Utah nonprofit founder aims to make evictions 'a thing of the past'


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Zachary Quinn founded BOUND to prevent evictions and homelessness in Utah.
  • BOUND partners with landlords to provide financial aid and tools to tenants.
  • The nonprofit is funded by private donors and aims to reduce taxpayer costs.

SALT LAKE CITY — A Provo resident who moved to Utah just six years ago believes he's found a practical way to keep families housed — and off the streets. Zachary Quinn, founder of the new nonprofit BOUND, said the solution starts with stopping evictions before they spiral into homelessness.

Quinn arrived from the East Coast in 2020 and was stunned by what he saw.

"It only took me three or four days to see what is really going on here," he said. "It's not a big city problem — there's obviously something else going on."

That realization pushed him to search for a model that could intervene early, before families lose their homes. Today, BOUND partners directly with landlords to identify tenants who are struggling but stable enough to stay housed with short-term help.

One of those tenants was Kris Price, whose living room walls are lined with family photos. Last year, he and his adult autistic son were days away from losing their home.

"I was panicked, trying to frantically find a job," Price recalled. "It is the scariest thing you would ever have to deal with."

Kris Price speaks with KSL’s Debbie Worthen on Wednesday. Price nearly lost his home when he sought help from BOUND to find financial aid.
Kris Price speaks with KSL’s Debbie Worthen on Wednesday. Price nearly lost his home when he sought help from BOUND to find financial aid. (Photo: Nathaniel Gillis, KSL)

When Price unexpectedly lost his job, the bills piled up fast.

"It was a domino effect, you know," he said.

But instead of filing an eviction, Price's landlord contacted BOUND.

Quinn said landlords are the key.

"We go directly to landlords because they're really the best filter for us — for the good tenants they want to keep," he explained.

BOUND then connects tenants with a one-time payment and financial tools through its partner, Savology, a financial planning app. The goal is not just to solve the immediate crisis, but to help families build stability.

Price said the support made all the difference.

"I want to be prepared for next time," he said. "The help kept me and my son from the streets."

BOUND is funded entirely by private donors. Quinn points to data showing that homelessness is expensive for taxpayers — about $35,000 per person per year — while keeping someone housed costs roughly $2,500.

"I foresee the term 'eviction' not being something that is just part of our everyday life in the future," Quinn said.

He believes that with early intervention, evictions can become rare — and homelessness far less common.

For more information about BOUND landlords can reach out at boundbox.org.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Debbie Worthen, KSLDebbie Worthen
Debbie Worthen brings nearly two decades of award-winning journalism experience to the KSL Newsroom and is thrilled be working for Utah’s legacy news organization. She anchors KSL 5 News at 4 and Live at 5 with Mike Headrick and reports for KSL 5 News at 10pm. There are countless things Debbie enjoys about working in local news, but storytelling is at the top of the list. Whether it’s meeting the remarkable people of Utah as they do amazing things, informing viewers of critical breaking news and issues that impact their communities or reporting on daily assignments like weather and traffic, Debbie is honored to be the one trusted to tell Utahn’s stories. She believes journalistic integrity and a commitment to accuracy have never been more important than they are now. Debbie started her career as a writer, producer and traffic reporter while finishing her communications degree at The University of Utah before making the jump to a full-time on-air position. (Although you could say she caught the news “bug” at KOLT-News at Cottonwood High School.) After several moves across the country, Debbie and her husband, Brandon Gilbert, moved to Utah to start their family. They love everything Utah has to offer and can’t imagine living anywhere else. Outside the office, Debbie and her family are advocates for at-risk youth and have fostered several children through Utah Foster Care. As a family they enjoy movie nights in the basement, trying new recipes and, a few times a year, traveling to exotic locations!

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