Thrilled to share that Saba Mwine-Chang (she/her) is joining our 9/24 HPRI Symposium on LA County Women’s Needs Assessment as a moderator!
Register the symposium here: https://lnkd.in/gcmA5-j8
Saba Mwine-Chang (she/her) serves as the inaugural Deputy Chief Equity Officer at the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority (LAHSA) where she provides strategic leadership and facilitates shared vision and collaborative partnerships among LAHSA staff, Los Angeles Continuum of Care, the City of Los Angeles and the County of Los Angeles. Saba’s work at LAHSA includes fostering: culturally specific and informed healing service delivery models; data driven equity goals, metrics and implementation; equity technical assistance and guidance for service providers, staff and the public at large. Prior to LAHSA, Saba served as inaugural Managing Director of the Homelessness Policy Research Institute (HPRI), a collaborative of over one hundred researchers, policymakers, service providers and experts with lived experience of homelessness that accelerate equitable and culturally informed solutions to homelessness in Los Angeles County by advancing knowledge and fostering transformational partnerships between research, policy and practice. Under Saba’s co-direction, HPRI more than doubled in size, growing collaboratively from a start-up to an established trusted racial equity centered institute locally and across the country. Saba helped deepen policy relationships, supported anti-racist research, practice and integrated community learning spaces.
Saba has over twenty years of experience spearheading housing justice work throughout the nation. At the Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH), she worked to establish their first racial equity initiatives via fundraising, designing grant programming, developing and delivering transformative learnings, and guiding community initiatives. Under the Obama Administration, she facilitated the national Housing Discrimination Study throughout Los Angeles County and other major cities across the country, measuring access to housing based on race and other protected classes. Saba is a classically trained actor and holds a master’s of fine arts in theatre; she is committed to the arts and somatic practice as a tool for healing racial trauma and shaping community spaces. In California and nationally, Saba is a leading voice in the movement for liberatory, community engaged, culturally informed healing approaches to addressing racism—the least examined cause and perpetuator of homelessness.