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About Would Works

"I Would Work if I Could"

OUR MISSION

At Would Works, we are committed to helping young adults with barriers to employment heal, learn new skills, build confidence, and prepare for future opportunities by providing paid, creative, hands-on woodworking training within a supportive community.

To see the wood transform very quickly and feel that sense of accomplishment... it makes you feel valuable, it makes you feel accomplished, and competent.  It makes you feel like you can achieve these longer life goals--the ones where you don't see results so quickly.

Marella
Would Works Trainee, 2019

OUR VISON

We envision a future where communities and systems work together to advance human dignity, increase economic opportunities for all, and enable people to thrive in balance with each other. In doing so, we aim to show that more equitable workforce models are possible.

Our Trainees

Young adults, between the ages of 18-30, are referred to our program by employment counselors and housing case managers from various Los Angeles organizations that provide resources to underserved youth, such as; Jovenes, Chrysalis Employment Services, A Place Called Home, Downtown Women’s Center, and America's Job Center of Callifornia.

Our program participants often face multiple barriers to employment; including housing insecurity, justice involvement, mental or physical health challenges, along with institutional factors such as hiring discrimination and systemic racism. Would Works provides a flexible, creative, and trauma informed space for anyone who Would Work if they could, to (re)engage with employment.

By providing work experience and resources to those who need it most, Would Works offers critical support to individuals experiencing homelessness in Los Angeles' Skid Row. But beyond that, Artisans build community and life skills in a space were they are treated with dignity and care.

Kristen Ochoa, MD, MPH
Medical Director, LA County Office of Diversion and Reentry

Our Programs

Would Works hosts 200 woodworking workshops annually providing over 6,000 hours of paid employment, healing community, and hands on woodworking training for people experiencing employment barriers and/or housing instability in Los Angeles.

Our workshops take place at our woodshop in Downtown LA and are divided into two core programs:

  • Beginner Builders Program: BBP meets twice a week with cohorts of up to 10 trainees for four month sessions. In these workshops, participants are paid to learn the ABCs of woodworking where they are trained to use common tools and machines found across a multitude of career pathways and how to safely navigate high hazard workshop environments. In addition to hard skills training, our young adult participants are provided individual case management, financial development courses, career discovery opportunities, workshops around social/emotional wellbeing, and healthy meals to ensure that each person receives holistic care while preparing for the next step in their professional journey.
  • Community Builders Program: CBP is an extended paid training opportunity for Trainees who have completed our Beginner Builders Program and want to learn more advanced techniques in furniture design and fabrication. CBP creates outdoor furniture for community spaces and supportive housing sites throughout Los Angeles, as well as our line of wood homewares, available for purchase on our website, through wholesalers, and pop up events.

Our Story

Our story is one of listening to people in need and coming up with a way to help.

In 2012 Would Works founder Connor Johnson was working at a homeless shelter in the Skid Row area of downtown Los Angeles. He met hundreds of people who stayed in the area.  He listened to their hopes and dreams and the obstacles they face every day. Time and again he would hear them say - I WOULD WORK... if I could.

He started Would Works with the help of friends and family and ran weekend workshops in church basements and housing site rec rooms throughout Skid Row. 

Ten years + later, with the support of Nick Offerman, the Los Angeles woodworking community, and a strong network of homeless services providers in Skid Row, Would Works has grown into a thriving social enterprise.

Our Team

Director

Michele Liu

Director

Michele volunteered with WW for two years before joining as our Program Director in 2021 and then becoming Director in 2022. Prior to WW, Michele's design career included a decade of designing for her own furniture studio, The Neverending Balloon, and another decade of working in the mens footwear industry, including some years at Nike, Inc. Michele pivoted her career, applying what she learned in the corporate world about brand design, sales and marketing, and merging her passion for design with intersectional social justice work. Michele gained her foundational nonprofit work experience through other organizations such as Tree People and Slow Food USA. At WW she focuses on program design, product design, team-building, and she particularly interested in (re-)designing community spaces to foster social and environmental transformation.

Shop Manager + Workshop Leader

Briana Pero

Shop Manager + Workshop Leader

Briana grew up in Santa Ana and attended Cal State Long Beach where she received a BFA in design with an emphasis on material studies. Briana is grateful for opportunities to support the growth of others--when not at Would Works, she can be found teaching woodworking at various shops & schools around LA. Her dog Saylor is often found making appearances on our social media platforms!

Workshop Leader

Li Diaz

Workshop Leader

Li Diaz builds futures at the intersection of skilled labor and fine craft. A welder, woodworker, and mechanic, Diaz has learned the alchemizing power of working with their hands; they strive to bring the catharsis of making by teaching. After specializing in corporate security for over 15 years, Diaz left to work as a rollercoaster mechanic at Six Flags and then pursued training and certifications in woodworking and structural welding. Since then, Diaz has taught diverse classrooms and workshop participants across Southern California. At WW, Diaz brings a non-violent, restorative justice lens to their teaching practices, and their own lived experiences give them deep empathy for the stories and goals of our students. Li was born and raised in San Francisco and currently lives in Los Angeles with their partner and pet kitten.