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00000181-fa79-da89-a38d-fb7f2b910000KUOW is joining forces with other Seattle media outlets to highlight the homeless crisis in the city and region on Wednesday, June 29, 2017.The effort was modeled after a collaboration by more than 70 San Francisco outlets to focus a day of news attention on the issue and possible solutions.Read more about the Seattle project and check out our coverage below. Follow the city's coverage by using #SeaHomeless.HighlightsThe Jungle: an ongoing coverage project going into the notorious homeless encampment under Interstate 5.Ask Seattle's Homeless Community: KUOW is launching a Facebook group where anyone may ask a question about homelessness, but only people who have experienced it may answer. This was inspired by a recent event KUOW co-presented with Seattle Public Library and Real Change, where residents of the Jungle answered audience questions. No End In Sight: an award-winning investigative project from KUOW about King County's 10-year plan to end homelessness.

This once homeless family is now housed, but that doesn't mean life is easy

What’s it like to finally have a place for you and your children to live, after spending most of the year homeless?

“Surreal,” said Tiffany Hicks, whose family we told you about in two stories this year (links below).

Hicks and her fiancé had been living at the downtown Seattle shelter Mary’s Place with their three kids, including a newborn baby. The older kids attended Lowell Elementary, where up to 20 percent of students were homeless.

Hicks and her family have since moved into an apartment in Auburn with help from Wellspring Family Services.

“It’s a lot better,” Hicks said. “No noise. No eating when they tell you to. No waiting in lineup to eat. No putting up with weird people in strange places...It’s just a lot better.”

KUOW’s Race and Equity team followed up with her as part of a year-end series revisiting some of the stories we covered in 2017.

Hicks said that after more than a year in shelters, she’s grateful for stable housing. But a lot of things are harder now.

Being in Auburn means that her family is far from most of the services they rely on.

And she said school officials urged her to keep her older kids enrolled at Lowell Elementary — that’s an hour-long taxi ride each way.

Still, she said, she feels “so blessed” right now, because they have a place to live, and they have each other.

Year started with KUOW: 2008