Snohomish County Council Approves $23 Million for Housing and Behavioral Health: Three of the Six Projects Are in Everett

What just happened? On Wednesday, April 24, 2026, the Snohomish County Council voted unanimously to award roughly $23 million in capital grants to six affordable-housing and behavioral-health projects across the county. Three of the funded projects are located in Everett — including a $5.8 million grant to the Everett Gospel Mission for its 172-bed shelter expansion, $4.2 million to Helping Hands for a 28-unit affordable building on Broadway in north Everett, and a grant to the Everett Station District Alliance for a 58-unit transit-oriented building on Smith Avenue. The money comes from two voter-authorized sales taxes that were specifically created to fund supportive housing.

If you live in Everett and you have ever wondered what your county council actually does between elections, last Wednesday is a clean answer.

In a single unanimous vote on April 24, the Snohomish County Council moved roughly $23 million out of the county’s Housing and Behavioral Health Capital Fund and into six brick-and-mortar projects that will, over the next two years, add hundreds of beds and apartments to the county’s housing supply. Three of those six projects are inside Everett city limits. One of them — the Everett Gospel Mission’s shelter expansion — is the largest single award in the round.

The vote did not change a tax rate. It did not raise a fee. What it did was take money the county already collects under two state laws — sales tax revenue earmarked for affordable and supportive housing — and put it into a slate of projects the council’s Human Services Department had screened and recommended.

Here is what each of the three Everett-located projects gets, what they will build, and when residents are likely to see results on the ground.

The Everett Gospel Mission Expansion: $5.8 Million for 172 Beds

The Mission’s award was the largest of the six, at $5.8 million. The grant goes toward a 172-bed expansion of the Mission’s existing shelter at 3530 Smith Avenue — roughly tripling the footprint of the current building.

The total project is budgeted at approximately $30 million. The county’s $5.8 million stacks on top of money already committed by the City of Everett, prior philanthropic giving, and a state legislative allocation approved earlier in 2026. The Mission’s CEO, Sylvia Anderson, has said construction is targeted for an October or November 2026 start. The first phase is intended to be open in time for the 2027 cold-weather season.

The expanded building will house separate spaces for men and women, on-site staff 24 hours a day, a small store for residents to access necessities, kennels and a wash station for residents’ pets, and a craft room. The current shelter will keep operating throughout construction.

For Everett residents, the Mission’s expansion is the closest thing to a measurable change in the city’s homeless-response capacity over the next 18 months. The Mission already runs the largest emergency shelter in Snohomish County. After the expansion, it will be larger by a factor of roughly three.

Helping Hands: $4.2 Million for 28 Apartments on North Broadway

The second-largest Everett-bound award was $4.2 million to the Helping Hands Project for a 28-unit affordable apartment building at 2410 and 2412 Broadway, in the city’s North Broadway corridor.

According to the county, the building will serve “those who are disadvantaged or have special needs.” The Helping Hands Project, a Snohomish County nonprofit, has been moving the project forward under the working name Broadway 33. Project completion is currently targeted for February 2028.

For neighbors on North Broadway, the practical effect is that two parcels currently fronting the corridor will move from their current condition into a permitted, occupied apartment building over the next 22 months. For the city’s affordable-housing inventory, it is 28 deed-restricted units that did not exist before.

The Everett Station District Alliance: A 58-Unit Building on Smith Avenue

The third Everett-located award went to the Everett Station District Alliance, the nonprofit working to redevelop the area around Everett Station into a transit-oriented neighborhood. ESDA’s planned project at 3102 Smith Avenue is a 58-unit, low-income mixed-use building. According to ESDA’s own filings, the unit mix breaks down as 15 units at 30 percent of area median income (the deepest affordability tier), 29 units at 50 percent AMI, and 14 units at 60 percent AMI. Fifteen of the 58 units are reserved for tenants experiencing homelessness.

The Smith Avenue site has prior development entitlements — a previously approved land-use permit on the parcel allowed up to 166 residential units over 3,359 square feet of retail. ESDA purchased the property and has been working through redesign and financing options. The county’s grant, alongside additional state and federal sources, is part of how that financing comes together.

Two Other Awards That Affect Everett Indirectly

The remaining three projects in the $23 million round are based outside city limits but still serve people who live, work, or seek care in Everett.

The Housing Authority of Snohomish County received $2.98 million toward a 60-unit senior-housing project at 5710 and 5714 200th Street SW in Lynnwood, with construction targeted for fall 2026. Holman Recovery Center received $3 million toward a 48-bed substance-use disorder facility at 4230 Airport Boulevard in Arlington. And Housing Hope’s Rainbow Terrace project, a 66-unit senior building with 14 units reserved for residents experiencing homelessness, was also funded in this round.

The combined effect across the six projects is hundreds of new housing or shelter beds added to the county’s inventory over the next 24 to 30 months — in a region where the per-capita affordable-housing gap remains one of the largest line items in the county’s biennial budget conversation.

Where the Money Comes From

The Housing and Behavioral Health Capital Fund — the source of all $23 million — is funded by two state-authorized sales taxes:

  • RCW 82.14.530 authorizes a sales tax for housing and related services
  • RCW 82.14.540 authorizes an additional sales tax dedicated to affordable and supportive housing

Both authorities were enacted by the Washington Legislature and adopted by the Snohomish County Council to create a recurring funding stream specifically for projects of this type. The fund operates on a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) cycle: nonprofits, public housing authorities, and qualified developers submit proposals; county Human Services staff score them; and the council votes on a slate.

April 24 was the council’s vote on the most recent NOFO slate.

What This Means for Everett Residents

For most Everett residents, the immediate effect of the April 24 vote is not visible — no new building goes up tomorrow, no rent line changes, no service appears on the street.

The longer effect, over the next two years, is roughly this:

  • The Gospel Mission’s shelter capacity grows substantially heading into the 2027 cold-weather season
  • 28 deed-restricted apartments arrive on North Broadway by early 2028
  • ESDA’s Smith Avenue project continues moving toward construction at a site that has been entitled but stuck for years

For neighbors near the three Everett sites — Smith Avenue, North Broadway, and the Mission’s Smith Avenue campus — the more concrete effect is permitting activity, construction traffic, and changes in foot traffic over the next 18 to 30 months. None of those projects is breaking ground this week. All three are now meaningfully closer to doing so.

What to Do Next

If you want to follow these projects directly:

  • Snohomish County Human Services Department publishes the official documents for the Housing and Behavioral Health Capital Fund, including the NOFO and the awarded-project list, on the county website at snohomishcountywa.gov.
  • The Everett Gospel Mission posts construction-timeline updates and volunteer opportunities at egmission.org.
  • The Helping Hands Project publishes Broadway 33 updates at helpinghands-project.org/broadway33.
  • The Everett Station District Alliance posts development-project updates at everettstationdistrict.com/development-projects.
  • Public comment on county budget priorities flows through the Snohomish County Council’s regular meeting process. Council meetings are held at the Robert J. Drewel Building (3000 Rockefeller Avenue, Everett). Agendas are posted at snohomishcountywa.gov.

If you want to weigh in before the next round of Housing and Behavioral Health Capital Fund awards, the time to engage is when the Human Services Department posts the next NOFO — usually quarterly to semi-annually. That is the input window where the project list gets shaped, well before the council’s vote.

Frequently Asked Questions

Was the April 24 vote unanimous?
Yes. According to Council Chair filings and post-vote reporting, all five council members present voted to approve the awards.

Does this raise my taxes?
No. The $23 million was awarded out of an existing fund. The two underlying sales taxes — under RCW 82.14.530 and RCW 82.14.540 — were authorized by the state Legislature and previously adopted by the county. No new tax was created or raised by this vote.

When will I see the new buildings?
The Gospel Mission expansion’s first phase is targeted for the 2027 cold-weather season. Helping Hands’ Broadway 33 is targeted for February 2028. ESDA’s Smith Avenue building’s construction timeline depends on completing its full financing stack, which is still in progress.

How does the county pick which projects get funded?
Through a competitive Notice of Funding Opportunity process. Nonprofits and public housing authorities submit applications. County Human Services Department staff score them against published criteria (project readiness, leverage of other funding sources, populations served). The council votes on the staff-recommended slate.

Are any of these projects “low-barrier” shelter or housing-first?
The Gospel Mission’s expansion is a shelter, not permanent housing, and operates under the Mission’s own program model. Helping Hands’ Broadway 33 and ESDA’s Smith Avenue project are deed-restricted affordable apartments, not shelter, and follow standard tenancy rules including leases.

Where can I read the full list of awarded projects?
The Snohomish County Human Services Department posts official NOFO documentation and award lists on the county website. The April 24 council action will appear in the council’s published meeting minutes.

How much did the county put into housing in this single round versus prior rounds?
The $23 million single-round total is among the larger awards out of the Housing and Behavioral Health Capital Fund in recent cycles. Prior awards have ranged from a few million to the high teens depending on application volume and project readiness.

What’s the difference between this fund and federal HUD funding?
This fund is locally raised under state authority (the two RCW sales taxes). It is separate from federal Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) and HOME funds, which the county also administers. Both streams ultimately fund similar project types but operate under different rules and timelines.


Sources: Snohomish County Council meeting record (April 24, 2026); HeraldNet; Everett Gospel Mission; Helping Hands Project; Everett Station District Alliance; RCW 82.14.530; RCW 82.14.540.

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