STRATEGIC PLAN
Dear Neighbors,
When Lydia Place first opened our doors in 1989, it was to meet an unmet need in our community by providing temporary housing and support for families with children. Nearly 35 years later, Lydia Place has expanded our scope and services to focus on upstream interventions and nurture whole-family healing that disrupt the generational cycle of poverty and homelessness. While we have evolved in countless ways as an organization, one thing that has not changed is our commitment to being adaptable by finding new, innovative ways to deliver on our mission to prevent and end family homelessness.
Today, Lydia Place serves over 300 families annually by pairing a variety of housing interventions and case management with parenting support and mental health counseling so that families exiting homelessness in Whatcom County can get back into housing and stay there. Despite rapid organizational growth over the last decade which has made meaningful, generational impacts for the families in our programs, the growing housing and mental health crisis our community is facing is quickly outpacing us. This calls for our biggest and most ambitious plan yet.
In response, Lydia Place has developed a Strategic Plan that will shape our next 5 years as an organization. Our strategic direction includes four initiatives which are guided by our mission, vision, and values, and paired with research, actions, and goals that reflect the urgency of the housing crisis alongside interventions that will improve community outcomes for generations to come. Within this framework, which summarizes what we expect to see because of our work, we are poised to make a significant and measurable difference with and for our neighbors to disrupt the generational cycle of homelessness.
At Lydia Place, we believe that everyone has something to contribute to this work. We all play a role in stewarding our time, resources, advocacy, and humanity to create a community of belonging where everyone has a home and the opportunity to thrive. A healthy, vibrant Whatcom County is ours to shape. We invite you to join us with care, heart, and hope as we continue to meet the needs of families with children exiting homelessness in our neighborhoods, schools, and communities.
Warmly,
Ashley Thomasson
Executive Director
Our strategic direction includes four initiatives which are guided by our values of:
Community, Equity, Upstream Impact, and Employee Wellness.
Initiative 1
To disrupt the generational cycle of homelessness through
increasing and expanding prevention strategies.
Lydia Place will work upstream to prevent families from losing housing by expanding our services to include “prevention” as a model of housing intervention and broaden our capacity for healing-centered services in order to decrease the likelihood that the children in our programs will become the next generation of clients we serve.
We will:
Expand
Build Access
Collaborate
Center Healing
You May See:
- Less families losing housing and needing services through Coordinated Entry.
- New, creative partnerships with rural communities, early learning centers, school districts, and community health groups.
- More staff joining our team, and expanded service and therapy specializations such as EMDR therapy and Critical Time Intervention.
Initiative 2
To cultivate sustained housing and positive health outcomes through
the healing effects of social connection and community.
Lydia Place will create safe spaces to build and nurture social connection and belonging for the families we serve that strengthen their hope for the future and expand their safety-net of external supports. We will focus on this within our client relations, our agency, and the broader community.
We will:
Include
Co-Create
Cultivate
Review
You May See:
- More current or former Lydia Place families serving on client advisory committees, employee interview panels, focus groups, board of directors, peer support programs, and joining us in employment.
- 1-2 pilot programs designed to bring in new creative partnerships and bridge authentic, lasting, mutually beneficial relationships between the families we serve and the broader community.
- Data available about the impact increased social connection and belonging has had on the families we serve such as improved sense of community, mental health, parent/child relationships, and sustained permanent housing.
Initiative 3
To increase equity at all levels of the organization.
Lydia Place will invest heavily in time, money, energy, and additional resources to ensure that we are building the framework, structures, culture, policies, and practices that ensure the conditions for inclusion, equity, and belonging in our work.
We will:
Review
Cultivate
Build Access
Challenge
You May See:
- Increased formal and informal opportunities for clients to provide input and recommendations that inform our work and practices, including the establishment of a Client Advisory Board.
- Dedicated staffing to review organizational policies and practices to further internal equity change; time and space carved out for Communities of Practice and Employee Resource Groups, to emerge.
- Services and materials offered in multiple languages that reflect the populations and demographics of who we serve.
- Educational resources and information available about local policy, advocacy opportunities, and ways to get involved.
- A paid apprenticeship program that creates pathways to employment for those with lived experience and who have historically not had access to higher education in the social services field.
Initiative 4
To expand our organizational infrastructure and build the internal
and external capacity necessary to accomplish our strategic initiatives.
Lydia Place will establish an effective capacity building plan that centers our growth with organizational values-alignment, ensures efficiency and good stewardship of our valuable resources, increases understanding of our work, and provides the space necessary to offer a growing variety of services to the families we serve.
We will:
Strategize
Communicate
Generate
Make Space
You May See:
- A strategy screen to guide key stakeholders in making thoroughly considered, values-aligned decisions regarding emerging opportunities.
- Streamlined processes and new software to support effective and efficient work-management.
- More data and information regularly available both internally and externally regarding the outcomes of the large scope of work that we do.
- New opportunities to join us in contributing to our work.
- A capital campaign to support a new office building with room to grow, creatively collaborate with partners and provide therapeutic spaces for gatherings that foster community, healing, and belonging.
TIMELINE
FALL 2023
- Hire Sara Lawson of Shorthand Consulting for facilitation and technical support
- Series of information gathering with staff, board, and key stakeholders
WINTER 2023/2024
- Narrow down to 4 key focus-areas
- Follow-up work sessions to build out and hone initiatives
- Identify opportunity to evolve our mission statement to better align with agency values and strategic direction
- Present first complete draft to staff and board
SPRING 2024
- Convene a workgroup of staff, board, and clients to draft an updated mission statement
- Refine final draft of strategic plan
- Present strategic plan and mission statement to board of directors for adoption
SUMMER 2024
- Release strategic plan to our community!
- Mobilize as staff, working towards our newly adopted initiatives
COMING SOON IN FALL 2024
Release our new, evolved mission statement – stay tuned!
EDUCATION & RESOURCES
In addition to seeking input from staff, board members, clients, and stakeholders, we also used local and national data and research to shape and guide our strategic initiatives. Here are some of the resources we reviewed, mulled over, discussed, and drew upon to help make decisions, narrow our focus, and craft a plan that was both values and evidence-driven.
Belonging Design Principles
Belonging Design Principles | Othering & Belonging Institute (berkeley.edu)
Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation: The U.S. Surgeon General’s Advisory on the Healing Effects of Social Connection and Community
Our Epidemic of Loneliness and Isolation: (hhs.gov)
2023 Whatcom County Point in Time Count
2023-PIT-Count-Report (whatcomcounty.us)
City Resolution Declaring Housing and Homelessness a Public Health Crisis
The Costs and Harms of Homelessness
The Costs and Harms of Homelessness – Community Solutions
ACES, Housing Insecurity and Child Health Outcomes
Microsoft Word – ACEs Fact Sheet Final Update.docx (nhchc.org) and Impact of Housing on Child Health (nemours.org)
A healthy, vibrant Whatcom County is ours to shape.
Ashley Thomasson, Executive Director