As she peeled a red cuff off the 53-year-old’s arm, nurse Molly Bosch broke into a smile. Despite everything, Jackie Peavy’s blood pressure was normal.
Peavy became homeless for the first time early this year after losing her job and getting evicted. Finding a place to live — let alone work that paid enough to afford rent in Seattle — felt out of reach.
But that night, Peavy had something few in her position do: an invitation to sleep in the same bed for as many nights as she needed, with almost no strings attached.
Peavy’s refuge was Donna Jean’s Place.
The entirely donor-funded 20-bed emergency women’s shelter opened in February less than two blocks from Volunteer Park in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood.
Tucked behind St. Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral, the shelter is run by Operati