How you can help:
How to welcome these retirement-age women:
- Volunteer Time – Thanks to all the help and we are all good for now!
- Donate Items: At this time we are not accepting donations — thanks for the amazing support to get us up and running.
- Donate Financial Gifts: Visit our Donation page to give a gift!
- Social Engagement: Connect with us to get our new residents connected to the community through participation in social activities, clubs, and walking groups.
Contact: office@lakecitypartners.org for more information.
What is the Kenmore Senior Women’s Shelter?
A specialized shelter program serving retirement-age women who are seeking shared housing solutions – e.g. renting rooms together in affordable/low income apartments or houses. Target shelter census is 30 women. For information on referrals please contact Thomas Burnside (thomas@lakecitypartners.org).
For a deeper-dive into the underlying landscape of a growing crisis of unsheltered homelessness for very low-income seniors, review this paper by our Executive Director, William Towey and this shelter design approach document.
Who will be residing here?
The target population is senior women who are community-minded, socially-stable, and retirement-age with very low fixed income. These women:
Have few or no behavioral health barriers to housing
Primary driver of homelessness usually due to being on average just $200-300 a month shy of affording market-based housing
Are not candidates for Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) (Read sidebar as to why they are not eligible)
Client Profiles
Join us in supporting elder women at the Kenmore Women’s Shelter
because getting older shouldn’t mean a life on the streets.
Mrs. McArdle
She was never going to have enough money to make it work.
Ms. McArdle, born in 1942, began working as a typist to help support her growing family. Her job lacked benefits like a 401k or pension, but it provided a steady income to supplement her husband’s wages. For decades, they lived comfortably, though her husband managed their finances, and Ms. McArdle never opened her own bank account.
After her husband’s passing, Ms. McArdle faced financial strain and had to downsize. Despite her frugality, rising costs around Puget Sound eventually led to the loss of her home. Today, she receives $1,088 monthly in Social Security and $142 in food stamps, but with limited options. She doesn’t qualify for Permanent Supportive Housing, senior housing has years-long waitlists, and local “affordable” apartments—costing about $800 monthly—would leave her rent-burdened at over 80%, with little left for essentials like medication.
Mrs. McArdle may not be a real person, but her story is.
Mrs. Williams
She worked hard her whole life and it still wasn’t enough.
As a young girl, Ms. Williams watched her mother struggle to pay rent and provide for her and her sister. Determined to secure a better future, she found full-time work as a school bus driver in the early 1960s, a steady job that allowed her to be self-sufficient, though it didn’t leave room for large savings or retirement. Health issues eventually reduced her to part-time work, and she retired in her late 50s on Social Security Disability Insurance.
After retirement, housing challenges mounted. Rising costs forced her out of apartment after apartment, and today, she relies on a $1,200 monthly Social Security check. After covering basic bills, medication, and food, rent is unaffordable. With no connections in less expensive areas, Ms. Williams now lives in her van with her dog, facing an uncertain winter and reflecting on how it came to this.
Mrs. Williams may not be a real person, but her story is.
Ms. Gonzales
She worked hard for her family but now they’re gone
At age 14, Ms. Gonzalez left school to work under the table and support her family, as her parents needed her help at home while her brothers finished school. She was told her future husband would provide for her, so she needn’t worry. After marrying, she left her job to care for their family since her husband, a truck driver, was often away.
Years later, her husband left, and as the region grew more expensive, her children moved away, unable to offer her a home. Now, at 70, Ms. Gonzalez has no income or safety net. The work she did didn’t qualify her for government entitlements, leaving her with just $189 per month in food stamps and healthcare but no stable housing. As her health declines, she spends nights on a park bench, homeless for the first time in her life.
Ms. Gonzalez may not be a real person, but her story is.
More Details
Current Conditions
Why aren’t Kenmore residents eligible for Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH)?
Kenmore residents have often worked their entire lives but their retirement plans haven’t kept up with cost-of-living increases, and they do not have chronic mental or physical health issues or substance abuse issues.
More information: kingcounty.gov – homeless housing
Kenmore is a hybrid enhanced/congregate shelter with a structured, shared-living approach. We screen for entry and require participation in self-managed daily shelter operations to guide our guests with the practice and experience needed for successful share-living.
This shelter site is operated and fully integrated with the Lake City Partners Shelter Services program based in Shoreline and leverages our Client Services program for case management and housing program management. Fully integrated with our 24×7 shelter monitoring, guests experience a balanced living environment with the benefits of enhanced shelter services with a high degree of autonomy, trust, and independence. Food Service is self-managed and supported by Hunger Intervention Program and North Helpline.
This project is made possible thanks to the support of King County.
Help Us Close the Gap!
Most of these women are experiencing homelessness due to being $200-300 a month shy of being able to afford market-based housing solutions.
LCP is working to provide a pathway for unsheltered women into shared-housing solutions. We are researching the feasibility of LCP acting as a master leasing agent and leveraging existing funding, senior services, and additional funding sources to ‘close the gap’ such that those participating would pay no more than $550 per month for their housing costs and have affordable/low-income housing with 2 to 6 women sharing a residence together.
If you are interested in participating in a community-based program that activates localized support groups, faith communities, volunteers and fundraising in conjunction with municipalities’ support to create a growing pool of destination locations for women to enter into shared housing following a 3 to 12 months period at the shelter, please contact us at office@lakecitypartners.org.