The Growing Our Village Campaign has officially begun! 

Neighborhood House is excited to begin the process of moving our Food Pantry and Senior Center programs into a newly purchased space on Barbur Blvd. This new site is large enough to co-locate both programs, and will provide additional space, ease of access, and more. The Growing Our Village Campaign aims to raise $3.3 million to purchase and renovate the building and create a built-to-suit space for the next generation of service. 

Learn more about the project and watch a video overview here

As we start to create a vision for the new space, we want to hear from our community!

Are you a past or current Food Pantry or Senior Center user? Attend our listening sessions coming up next week!

Pantry Listening Session
Tuesday, June 7 at 4-5pm
In-person at the pantry garden (3445 SW Moss St.)
Or via Zoom (meeting ID 86110100311)

Senior Listening Session
Thursday, June 9 at 4-5pm
In-person at the Senior Center (7688 SW Capitol Hwy)
Or via Zoom (meeting ID 83925118627)

Want to get a sneak peek at the new building on Barbur? Sign up for a free tour!

Click here to see dates/times and sign up now! 

Email us with any questions.

I started using the Free Food Market. I learned about more programs that could help us. But the biggest change wasn’t the services themselves.

It was how I was treated. 

For the first time in my entire life, I was met with dignity. 

I wasn’t talked down toI wasn’t made to feel ashamed for needing help. I wasn’t forced to “prove” I deserved to survive. At Neighborhood House, people spoke to me with genuine respect, something I have so often not been given, simply due to my circumstances. That changed everything. Even now, it still brings tears to my eyes. 

When you’re disabled, when you’re parenting alone, when you’re just trying to get through the day without falling apart…asking for help is hard. Being treated with kindness backed by action? It’s life-changing. 

That kindness empowered me. 
I joined the Head Start Policy Council. 
I became involved in statewide advocacy work. 
And eventually, when someone asked iI would consider joining the Neighborhood House Board, I said yes. 

Being on the board fills a need I’ve carried my whole life: the deep need to give back. There is so little any one person can do alone. But when we connect, when we come together as a community, everything becomes possible. 

People sometimes ask me why services like Neighborhood House still matter. 

My answer is simple: 

Because income inequality is growing. 
Because our systems do not prioritize people in poverty. 
Because without places like Neighborhood House, people really would go hungry. Children would go without resources necessary to thrive. Housing insecure families would be turned out into the streets. 
And that is simply not acceptable.

Until we change the systems that create these conditions in the first place, we need community-based organizations that keep people alive, keep families housed, and treat every neighbor with dignity.

And there’s one more thing I want you to know:

No one chooses this. 

Everyone is doing the best they can. 
Sometimes people just need a little boost.

When you donate or volunteer at Neighborhood Houseiis truly life changing. You may never meet every person you help—but please know there are so many of us who feel overwhelmed with gratitude because these services exist.

I am one of them.

So today, as we close out the year, I’m asking you to help more neighbors like me.

Here’s how you can help right now: 

  • Make a gift today — your support goes directly to families who need it most.
  • Start a food dr​ive — our Food Security Program is a lifeline and always needs support. 
  • Share my letter with a friend who believein a more just and caring community.

Thank you for believing in this work.

Thank you for believing in people like me. 

With gratitude,

Love 
Board Member & Program Participant 
Neighborhood House 

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