The Pathways to Housing DC 5K 5K Run/Walk will take place on June 23, 2019 in Arlington's gorgeous Bluemont Park.
The event features a professional pre-race warm-up & stretch, a professional announcer, live DJ, one of a kind Pathways DC event gear, and just an amazing time with friends, family, neighbors, co-workers and other charitable individuals like yourself.
Founded in 2004, Pathways to Housing DC provides home, health, and hope to more than 3,500 adults each year who are experiencing homelessness or at risk for homelessness. Pathways to Housing DC initially opened our doors to end homelessness and help the healing of men and women who were considered “chronically homeless”- those individuals living on the streets for years with serious mental health challenges such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder that were not being treated. What made Pathways to Housing DC unique in a city with many mental health and housing programs was our Housing First model. Other organizations operated with rules and pre-housing requirements such as curfews, mandated sobriety, compliance with medication, and participation in groups either before entering housing, or as a requirement to keep housing. This approach worked for the majority of individuals experiencing homelessness who were seeking services, but the remaining most psychiatrically disabled and vulnerable subgroup stayed on the street and were not effectively housed within the existing system of care. What has made Pathways to Housing DC so unique in its success over the past decade is our reversal of this traditional treatment sequence. Instead of requiring people to be “clean and sober” or “housing ready,” Pathways DC offers housing, first.
Since placing its first client into permanent housing nearly a decade ago, Pathways to Housing DC has successfully ended chronic homelessness and supported recovery for more than 850 Washington residents. With a staff today of over 140 highly skilled professionals, Pathways to Housing DC provides comprehensive, integrated health and social services to nearly 3,500 clients annually throughout the District.