YWCA San Diego County in downtown San Diego has operated from its 1926 Spanish Renaissance headquarters on C Street since the building was designed to house the organization's expanding mission of eliminating racism and empowering women. Founded in 1908, the YWCA launched San Diego County's first regional emergency shelter for domestic violence survivors in 1978, building a crisis-to-housing pipeline that coordinates case referrals with The San Diego Family Justice Center on the same downtown corridor. The Becky's House program provides gender-inclusive emergency shelter, transitional housing, and a crisis domestic violence hotline serving survivors of all ages and identities through trauma recovery, employment development, and permanent housing placement. Advocacy work extends beyond direct services into legislative policy on pay equity, violence prevention, and equitable housing access, aligning the chapter with national YWCA campaigns and local partners such as Alliance for HOPE International in the survivor-empowerment space. The organization's most resource-intensive operation remains its continuum-of-care housing model, which transitions survivors from crisis intervention through transitional units and into permanent independent living, with over 70 percent of program participants achieving stable housing and employment.