People don’t fall through the cracks—they’re pushed. Whether it’s due to poverty, addiction, prison sentences, or mental health struggles, too many individuals leave institutions only to find themselves alone, homeless, and vulnerable. Without meaningful support, the result is often a return to crime, relapse, or long-term dependency. That’s why supported housing isn’t just helpful—it’s essential.
Fairways was founded to fill that gap.
Our approach is simple but powerful: we provide safe, affordable housing with wraparound support services for people facing life transitions. That includes ex-offenders, people overcoming addiction, those leaving care or shelters, and others who need structured help to reintegrate into society.
What makes supported housing different is the combination of accommodation and care. Residents don’t just have a place to sleep—they have someone to talk to, routines to keep, responsibilities to meet, and pathways to healing. Whether it’s helping with job searches, managing appointments, attending recovery meetings, or simply having someone to listen, these small steps add up to lasting change.
Statistically, ex-offenders are more likely to reoffend if they are released without stable housing. Similarly, individuals recovering from addiction are at higher risk of relapse if they return to environments filled with old triggers and no accountability. Fairways breaks that pattern. We don’t just offer rooms—we create safe, stable environments that promote change.
Our staff understands that people are more than their pasts. We treat our residents with dignity, fairness, and honesty. And because of that, they begin to believe in themselves too.
Over the years, we’ve seen people go from having nothing to rebuilding careers, families, and lives filled with purpose. Supported housing works—not because it’s a charity handout, but because it gives people a platform to stand on again.