the medication and still sleeping outside in the same community with the same barriers to care, the instability of daily survival makes staying in treatment exponentially more challenging. As with all things, the issue is complicated.
The good news is we have a seen a model in Seattle that effectively addresses this complex issue. In 2005, Downtown Emergency Services Coalition (DESC) started a low-barrier housing program called 1811 Eastlake. DESC partnered with the Addictive Behaviors Research Center of the University of Washington to evaluate the program.[7] What they discovered was that the annual average cost to the City of Seattle for “homeless chronic alcoholics who are the heaviest users of publicly-funded crisis services” was $86,062 per person, per year.[8][9] After only one year of being housed, the residents’ alcohol use decreased and the average cost to house the participants in the program was $13,440.[10] That is a savings of $72,622 per person. With only 75 people in the program, that adds up to a yearly savings of five million dollars. Read more about the program here. Imagine what this city would look like if we saved money AND housed people.
People who have access to resources, people who can afford to live in the Emerald City are the ones who are best equipped to change the realities of people experiencing homelessness. If the journalist from the KOMO piece had used his voice to call for more housing, for greater prison reform and for more rapid access to treatment and MAT, we would have cheered his efforts. The power to change a city cannot rest on the people who are suffering needlessly without shelter. It lies with us. We have to see this crisis as a community-wide problem and stop putting blame and stirring up hate for people who don’t have power and privilege - that’s how people get killed. It begins with fear and dehumanizing our neighbors and ends with violence. In October, our unhoused friend and neighbor Danny was shot and killed by a housed person who called him a nuisance. This city was not outraged. Perpetuating a hateful response to people who use drugs and are unsheltered is dangerous, changes nothing, and serves no one’s interest.
We have spent a lot of time at Aurora Commons pleading with our community to believe that all lives are precious. That our neighbors include all of the people in our communities who reside there, housed or unhoused. We have created an incredible community of people who are behind this mission. Thank you. Our response to homelessness in our neighborhood is connection, community, and relationships. We provide our unsheltered neighbors a safe space and help them bridge to vital resources to increase their stability, safety, and health. The result of this investment translates into lives changed, including our own. “If we have no peace, it is because we have forgotten that we belong to each other.” Mother Teresa. Community and a corresponding network of care, combined with enough housing options for people to survive in this growing city, is the solution.
And, to our friends and neighbors experiencing homelessness, who may or may not use drugs, who sleep outside: you are not “wretched souls.” You are not a nuisance. You are our neighbors. You matter. You are worthy. You have value. We believe in you and we love you.
There have been many great responses to Dying, here are some links:
Are arrests the answer to homelessness? Seattle Police chief says no
King County regional leaders respond to recent homeless conversation
[1] https://www.realchangenews.org/2019/03/27/seattle-splitting-not-dying
[2] https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/future-of-cities/the-economics-of-homelessness-in-seattle-and-king-county
[3] https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/homeless/do-homeless-people-come-to-seattle-for-help/
[4] https://www.vera.org/publications/price-of-prisons-what-incarceration-costs-taxpayers
[5] https://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2016/jul/10/cory-booker/how-war-drugs-affected-incarceration-rates/
[6] https://www.samhsa.gov/medication-assisted-treatment/treatment
[7] https://www.desc.org/what-we-do/housing/1811-eastlake/
[8] https://www.desc.org/what-we-do/housing/1811-eastlake/
[9] https://www.desc.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/DESC_1811_JAMA_info.pdf
[10] https://www.desc.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/DESC_1811_JAMA_info.pdf
Annual Report
Karen Cirulli Farewell
A message from Karen Cirulli, Co-founder of Aurora Commons
In a couple of weeks, I will be stepping out of my role as the Director of Community Engagement in order to build and pursue the part of me that is a massage therapist. I have been a massage therapist for 12 years and it is finally time to bring this to the forefront of my vocation. This transition in my life feels right and ripe with possibilities. Although I am taking a significant step back, I will still have a small handful of hours per month with the Commons in a supportive role.
I could not feel more confident in the hands that will take over my position as Director of Community Engagement. Marge Long is an exceptional woman not only with an immense amount of experience (she is over-qualified for the job!) but she embodies the philosophies of Aurora Commons. She is wise, humble and loving with a healthy dose of that east coast fieriness. I am truly excited for you to meet her. This is a huge change and it felt appropriate for me to say some words of reflection as I move on:
Dear Aurora Ave and Aurora Commons Community,
Nearly a decade ago I turned to you because you felt vaguely familiar causing my curiosity to be peaked. There was a draw toward you that I couldn't quite explain except I knew you would change me. Then, inevitably, under the stream of constant headlights, I fell in love with you and together we built a home.
You have shaped me in ways that have challenged ALL that I have known. You have been brutally honest by being yourself while inviting me to be myself. You have accepted me and let me into the sacred corners of your stories, into your motel rooms, your wheeled homes, your tents and under your awnings. You have invited me to your births and I have stood with you weeping at death. You fight hard to live and survive, you are stronger then I will ever be.
You have taught me and will continue to teach me how to hold extremes and let go of absolutes. This community of humans, all of you who enter the Commons, you enter knowing you are a part of something bigger. You are teaching this city how to BE WITH ONE ANOTHER regardless of status. THAT is this miracle, THAT is the magic that continues to draw me back to you. Although I am taking a very significant step back, you will remain my teacher and my heart. You will thrive, you will continue to challenge me and cause us all to wrestle with our own humanity while defying stereotypes and stigma. These words include everyone who participates in this community in any way - I hope you know how powerful you are. You are shaking your fist in the face of dehumanization. By participating you are changing the tide of disempowerment, you are revolutionaries.
Marge Long, Incoming Director of Community Engagement
I humbly accept the position of Director of Community Engagement at Aurora Commons with great anticipation and gratitude for the opportunity to be a part of this work and team. I refuse to accept the notion of stepping into shoes I could not, should not, nor would attempt to fill. I come into this sacred space bringing all of my humanity, with my few smoothed out edges and mostly my jagged edges in the hopes I will connect to other’s humanity. I have walked in the shoes many of our neighbors are in. I have been in recovery from drug abuse for over twenty-six years; I have been homeless and sold my body to feed my addictions. My hope is in the truth that we are all human, we are all in need of being loved, seen, and known for who we are and not what we do and that every human being is equally valuable. I believe these truths are what will enable me to step into this position with an attitude of acceptance, equality, and love. I am extremely grateful for the work Karen Cirulli has started and look forward to her continued guidance as I lean into all this next season holds. I have felt invited into this space with a warm an invigorating hug from all the leadership and staff and I am overjoyed to be a part of the goodness and the messiness that comes from being human together.