325 S. Los Angeles Street
Directions at the website. Free parking. On mass transit.
The mission of the Downtown Women�s Center is to provide permanent supportive housing and a safe and healthy community fostering dignity, respect, and personal stability, and to advocate ending homelessness for women. DWC is committed to providing the resources homeless women need to reconnect with their sense of self and reclaim goals and dreams that have become lost in their day-to-day struggle for survival. In keeping with our Mission and Philosophy, we empower each individual woman via access to supportive services and a safe community that can enhance her safety and well-being.
The Downtown Women�s Center was founded in 1978 by Jill Halverson, a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who was working as a social worker employed by a Skid Row agency serving alcoholic men. Jill met Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot. Rosa�s Story is one of survival in the face of adversity. Halverson learned from Rosa that there were no facilities where homeless women could bathe, eat a good meal, or get off the streets. In fact, the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970s directly caused a significant number of women to become homeless. At that time, women were only about 5% of the homeless population, and downtown mission facilities provided meals to women but did not offer shelter. Women therefore spent their days and nights on unsafe streets or in rundown hotels.
In 1978, DWC Founding Director Jill Halverson rented a storefront and opened the city�s first Day Center for women. Halverson withdrew her life savings and, garnering support from others in the community, acquired the furniture and rent dollars needed to open the Downtown Women�s Center and provide hot, well-balanced meals to women in need. In the beginning, Jill's Place (as DWC's drop-in center has come to be known) operated as a de facto mental health facility with volunteer psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses. Over time, the Center grew to become a comprehensive program offering not just one daily meal, but three�breakfast, lunch, and a hearty afternoon snack�along with a respite from life on the street. Day-rest beds, restrooms, showers, and a variety of personal services are important components of the Center, creating a safe space for women to rest and refresh themselves. Please visit Our Center for more information about the comprehensive array of services currently offered to women. Such services, so essential to maintain well-being and a sense of dignity, are difficult to find on Skid Row, even in the present day. In fact, 29 years after our founding, DWC remains the only center providing a safe environment exclusive to women.
Another milestone was reached in 1986, when, with they help of an exceptionally talented and generous Community of Supporters, DWC opened the doors of our newly acquired and renovated Residence. The design of the Residence, located directly adjacent to the Day Center, features 47 unique, single-room apartment units in which women live on a permanent basis. The Residence is dedicated to providing safe, service-enriched, low-cost housing featuring furnished private rooms and access to community kitchen, bath, laundry and recreational facilities. Specialized programs and individualized case management encourage and assist the residents in making the transition to independent living.
A set-back befell DWC in 1987, when the Whittier Narrows Earthquake caused significant damage to the Day Center. With the help of our supportive community, the Center was rebuilt to double our original capacity, accommodating the growing population of homeless women who benefit from DWC's vital services.
Today, the Downtown Women�s Center is nationally recognized as a prototype for programs striving to meet the unique needs of homeless women. We serve over 2000 women per year in our Day Center and in 2006, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of our Residence! Within all aspects of DWC, women find support in coping with the multiple challenges that have contributed to their homelessness: the effects of aging, mental illness, physical disability, domestic violence, poverty, and aging out of foster care.
Wed Jan 15 00:00:00 +0000 2025 by DNug:notes: Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm, Administrative Offices: (213) 680-0600
Monday-Friday, 6am-4pm and Weekends 8am-2pm, Day Center: (213) 613-0761
Additional evening and weekend hours, Residence: (213) 680-1226
Fax: (213) 680-0844. No junk faxes and no unsolicited ads accepted.
Directions at the website. Free parking. On mass transit.
Creating a Space for Women
Before DWC opened our doors in 1978, homeless women in the heart of Los Angeles had no place to turn for shelter and support. Skid Row and its surrounding streets were in every respect a man’s world -- its shelters, pantries and social services accessible only to men. DWC began as the result of one woman’s deep concern for the well-being of mentally ill women who found themselves destitute and on the streets of Los Angeles following the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970’s. Read about How DWC Began for highlights of our 20 year history, including the story of how Founding Director Jill Halverson noticed and responded to the needs of Skid Row’s women. Her relationship with Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot, initiated and inspired the support of the many individuals who have offered their time, resources, and talents to create a safe place for women facing the harsh realities of homelessness. Rosa's Story speaks to the resourcefulness and dignity of a women who faces survival on the streets.
Our Mission: Recognizing the Dignity of Women, Enriching Lives
The mission of the Downtown Women’s Center is to provide permanent supportive housing and a safe and healthy community fostering dignity, respect, and personal stability, and to advocate ending homelessness for women. DWC is committed to providing the resources homeless women need to reconnect with their sense of self and reclaim goals and dreams that have become lost in their day-to-day struggle for survival. In keeping with our Mission and Philosophy, we empower each individual woman via access to supportive services and a safe community that can enhance her safety and well-being.
Issues of the Current Day
The nature of homelessness among women underwent substantial change in the late 1990s. Increasingly, homeless women exhibited a multiplicity of issues lending to their homelessness, including substance abuse/addiction, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis or other chronic illness. On the whole, the women are younger and less stable. The issue of domestic violence has become a primary indicator, and affects a cross section of women indiscriminate of socio-economic factors.
HOW OUR CENTER BEGAN
The Downtown Women’s Center was founded in 1978 by Jill Halverson, a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who was working as a social worker employed by a Skid Row agency serving alcoholic men. Jill met Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot. Rosa’s Story is one of survival in the face of adversity. Halverson learned from Rosa that there were no facilities where homeless women could bathe, eat a good meal, or get off the streets. In fact, the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970s directly caused a significant number of women to become homeless. At that time, women were only about 5% of the homeless population, and downtown mission facilities provided meals to women but did not offer shelter. Women therefore spent their days and nights on unsafe streets or in rundown hotels.
In 1978, DWC Founding Director Jill Halverson rented a storefront and opened the city’s first Day Center for women. Halverson withdrew her life savings and, garnering support from others in the community, acquired the furniture and rent dollars needed to open the Downtown Women’s Center and provide hot, well-balanced meals to women in need. In the beginning, Jill's Place (as DWC's drop-in center has come to be known) operated as a de facto mental health facility with volunteer psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses. Over time, the Center grew to become a comprehensive program offering not just one daily meal, but three—breakfast, lunch, and a hearty afternoon snack—along with a respite from life on the street. Day-rest beds, restrooms, showers, and a variety of personal services are important components of the Center, creating a safe space for women to rest and refresh themselves. Please visit Our Center for more information about the comprehensive array of services currently offered to women. Such services, so essential to maintain well-being and a sense of dignity, are difficult to find on Skid Row, even in the present day. In fact, 29 years after our founding, DWC remains the only center providing a safe environment exclusive to women.
Another milestone was reached in 1986, when, with they help of an exceptionally talented and generous Community of Supporters, DWC opened the doors of our newly acquired and renovated Residence. The design of the Residence, located directly adjacent to the Day Center, features 47 unique, single-room apartment units in which women live on a permanent basis. The Residence is dedicated to providing safe, service-enriched, low-cost housing featuring furnished private rooms and access to community kitchen, bath, laundry and recreational facilities. Specialized programs and individualized case management encourage and assist the residents in making the transition to independent living.
A set-back befell DWC in 1987, when the Whittier Narrows Earthquake caused significant damage to the Day Center. With the help of our supportive community, the Center was rebuilt to double our original capacity, accommodating the growing population of homeless women who benefit from DWC's vital services.
Today, the Downtown Women’s Center is nationally recognized as a prototype for programs striving to meet the unique needs of homeless women. We serve over 2000 women per year in our Day Center and in 2006, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of our Residence! Within all aspects of DWC, women find support in coping with the multiple challenges that have contributed to their homelessness: the effects of aging, mental illness, physical disability, domestic violence, poverty, and aging out of foster care.
-> Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm, Administrative Offices: (213) 680-0600
Monday-Friday, 6am-4pm and Weekends 8am-2pm, Day Center: (213) 613-0761
Additional evening and weekend hours, Residence: (213) 680-1226
Fax: (213) 680-0844. No junk faxes and no unsolicited ads accepted.
Directions at the website. Free parking. On mass transit.
Creating a Space for Women
Before DWC opened our doors in 1978, homeless women in the heart of Los Angeles had no place to turn for shelter and support. Skid Row and its surrounding streets were in every respect a man�s world -- its shelters, pantries and social services accessible only to men. DWC began as the result of one woman�s deep concern for the well-being of mentally ill women who found themselves destitute and on the streets of Los Angeles following the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970�s. Read about How DWC Began for highlights of our 20 year history, including the story of how Founding Director Jill Halverson noticed and responded to the needs of Skid Row�s women. Her relationship with Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot, initiated and inspired the support of the many individuals who have offered their time, resources, and talents to create a safe place for women facing the harsh realities of homelessness. Rosa's Story speaks to the resourcefulness and dignity of a women who faces survival on the streets.
Our Mission: Recognizing the Dignity of Women, Enriching Lives
The mission of the Downtown Women�s Center is to provide permanent supportive housing and a safe and healthy community fostering dignity, respect, and personal stability, and to advocate ending homelessness for women. DWC is committed to providing the resources homeless women need to reconnect with their sense of self and reclaim goals and dreams that have become lost in their day-to-day struggle for survival. In keeping with our Mission and Philosophy, we empower each individual woman via access to supportive services and a safe community that can enhance her safety and well-being.
Issues of the Current Day
The nature of homelessness among women underwent substantial change in the late 1990s. Increasingly, homeless women exhibited a multiplicity of issues lending to their homelessness, including substance abuse/addiction, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis or other chronic illness. On the whole, the women are younger and less stable. The issue of domestic violence has become a primary indicator, and affects a cross section of women indiscriminate of socio-economic factors.
HOW OUR CENTER BEGAN
The Downtown Women�s Center was founded in 1978 by Jill Halverson, a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who was working as a social worker employed by a Skid Row agency serving alcoholic men. Jill met Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot. Rosa�s Story is one of survival in the face of adversity. Halverson learned from Rosa that there were no facilities where homeless women could bathe, eat a good meal, or get off the streets. In fact, the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970s directly caused a significant number of women to become homeless. At that time, women were only about 5% of the homeless population, and downtown mission facilities provided meals to women but did not offer shelter. Women therefore spent their days and nights on unsafe streets or in rundown hotels.
In 1978, DWC Founding Director Jill Halverson rented a storefront and opened the city�s first Day Center for women. Halverson withdrew her life savings and, garnering support from others in the community, acquired the furniture and rent dollars needed to open the Downtown Women�s Center and provide hot, well-balanced meals to women in need. In the beginning, Jill's Place (as DWC's drop-in center has come to be known) operated as a de facto mental health facility with volunteer psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses. Over time, the Center grew to become a comprehensive program offering not just one daily meal, but three�breakfast, lunch, and a hearty afternoon snack�along with a respite from life on the street. Day-rest beds, restrooms, showers, and a variety of personal services are important components of the Center, creating a safe space for women to rest and refresh themselves. Please visit Our Center for more information about the comprehensive array of services currently offered to women. Such services, so essential to maintain well-being and a sense of dignity, are difficult to find on Skid Row, even in the present day. In fact, 29 years after our founding, DWC remains the only center providing a safe environment exclusive to women.
Another milestone was reached in 1986, when, with they help of an exceptionally talented and generous Community of Supporters, DWC opened the doors of our newly acquired and renovated Residence. The design of the Residence, located directly adjacent to the Day Center, features 47 unique, single-room apartment units in which women live on a permanent basis. The Residence is dedicated to providing safe, service-enriched, low-cost housing featuring furnished private rooms and access to community kitchen, bath, laundry and recreational facilities. Specialized programs and individualized case management encourage and assist the residents in making the transition to independent living.
A set-back befell DWC in 1987, when the Whittier Narrows Earthquake caused significant damage to the Day Center. With the help of our supportive community, the Center was rebuilt to double our original capacity, accommodating the growing population of homeless women who benefit from DWC's vital services.
Today, the Downtown Women�s Center is nationally recognized as a prototype for programs striving to meet the unique needs of homeless women. We serve over 2000 women per year in our Day Center and in 2006, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of our Residence! Within all aspects of DWC, women find support in coping with the multiple challenges that have contributed to their homelessness: the effects of aging, mental illness, physical disability, domestic violence, poverty, and aging out of foster care.
status: Open -> Unknown
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client_contact_phone: ->
client_contact_email: ->
areas_served: ->
eligibility: ->
payment_forms: ->
temp_perm: -> Temporary
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cat_notes: ->
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(show/hide changes)Wed Sep 19 05:05:40 +0000 2007 by LTel:website
parish: -> Los Angeles
main_phone: 213 613 0761 -> (213) 613-0761
notes:
Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm, Administrative Offices: (213) 680-0600
Monday-Friday, 6am-4pm and Weekends 8am-2pm, Day Center: (213) 613-0761
Additional evening and weekend hours, Residence: (213) 680-1226
Fax: (213) 680-0844. No junk faxes and no unsolicited ads accepted.
Directions at the website. Free parking. On mass transit.
Creating a Space for Women
Before DWC opened our doors in 1978, homeless women in the heart of Los Angeles had no place to turn for shelter and support. Skid Row and its surrounding streets were in every respect a man’s world -- its shelters, pantries and social services accessible only to men. DWC began as the result of one woman’s deep concern for the well-being of mentally ill women who found themselves destitute and on the streets of Los Angeles following the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970’s. Read about How DWC Began for highlights of our 20 year history, including the story of how Founding Director Jill Halverson noticed and responded to the needs of Skid Row’s women. Her relationship with Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot, initiated and inspired the support of the many individuals who have offered their time, resources, and talents to create a safe place for women facing the harsh realities of homelessness. Rosa's Story speaks to the resourcefulness and dignity of a women who faces survival on the streets.
Our Mission: Recognizing the Dignity of Women, Enriching Lives
The mission of the Downtown Women’s Center is to provide permanent supportive housing and a safe and healthy community fostering dignity, respect, and personal stability, and to advocate ending homelessness for women. DWC is committed to providing the resources homeless women need to reconnect with their sense of self and reclaim goals and dreams that have become lost in their day-to-day struggle for survival. In keeping with our Mission and Philosophy, we empower each individual woman via access to supportive services and a safe community that can enhance her safety and well-being.
Issues of the Current Day
The nature of homelessness among women underwent substantial change in the late 1990s. Increasingly, homeless women exhibited a multiplicity of issues lending to their homelessness, including substance abuse/addiction, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis or other chronic illness. On the whole, the women are younger and less stable. The issue of domestic violence has become a primary indicator, and affects a cross section of women indiscriminate of socio-economic factors.
HOW OUR CENTER BEGAN
The Downtown Women’s Center was founded in 1978 by Jill Halverson, a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who was working as a social worker employed by a Skid Row agency serving alcoholic men. Jill met Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot. Rosa’s Story is one of survival in the face of adversity. Halverson learned from Rosa that there were no facilities where homeless women could bathe, eat a good meal, or get off the streets. In fact, the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970s directly caused a significant number of women to become homeless. At that time, women were only about 5% of the homeless population, and downtown mission facilities provided meals to women but did not offer shelter. Women therefore spent their days and nights on unsafe streets or in rundown hotels.
In 1978, DWC Founding Director Jill Halverson rented a storefront and opened the city’s first Day Center for women. Halverson withdrew her life savings and, garnering support from others in the community, acquired the furniture and rent dollars needed to open the Downtown Women’s Center and provide hot, well-balanced meals to women in need. In the beginning, Jill's Place (as DWC's drop-in center has come to be known) operated as a de facto mental health facility with volunteer psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses. Over time, the Center grew to become a comprehensive program offering not just one daily meal, but three—breakfast, lunch, and a hearty afternoon snack—along with a respite from life on the street. Day-rest beds, restrooms, showers, and a variety of personal services are important components of the Center, creating a safe space for women to rest and refresh themselves. Please visit Our Center for more information about the comprehensive array of services currently offered to women. Such services, so essential to maintain well-being and a sense of dignity, are difficult to find on Skid Row, even in the present day. In fact, 29 years after our founding, DWC remains the only center providing a safe environment exclusive to women.
Another milestone was reached in 1986, when, with they help of an exceptionally talented and generous Community of Supporters, DWC opened the doors of our newly acquired and renovated Residence. The design of the Residence, located directly adjacent to the Day Center, features 47 unique, single-room apartment units in which women live on a permanent basis. The Residence is dedicated to providing safe, service-enriched, low-cost housing featuring furnished private rooms and access to community kitchen, bath, laundry and recreational facilities. Specialized programs and individualized case management encourage and assist the residents in making the transition to independent living.
A set-back befell DWC in 1987, when the Whittier Narrows Earthquake caused significant damage to the Day Center. With the help of our supportive community, the Center was rebuilt to double our original capacity, accommodating the growing population of homeless women who benefit from DWC's vital services.
Today, the Downtown Women’s Center is nationally recognized as a prototype for programs striving to meet the unique needs of homeless women. We serve over 2000 women per year in our Day Center and in 2006, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of our Residence! Within all aspects of DWC, women find support in coping with the multiple challenges that have contributed to their homelessness: the effects of aging, mental illness, physical disability, domestic violence, poverty, and aging out of foster care.
-> Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm, Administrative Offices: (213) 680-0600
Monday-Friday, 6am-4pm and Weekends 8am-2pm, Day Center: (213) 613-0761
Additional evening and weekend hours, Residence: (213) 680-1226
Fax: (213) 680-0844. No junk faxes and no unsolicited ads accepted.
Directions at the website. Free parking. On mass transit.
Creating a Space for Women
Before DWC opened our doors in 1978, homeless women in the heart of Los Angeles had no place to turn for shelter and support. Skid Row and its surrounding streets were in every respect a man’s world -- its shelters, pantries and social services accessible only to men. DWC began as the result of one woman’s deep concern for the well-being of mentally ill women who found themselves destitute and on the streets of Los Angeles following the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970’s. Read about How DWC Began for highlights of our 20 year history, including the story of how Founding Director Jill Halverson noticed and responded to the needs of Skid Row’s women. Her relationship with Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot, initiated and inspired the support of the many individuals who have offered their time, resources, and talents to create a safe place for women facing the harsh realities of homelessness. Rosa's Story speaks to the resourcefulness and dignity of a women who faces survival on the streets.
Our Mission: Recognizing the Dignity of Women, Enriching Lives
The mission of the Downtown Women’s Center is to provide permanent supportive housing and a safe and healthy community fostering dignity, respect, and personal stability, and to advocate ending homelessness for women. DWC is committed to providing the resources homeless women need to reconnect with their sense of self and reclaim goals and dreams that have become lost in their day-to-day struggle for survival. In keeping with our Mission and Philosophy, we empower each individual woman via access to supportive services and a safe community that can enhance her safety and well-being.
Issues of the Current Day
The nature of homelessness among women underwent substantial change in the late 1990s. Increasingly, homeless women exhibited a multiplicity of issues lending to their homelessness, including substance abuse/addiction, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis or other chronic illness. On the whole, the women are younger and less stable. The issue of domestic violence has become a primary indicator, and affects a cross section of women indiscriminate of socio-economic factors.
HOW OUR CENTER BEGAN
The Downtown Women’s Center was founded in 1978 by Jill Halverson, a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer who was working as a social worker employed by a Skid Row agency serving alcoholic men. Jill met Rosa, a mentally ill woman whose home was two shopping carts in a downtown parking lot. Rosa’s Story is one of survival in the face of adversity. Halverson learned from Rosa that there were no facilities where homeless women could bathe, eat a good meal, or get off the streets. In fact, the closure of mental hospitals in the early 1970s directly caused a significant number of women to become homeless. At that time, women were only about 5% of the homeless population, and downtown mission facilities provided meals to women but did not offer shelter. Women therefore spent their days and nights on unsafe streets or in rundown hotels.
In 1978, DWC Founding Director Jill Halverson rented a storefront and opened the city’s first Day Center for women. Halverson withdrew her life savings and, garnering support from others in the community, acquired the furniture and rent dollars needed to open the Downtown Women’s Center and provide hot, well-balanced meals to women in need. In the beginning, Jill's Place (as DWC's drop-in center has come to be known) operated as a de facto mental health facility with volunteer psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses. Over time, the Center grew to become a comprehensive program offering not just one daily meal, but three—breakfast, lunch, and a hearty afternoon snack—along with a respite from life on the street. Day-rest beds, restrooms, showers, and a variety of personal services are important components of the Center, creating a safe space for women to rest and refresh themselves. Please visit Our Center for more information about the comprehensive array of services currently offered to women. Such services, so essential to maintain well-being and a sense of dignity, are difficult to find on Skid Row, even in the present day. In fact, 29 years after our founding, DWC remains the only center providing a safe environment exclusive to women.
Another milestone was reached in 1986, when, with they help of an exceptionally talented and generous Community of Supporters, DWC opened the doors of our newly acquired and renovated Residence. The design of the Residence, located directly adjacent to the Day Center, features 47 unique, single-room apartment units in which women live on a permanent basis. The Residence is dedicated to providing safe, service-enriched, low-cost housing featuring furnished private rooms and access to community kitchen, bath, laundry and recreational facilities. Specialized programs and individualized case management encourage and assist the residents in making the transition to independent living.
A set-back befell DWC in 1987, when the Whittier Narrows Earthquake caused significant damage to the Day Center. With the help of our supportive community, the Center was rebuilt to double our original capacity, accommodating the growing population of homeless women who benefit from DWC's vital services.
Today, the Downtown Women’s Center is nationally recognized as a prototype for programs striving to meet the unique needs of homeless women. We serve over 2000 women per year in our Day Center and in 2006, celebrated the 20-year anniversary of our Residence! Within all aspects of DWC, women find support in coping with the multiple challenges that have contributed to their homelessness: the effects of aging, mental illness, physical disability, domestic violence, poverty, and aging out of foster care.
region: -> Southern
(show/hide changes)Wed Sep 12 08:35:20 +0000 2007 by tfri:(show/hide changes)(hide history)