About Us

group of women sitting on stairs, survivor services, YWCA DAYTON

Mission: YWCA Dayton is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women, and promoting peace, justice, freedom, and dignity for all.

Vision: We lead the way for women to become the driving force behind their own success in a community free of racial and economic barriers, because every woman within our reach deserves to be safe, supported, and empowered to unleash her full potential.

Direct services include Montgomery and Preble counties’ only domestic violence shelters, Rape Crisis Center, 24/7 Crisis Hotline at 937-222-SAFE, four housing programs, youth programs, and wrap around services.

Board of Directors

Our Board of Directors is a diverse group of women leaders using their passion, insights, and connections in the community, to create real impact for YWCA Dayton.

2023 – 2024 Officers

Shannon Costello
Treasurer

Jennifer Heapy
Chair

Erin Kunkle
Vice Chair,

Alyssa Young
Secretary

Directors

Jenni Frazer

Erica Gordon

Maleka James

Rachel Jessup

Adele Johnson-Kebe

Michelle Kaye

Erin Kunkle

C. Lashea Lofton

Rachel Maki

Katie Meyer

Kristina Scott

Shana Sellers-Mcelroy

Hope Smalls

Dr. Rachel Sturm

Honorary Board Member
Betsy Whitney

Emeritus Board Members
Yvonne Isaacs

Key Dates in YWCA History

Annual Reports

YWCA is on a mission to eliminate racism and empower women, and we’re committed to accountability and transparency in everything we do. Below you will find resources that illuminate our financial position, outline how we allocate our resources, and showcase the impact of the valuable support from our donors and sponsors. As a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization, we welcome your support of our mission!

FAQs

  • YWCA and YMCA have no corporate connection at the national level. They are separately incorporated nonprofits, and always have been. There have been/are some joint YM/YWCAs in a few communities, but our organizations are not related.

    YWCA and YMCA have different missions. YMCA’s mission is to put Christian principles into practice through programs that build healthy spirit, mind, and body for all. YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women, and promoting peace, justice, freedom, and dignity for all.

    YWCA and YMCA have different histories. YMCA began in 1844 as an organization meant to “meet the practical and spiritual needs of young men flocking to London during the Industrial Revolution.” Inspired by the stories of YMCA in England, the first U.S. YMCA was formed in Boston in 1851.

    The first YWCA was formed in New York City in 1858 as the Ladies Christian Association. The full name, YWCA, was first used in Boston in 1866. (YWCA Dayton was founded four years later as the Women’s Christian Association.)

    What YWCA and YMCA have in common:

    • Both do a lot of good in their communities.

    • Both provide quality services and meet community needs

    • Both serve low-income families and high-need communities.

    • Both have rich histories and bright futures.

  • In the early years of YWCA’s movement, it was a “Christian sisterhood” that drove our work. Thus, our founding name was Women’s Christian Association, and then Young Women’s Christian Association as we moved to ensure women and girls across the age spectrum had their needs met and voices heard.

    Today, YWCA is a word, not an acronym. Our work is driven by a commitment to intersectional gender equity, no matter someone’s religion. Because of that, in December 2015, our corporate name was officially changed from Young Women’s Christian Association of the United States of America Inc. to YWCA USA Inc. to be more reflective of our organization’s inclusive nature.

    Here in Ohio, we officially followed suit in 2018 with a legal name change from Young Women’s Christian Association of Dayton, Ohio, Inc. to YWCA Dayton.

  • As poet and gender and civil rights activist Audre Lorde said, “I am not free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are very different from my own.”

    Women have come a long way since YWCA USA was founded in 1858 in terms of civil and economic rights. However, YWCA recognizes that women — and particularly women of color — still have a long way go to achieve parity in terms of personal safety, wages, child care, careers, and other opportunities.

    YWCA Dayton, like all of our 200+ sister associations, is committed to creating opportunities for women’s growth, leadership, and power.

  • In some ways. While our mission of “elevating women in our midst” has never wavered, our programs and services have adapted to meet our community’s most pressing needs during the past 14+ decades.

    For example: When our current central building was built in 1913, it included a swimming pool to provide a recreational space in an era when a community pool — and especially one that allowed women and girls — wasn’t available. By the 1990s, public swimming was commonplace. When our child care services began in the 1950s, there were no options for working mothers within a 10-mile radius; but, by 2015, there were multiple high-quality centers in the greater Dayton area.

    Providing housing and shelter for women has been a core program during our entire 148-year history. From our Widows’ Home in the 1870s to room rentals for young professionals in the 1920s to our domestic violence shelters and Permanent Supportive Housing units today, ensuring women have access to a safe, affordable place to call home is a hallmark of YWCA Dayton service delivery.