This research investigates Basic Needs Resources and Programs in the city of Kent, Washington. Kent is the sixth most populous municipality in Washington State, with an official population of 136,588, according to the 2020 Decennial Census. Shelter, food, water, education, and healthcare are five basic needs that, when attended to sufficiently, empower marginalized populations and those experiencing personal/financial crises. What are the barriers to assistance programs for those facing basic-need insecurity in areas such as access to shelter and affordable housing? To answer this question, this research pursues five steps. First, defining “Basic Needs” in the United States, Washington State, and Kent. Secondly, this research isolates five material-needs: safe/sustainable shelter and housing, quality food, clean running-water and sanitation, quality kindergarten-through-secondary education, and affordable healthcare and insurance. Third, this proposal notes historical and current resources/programs in Kent, WA, attending to those experiencing housing insecurity, especially due to the importance of providing shelter and housing as a basic need in addressing explicit housing insecurity. Fourth, this proposal outlines the methods to survey those operating affordable housing initiatives and emergency shelter programs and evaluate their activities according to recent research in the field. Fifth, the potential barriers of access to affordable housing in Kent, WA include racial and gender discrimination, socioeconomic disparities in wealth, rising costs of housing incongruent with stagnant rates of compensation among the working class, and the precedence of corporate interests over affordable housing development projects. This research is critical to further understanding the systems that discourage or disempower populations from seeking help in financial mobility.