Jasmine Donahue shows her medicine cabinet where people are able to safely store and have access to their medications on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)

Jasmine Donahue shows her medicine cabinet where people are able to safely store and have access to their medications on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)

Everett extends deadline for homeless service facing closure

Hope ‘N Wellness must now comply with city zoning laws by April 30. The organization is “grateful,” its owner said, but still hopes for a permanent solution.

EVERETT — Hope ‘N Wellness, which provides social services in downtown Everett, will be able to operate through the end of April after the city extended a deadline requiring the organization to comply with zoning laws.

Jasmine Donahue, who founded the organization in 2020 and currently heads it, is “very grateful” for the extension, she said in an interview Tuesday. But she still hopes to find a permanent solution to allow the organization to operate downtown.

Hope ‘N Wellness provides a place for those in need — particularly people experiencing homelessness or addiction — to warm up, keep track of appointments, and store belongings. The city has said, however, that the organization is violating a city code which prohibits social services from operating on the ground floor of certain streets within Metro Everett. Those codes, first introduced in 2006 and expanded upon in 2018, limit certain areas of downtown to retail shops and dining.

If the organization, located at 3021 Rucker Ave., was operating a few blocks away or above the first floor, it could continue to operate as a social service facility.

Initially, the city gave Donahue a deadline of October 2024 to meet zoning requirements, either by closing the organization’s doors or by finding a new location. The city later extended the deadline to Feb. 28 and, as of Feb. 12, extended it again to April 30. Mayor Cassie Franklin directed staff to do so, she said at the Feb. 12 City Council meeting.

The extension means Donahue can operate Hope ‘N Wellness through the end of winter, at a time when its services are most desperately needed. Finding other possible locations to move the organization, however, remains difficult. As of Tuesday, she has not found a suitable location to move to.

“There’s a lot of different pieces to all of that,” Donahue said. “We have found one good potential partnership, but it doesn’t necessarily include space. It’s all learning curves and trying a little bit of everything, keeping an open mind about how that could look.”

The extension is also contingent upon keeping the organization’s current schedule the same, a city building official, Tony Lee, wrote to Donahue in an email. Currently, Hope ‘N Wellness is open one day per week.

Trying to open the location on additional weekdays would “take some prep work anyways,” Donahue said, so the organization is already focusing its efforts on providing the best services it can once a week.

“Our hope is that this is a sign of good faith with potentially working with us to stay permanently,” she said.

The city is looking to possibly partner with social service providers like Hope ‘N Wellness to increase the availability of services in Everett, city spokesperson Simone Tarver said in an email. But the city also must enforce its code, put in place to activate Everett’s downtown and support the growth of small businesses, she said.

“We want to see our social service providers be successful while also ensuring we’re appropriately preventing and addressing impacts to the homes, businesses and public spaces in the surrounding area,” Tarver wrote. “And that’s why plans like the Metro Everett plan are important — they set a vision and provide a framework for future decisions that help us to make the community’s vision for that area a reality.”

Donahue is holding out hope for a permanent solution to keep the organization downtown, but isn’t “discrediting options on the table,” she said. Another option, she said, could be working with a number of other groups who share a similar vision to open multiple smaller social service day centers, increasing access to services city-wide.

Even if the building closes at the end of April, however, she insists she will keep working for those in need in Everett.

“As long as there is breath in my lungs, I will be out here supporting folks as best I can,” Donahue said. “We have a huge population of folks from all different walks of life that have felt hopeless and decided to trust a little bit, to try. I don’t see doing anything but trying to honor that as best I can.”

Will Geschke: 425-339-3443; william.geschke@heraldnet.com; X: @willgeschke.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Local News

Employees and patrons of the Everett Mall signed a timeline mural that traces the history of the 51-year-old indoor mall that was once considered the premier place to go shopping in the city. Thursday, March 20, 2025 (Aaron Kennedy / The Herald)
Mall mural offers nostalgic trip into the past

Past and present Everett Mall employees joined customers Thursday to view an artistic timeline of the once popular shopping mecca.

Edmonds Mayor Mike Rosen gives his State of the City address on Thursday, March 20 in Edmonds, Washington. (Will Geschke / The Herald)
Edmonds mayor talks budget at 2025 State of the City

Mayor Mike Rosen discussed the city’s deficit and highlights from his first year in office.

Jeannie Nicholos points out some of the multi-colored marks on her office wall left by lighting that struck the outside of her home and traveled inside on Thursday, March 27, 2025 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Everett home hit by lightning, catches fire

Family escapes as roof burns; two other homes hit on Camano Island.

Snohomish County sheriff Susanna Johnson swears in colleagues during the ceremonial oath of office at the PUD auditorium in Everett, Washington on Tuesday, Jan. 2, 2024. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
Sheriff, council member elected to lead Snohomish justice council

Dunn and Johnson to co-chair as the council encourages community members to join.

Judge sets $2M bail in 1989 Everett murder case

Joseph Andrew Jacquez pleads not guilty in first court appearance after extradition from Nevada.

‘An uphill battle’: South County firefighter facing his toughest fight

Nick Jessen, 38, has stage four lung cancer, a disease disproportionately affecting his profession.

Four scams that officials say residents should watch out for

Toll scams, jury duty fraud and fake arrest warrants are among the new tactics.

Amtrak suspends most train service on Cascades route

Amtrak discovered problems with its Horizon railcars, which forced the suspension. The agency will use buses in the meantime to keep service running.

Lester Almanza, programs manager at the Edmonds Food Bank, puts together a custom shoppers order on Wednesday, March 26, 2025 in Edmonds, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
‘It’s going to lead to more hungry people’: Cuts hit SnoCo food banks

Federal and state funding to local food banks is expected to drop — even as the need has increased in recent years.

Logo for news use featuring Snohomish County, Washington. 220118
County council approves changes to ADU laws

The ordinance allows accessory dwelling units to be built in more urban areas and reduces some restrictions previously in place.

Update: Everett not included in severe thunderstorm watch from NWS

Everett could still see some thunderstorms but the severity of the threat has lessened since earlier Wednesday.

Dr. Katie Gilligan walks down a hallway with forest wallpaper and cloud light shades in the Mukilteo Evaluation and Treatment Center with Amanda Gian, right, and Alison Haddock, left, on Monday, March 24, 2025 in Mukilteo, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Partnership works to train Snohomish County mental health doctors

Compass Health works with medical students from Washington State University to provide psychiatry training. Both groups hope to fill gaps in much-needed services.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.