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Community Engagement <br />Washington State's Local Plan Guidance requires that counties involve a broad range of stakeholders in developing <br />homeless housing plans, including people with lived experience of homelessness, local governments, service <br />providers, and the public. But more than a requirement, community engagement is essential to building a plan that <br />is practical, responsive, and community owned. <br />We approached engagement with a clear belief: those closest to the problem are closest to the solution. <br />Homelessness touches every part of our county, and addressing it requires perspectives from across the spectrum, <br />those with lived experience, frontline workers, community partners, and everyday residents. Their insights shaped <br />not only the priorities of this plan, but the way we talk about homelessness, the way we serve, and the values we <br />hold. <br />Between September and November 2024, more than 280 individuals participated in shaping the Kittitas County <br />2025-2030 Homeless Housing Plan: <br />c 240 residents completed a community survey, distributed both online and in person through trusted <br />community channels. <br />o Over 30 people joined facilitated focus groups, including individuals with lived experience, nonprofit <br />providers, government representatives, healthcare workers, educators, and community members. <br />o Stakeholders engaged through targeted meetings with housing providers, city officials, and regional <br />partners. <br />WhatWe Heard <br />Survey responses reflected shared concerns across demographic lines and geographies <br />r Broad support for expanding affordable <br />housing, emergency shelter, and behavioral <br />health services. <br />r Frustration with stigma, service gaps, and <br />confusing systems that prevent people from <br />getting help. <br />r A divide in public opinion around personal <br />responsibility versus systemic causes of <br />homelessness. <br />"lt's not that people are unwilling to engage-it's that <br />they're tired of being treated bodly or getting stuck in a <br />system that doesn't work." <br />-Service provider participant. <br />"People want help and want to get sober, but it's hard to <br />stoy sober on the streets." <br />-Participant with Iived experience. <br />a A clear call for collaborative solutions and better public education to shift understanding and engagement. <br />From the focus groups, five cross-cutting themes emerged <br />The svstem is too hard to access: participants described long waits, strict rules, and complex requirements <br />that don't match people's real lives. <br />a <br />Page | 10