Quick answer: Five no-cost mental health resources cover almost every situation for NAVSTA Everett Sailors and Navy families during Mental Health Awareness Month 2026 (and every month after). Dial 988 then press 1 for the Military and Veterans Crisis Line (24/7). Call the Naval Station Everett Fleet & Family Support Center at 425-304-3735 for short-term counseling that does not generate a medical record. Walk into the Everett Vet Center at 1010 SE Everett Mall Way Suite 207 (425-252-9701) for combat-trauma support. Schedule mental health care at the Everett VA Clinic, 220 Olympic Boulevard. Reach the Snohomish County Veterans Assistance Program at 425-388-7255 for emergency help. None of them require a referral to start.
May is Mental Health Awareness Month, and for the more than 6,000 Sailors and Navy family members who call Naval Station Everett home, the month lands at the end of a difficult run. PCS season is heating up. Five Arleigh Burke-class destroyers cycle through deployment workups. The shipyard delays around the FF(X) frigate program have introduced fresh uncertainty about who is moving where and when. Department of Defense research, summarized by Syracuse University’s Institute for Veterans and Military Families, shows that 11.7% of active-duty service members carry at least one mental health diagnosis — a roughly 40% rise between 2019 and 2023.
The good news for NAVSTA Everett families: the local resource network is denser than most people realize, and almost all of it is free. Here is what is open, who it is for, and how to reach it during May 2026 and beyond. This is the comprehensive Everett-specific resource map, organized by what’s most useful in different situations.
If You or Someone You Love Is in Crisis Right Now
Dial 988, then press 1. That’s the Military and Veterans Crisis Line, staffed 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by responders trained in military culture. Active-duty Sailors, Reservists, retirees, veterans, and family members can all use it. You can also text 838255 for the same service, or chat online at veteranscrisisline.net.
The Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense built the line specifically because too many service members and families hesitated to call a civilian crisis line. You don’t need to be enrolled in VA care to use it. You don’t need to be retired or separated. You don’t need a diagnosis. The line exists for the moment when reaching out is the right move.
If the situation is medical and immediate, the closest emergency department to the gate is Providence Regional Medical Center Everett on Pacific Avenue, with a 24/7 emergency department and behavioral health response capability.
Fleet & Family Support Center: Short-Term Counseling, No Medical Record
The Fleet & Family Support Center (FFSC) at NAVSTA Everett is staffed with licensed counselors who hold master’s or doctoral degrees in social work, marriage and family therapy, or psychology. The Center provides individual, marriage, and family counseling on a short-term basis to active-duty service members, spouses, dependents, and retirees.
Phone: 425-304-3735. Email: ffsp.cnrnw@navy.mil.
The detail that matters most to many Sailors: FFSC counseling does not generate a medical record and does not feed into a security clearance review. Many Sailors who hesitate to seek help on the medical side because of clearance worries find FFSC’s non-medical model is the bridge that gets them talking to someone licensed.
The Center also runs deployment readiness counseling, financial counseling, and relocation support. It operates a satellite office at NAVSUP FLC Puget Sound Smokey Point, which can be a more convenient option for families living north of the base.
Military and Family Life Counselors (MFLCs): Embedded, Free, Confidential
MFLCs are Department of Defense contracted licensed clinical counselors who rotate through installations and provide non-medical counseling to service members and families. Naval Station Everett has MFLC coverage. The Centers for Deployment Psychology notes that DoD requires MFLCs to be licensed clinical providers with a master’s degree or higher in a behavioral health field.
The conversations stay off the medical record, off the chain of command, and off the security clearance process. Sessions can happen at the Fleet & Family Support Center, on board the ship if the MFLC is doing rotations there, or at off-base locations the MFLC arranges.
The way to reach an MFLC at NAVSTA Everett is through the Fleet & Family Support Center at 425-304-3735, which can route the request to the current MFLC contact rotation.
Everett Vet Center: Combat-Trauma Specialty
The Everett Vet Center at 1010 SE Everett Mall Way, Suite 207, phone 425-252-9701, is a Department of Veterans Affairs Vet Center that provides combat-trauma counseling, military sexual trauma counseling, bereavement counseling for surviving family members, and readjustment services for veterans of all eras.
Vet Centers are run on a different model from VA medical clinics: they’re community-based, the staff is largely combat-experienced veterans themselves, and the conversations don’t go into the broader VA medical record by default. For combat veterans who haven’t engaged with VA at all, the Everett Vet Center is often the first door they walk through.
The Vet Center is open to combat veterans, MST survivors, family members of veterans killed in service, and active-duty members who served in a combat zone. You don’t need to be enrolled in VA healthcare to receive Vet Center services.
Everett VA Clinic: Routine Mental Health Care Inside the VA System
The Everett VA Clinic at 220 Olympic Boulevard is part of the VA Puget Sound Health Care System and provides routine mental health care, medication management, group therapy, and care coordination for veterans enrolled in VA care. Initial enrollment in VA healthcare is required for most ongoing mental health services through the clinic.
For active-duty Sailors transitioning out of service, the 180-day pre-separation BDD (Benefits Delivery at Discharge) window is the optimal time to start the VA enrollment process. Initiating BDD before separation gets your VA claims into the queue earlier and shortens the gap between leaving active service and beginning VA care.
Snohomish County Veterans Assistance Program: Emergency Help
The Snohomish County Veterans Assistance Program at 3000 Rockefeller Avenue, phone 425-388-7255, provides emergency financial assistance, rental and utility help, and case management for Snohomish County veterans and their families. The program is funded through the county’s Veterans Assistance Fund and operates on a need-based model.
For a veteran or active-duty family in immediate financial distress — about to lose housing, facing utility shutoff, or unable to cover an essential expense — Snohomish County Veterans Assistance is the local emergency-help door.
Chaplain Services and Spiritual Support
NAVSTA Everett chaplains provide pastoral counseling protected by absolute confidentiality (the chaplain-confessor privilege). For Sailors and family members who want to talk to someone in a faith context, or who specifically need the absolute-confidentiality model that only chaplains can offer, the chaplain corps at the base is reachable through the quarterdeck or through the FFSC referral process.
Why the May 2026 Window Matters
Mental Health Awareness Month coincides this year with several stress-elevating realities at NAVSTA Everett. PCS orders are landing in waves through the spring as the rotation cycle ramps. Deployment workups on the destroyer squadron are entering their crunch phase. The FF(X) frigate program timeline has introduced uncertainty about which families will move and when, which is itself a stressor for Navy households planning their next 18 months.
Department of Defense research showing 11.7% of active-duty members with at least one mental health diagnosis (a 40% rise from 2019 to 2023) is the broader context. The five resources above exist precisely because the demand is real and the structural barriers to seeking help — particularly clearance concerns and medical-record fears — keep many Sailors from reaching out until the situation is more acute than it needed to be.
Cross-References to Related Coverage
For other NAVSTA Everett family resources covered recently: see our Everett Gospel Mission services for military families, our FF(X) frigate budget timeline guide for Navy families, and our VA claims help guide after the Vet Center change.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will using FFSC counseling affect my security clearance?
FFSC counseling does not generate a medical record and does not feed into the standard security clearance review process. Many Sailors who hesitate to seek help on the medical side because of clearance worries find FFSC’s non-medical model is the bridge to getting help without the documentation concerns.
Do I need to be enrolled in VA healthcare to use the Everett Vet Center?
No. Vet Centers operate on a different model from VA medical clinics. You don’t need to be enrolled in VA healthcare to receive Vet Center services. The Everett Vet Center is open to combat veterans, MST survivors, family members of veterans killed in service, and active-duty members who served in a combat zone.
What’s the difference between calling 988 and pressing 1 vs. just calling 988?
Pressing 1 routes you to the Military and Veterans Crisis Line, staffed by responders trained in military culture. Just calling 988 routes you to a civilian Suicide and Crisis Lifeline responder. Both are available 24/7. For service members and veterans, the +1 routing is generally preferable because the responders understand the specific stressors of military life.
Can spouses use FFSC counseling?
Yes. FFSC counseling is open to active-duty service members, spouses, dependents, and retirees. The Center runs individual, marriage, and family counseling.
How fast can I get an appointment?
For acute crisis situations, 988+1 is the right immediate door. For non-crisis FFSC counseling, appointments are typically available within days to two weeks. The Vet Center and Everett VA Clinic have variable wait times depending on demand and provider availability.
What if I’m an MST survivor?
The Everett Vet Center provides specific Military Sexual Trauma counseling. You don’t need to have filed a report or have any documentation to receive MST services. The Vet Center is structured to be low-barrier for survivors who may have hesitated to engage with the broader VA system.
What about my kids?
FFSC has family counseling that includes children. School-based MFLCs serve military-connected students at certain Everett-area schools. The Family Advocacy Program at NAVSTA also provides services for families with children. The FFSC referral line at 425-304-3735 can route family-specific requests appropriately.
I’m not active duty anymore. Which resource applies to me?
If you’re separated or retired: 988+1 for crisis, Everett Vet Center for combat-trauma or MST counseling, Everett VA Clinic for routine mental health care (requires VA enrollment), and Snohomish County Veterans Assistance for emergency financial help. FFSC is generally for active-duty members and their families, with some retiree services.
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