Youth Resource Center Established in Lake Forest Park

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By: Heidi Shepherd

The Rotary Club of Lake Forest Park, the North Urban Human Services Alliance (NUHSA), and the City of Lake Forest Park joined forces and worked with King County Councilmember, Rod Dembowski, to help address the need. The Rotary Club of Shoreline, the City of Shoreline, and the Shoreline School District later joined the efforts as well, adding increased capacity. In 2019, after years of advocacy, community members successfully secured funding from the County for a Youth Resource Navigator to serve young people experiencing homelessness or housing instability in Shoreline and Lake Forest Park.

Melonie Neufeld, Lake City Partners and George Piano, LFP Rotary celebrate the opening.Next came a space. George Piano, long-time member of the Lake Forest Park Rotary and Chair of their Homeless Youth Project, identified an office in the Lake Forest Park Town Center. The office—which had been formerly owned by a local doctor—had been sitting vacant for almost a year. Merlone-Geier, the property management company of the Center, offered to give George a discounted rent in order to support the community’s young people.

From there, both Rotary clubs launched a yearlong fundraising effort to furnish and renovate the space, underwrite the rent, and create a client assistance pool for youth who needed immediate help. But they still needed to find an organization that could provide the outreach and referral services.

That’s where YouthCare came in. Working with social service organizations in north King County, the Shoreline Youth and Teen Development Center, and REST (Real Escape from the Sex Trades), YouthCare staff will operate the newly renovated space in Lake Forest Park starting in February 2021.

The Resource Center will be open several evenings a week and primarily accessible via appointment or referral. There, young people ages 12-24 will be able to meet with the youth resource navigator and access basic resources, like hygiene supplies, non-perishable food, bus passes and cellphones, as well as WIFI and computer access so young people can connect remotely with other services. The youth navigator will also help connect young people to shelter and housing, medical and behavioral healthcare, education and employment training, and other community resources. Later down the line, YouthCare hopes to use the equipment installed by the previous owner to offer onsite medical care.

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