Capture the Story of Your Residents

Capture the Story of Your Residents & Increase Engagement

Bring in a Sacred Streets artist to capture the soul of your mission through powerful portrait stories. It will inspire your audience toward involvement and radically uplift those going through recovery.

As a relational portrait artist and pastor since 2012, Jason Leith will create custom portraits with your people using meaningful materials that portray hope, value, and restoration.

Capture the Story of
Your Residents & Increase Engagement

Hire Jason and/or his team to connect with your residents at the start of their recovery journey. He will create custom portraits using meaningful materials that tell a story of hope, value, and a life undergoing restoration.

Increase Resident Recovery​

2 of 3 portrait subjects from a street level have a total life turnaround or express a deep life impact.

Tell the story of your organization

through art that beautifies and enriches your facilities.

Fuel donor giving

through heartfelt artwork. Auction artworks during your next fundraiser.

Reach further

in your next social posts, emails, and year-end reports.

3 Ways to Partner

1. Commission an Original Portrait

• Commission a completely personalized portrait made from objects representing the soul of the individual and your mission.

• This includes affirming relational face-to-face process during the initial sketch.

• All digital files of artwork for your use in print, web, and social media

• 1 portrait: $1800 + travel expense. Commissioning a set of three or more can create a showcase event.

2. Set Up Relational Sketches

• Setup time for an artist to make sketch portraits at your facility while connecting 1-on-1 (8×11″ drawings, 1 hour each)

• Invite your residents first-come-first-served or hand-selected.

• One artist can do max. 3 sketches in one day’s visit. Commission 2-3 artists to create more.

• Cost varies based on needs

3. Exhibit from Our Collection

Inspire volunteer engagement by showcasing portraits from our existing collection. Rental prices vary with number of portraits and time loaned out.

Working with Jason​

Jason Leith is a pastor of 12 years at Saddleback Church, guiding hundreds on their spiritual walk. He received his Master of Arts in Global Leadership from Fuller Seminary, laying the foundation for adult development and serving people in urban environments.

Your people be beautifully captured in artwork as they are ministered to by Jason’s compassionate ear and pastoral presence.

Homeless Services Orange County 2025

Homeless Services Orange County 2025

Want to be more empowered to help someone when you see a need? Here’s a Resource sheet for giving assistance to those in the Orange County Area.
It can help with questions like:
    • Where can i send someone for immediate food or shelter in my city?
    • What time and day are food distributions?
    • Where can someone go for long-term housing?
    • Is there help for someone having a mental health crisis near me?

Click Document to View

Sections

  • Food Pantries
  • Medical
  • Drug Rehab
  • Mental Health Crisis
  • Clothing/Shower/Resources
  • Emergency Shelter
  • Housing (Long Term)
  • Employment
  • Outreach

Cities

  • North Orange County
  • South Orange County
  • Central Orange County
  • San Juan Capistrano
  • Brea
  • Santa Ana
  • Anaheim
  • La Habra
  • Irvine
  • San Clemente
  • Laguna Niguel
  • Fullerton
  • Orange
  •  Huntington Beach
  • Westminster
  • Mission Viejo
  • Rancho Santa Margarita
  • Tustin
  • Cypress
  • Costa Mesa
  • Placentia
  • Garden Grove
  • Lake Forest
  • Laguna Beach
  • Huntington Beach
  • Fountain Valley
  • Midway City
  • Stanton
  • Buena park

State of Homelessness in Orange County 2025

State of Homelessness in Orange County

Over the past month, I’ve been ensuring that I’m up to date with the latest research and progress on helping people who living in poverty in Orange County. I’ve attended events and done a fair share of reading. Here’s some key takeaways of what I learned from dozens of leading voices.

State of Homelessness Address (from United to End Homelessness). Statements from Vincent Sarmiento (2nd District Supervisor), Katrina Foley (OC Board Supervisor), Tim Shaw (Continuum of Care), and more

  • Key Takeaway: As a “housing-first” advocates, their first goal is to simply get someone housed. However, long-term low income housing is short in supply, expensive to build, and slowed by delays among collaborating sectors. It costs more to serve someone unhoused than to pay for their housing.

 

Giving Guidance to End Homelessness. A panel discussion from the CEOs of Second Harvest, Illumination Foundation, and Families Forward.

  • Key Takeaway: similar to the above, they see the path as providing housing as a basic right, but wait times and delay in development hinder progress.

 

Americans with No Address Documentary. Film on the faces of homelessness and different approaches to helping across the United States.

  • Key Takeaway: The US Federal Approach to homelessness is not working (so-called harm reduction programs and lack of mental health care). The holistic care programs of Rescue Missions show hopeful results.