Jenn Mallow, who serves as the Communications Liaison for the Northern Region of Marin County, stands alongside former Camp Compassion resident Zachary Boulware. The table is overflowing with clothing gathered through MPRCC’s year-round donation drive — a grassroots effort that began five years ago at a booth at the Novato Farmers Market and has since served thousands in need.
Advocates for the unhoused stood in silent protest as new ordinances restricting public camping were passed inside. The demonstration, organized by peer leaders and community allies, marked a powerful moment of resistance against policies seen as criminalizing homelessness.
The event, held outside City Hall in 2024, brought together peer organizers, legal representatives, and supporters of Marin’s only peer-led encampment. Signs reading “Save Camp Compassion” and “Got Compassion?” reflected public calls to protect unhoused residents and challenge punitive city policy.
A view of Camp Compassion, a peer-led survival community founded by unhoused residents in Marin County.
More than just tents — Camp Compassion served as a grassroots response to failed shelter systems, offering safety, structure, and community for those with nowhere else to go. Organized with dignity and supported by MPRCC, the camp became a symbol of resistance and resilience.
Cardboard messages call for dignity, housing, and an end to police harassment, reflecting the urgent demands of the community and the leadership of peer organizers from MPRCC and the California Homeless Union.
Jenn Mallow speaks with a community member at the Novato Farmers Market during a public outreach effort.
In this moment, Jenn explains the realities of homelessness in Marin County, offering education, advocacy, and a peer-led perspective to challenge stigma and build understanding.
As core leaders of the Marin Peer Resource Community Collective (MPRCC), Jenn and Bambi collaborate with Robbie Powelson, a key member of the California Homeless Union’s legal team. Robbie has been instrumental in defending the rights of unhoused individuals across California — from helping secure a $540,000 settlement in Sausalito, to winning key legal challenges in San Rafael and beyond. His support continues to empower grassroots action and protect the dignity of those living without shelter.
Taken in the center of Marin County’s first peer-led, city-supported encampment, this image captures the strength, unity, and shared purpose of leaders who turned survival into solidarity. Together, they created a haven rooted in dignity, mutual aid, and lived experience — a model for what true community can look like when led by those directly impacted.
A Krishna monk who studied in India, Chris radiated love for all living beings and became a beloved figure among Marin’s unhoused community. He was Jenn Mallow’s best friend during her time on the streets, offering spiritual grounding and unshakable kindness. Though Chris tragically took his own life in 2017, his message of love and compassion remains the emotional foundation of MPRCC’s work.
This powerful moment captured the beginning of a movement — unhoused leaders and allies demanding equal rights, protection from displacement, and recognition of their humanity. It laid the groundwork for Camp Compassion, Marin’s first peer-led, city-supported encampment, and helped ignite lasting advocacy for housing justice.
Smiling proudly in front of hand-posted Got Compassion? signs, they represented Camp Compassion, MPRCC, and the unhoused voices of Marin County. As peer leaders, they brought lived experience to a national stage — advocating for equity, dignity, and real policy change shaped by those who’ve survived it.
MPRCC has become a powerful grassroots force for justice, housing equity, and peer-led recovery in Marin County. We’re proud to be featured in local media and recognized by communities, city councils, and civil rights allies for the work we do from the ground up.
“Jennifer Mallow, a Novato resident who has been living in her car and organizing food and clothing drives at the market, said she was devastated by the city’s reaction.”
– Marin Independent Journal, 2021
“Mallow said the site [Camp Compassion] provided a safer and more stable environment for people who had nowhere else to go, especially women.”
– Marin IJ, 2024
“The group also organizes outreach to encampments, offers peer-led support, and advocates for policies that protect Marin’s most vulnerable residents.”
– ABC7 News, 2024
“City Hall was lined with protest signs calling for compassion, safety, and peer-led housing solutions.”
– Marin Local News, 2024
“Camp Compassion was Marin’s first peer-run, longest-operating, city-supported encampment — a lifeline for those left behind by broken systems.”
– Community statement quoted in press conference, 2024