The organization started during the Great Depression, when it served soup to homeless and unemployed individuals.
Today, Seattle’s Union Gospel Mission has grown to include a number of programs – from search and rescue and prison ministries to women’s shelter and transitional housing.
Riverton Place is where homeless men who want to recover from addiction may go. The facility can serve 72 people at a time.
Each month, the center graduates three to seven men, which means they have been sober for a year.
Riverton checks in with graduates to ensure they remain on the path to recovery – and reports having a success rate of 82 percent.
Dan Edmondson, manager of education and employment at Riverton, said the need to help the homeless community continues to be on the rise.
“I live in Des Moines, and I know from just my drive to work, that there are way more people experiencing homelessness,” he said. “We want to be a part of the solution. Not everyone wants help. But if they do, we’re able to.”
The nine-month program includes counseling, job training, religious studies, legal services, a dental clinic and a computer lab.
“Every single person leaves here with a job,” Edmondson said.
Gardening and harvesting produce for the kitchen is one of the work-study options, he said.
The green space is also meant to provide a place for reflection.