Our Mission

Meeting Each Need
with Dignity

We envision an empowered community with equitable access to food, housing, wellness, and economic security.

Upper Valley MEND works to foster a diverse and engaged community by helping meet the basic needs of people struggling to make ends meet or facing crisis situations. Since 1988, Upper Valley MEND has served some of the most vulnerable people in the Upper Wenatchee Valley, ensuring they have the resources and support to get on their feet and stay on their feet.

We do this by providing local community members with access to free healthy food, free health care, low-cost clothing and household goods, support with bills in times of crisis, transportation assistance, emergency shelter, a safe place to be heard, and assistance making a plan for the future.

Our Story

Since 1988, Upper Valley MEND has been the go-to resource for those facing homelessness or hunger or lacking healthcare or affordable housing. In that time, Upper Valley MEND has grown to support roughly one-quarter of the area’s population each year. We serve low- and moderate-income families and individuals, seniors and children, and people facing crisis, addiction, mental illness, and homelessness. Programs like the Community Cupboard food pantry are models for success in the region, and the model is being replicated around North Central Washington.

  • The local Ministerial Association launched a cooperative effort to start a community food bank.

    Eight churches gave support and volunteers to staff the food bank one morning a week in a room provided by the Community United Methodist Church. Due to increasing demand for food bank services and a desire to meet additional needs in the community, this effort was eventually expanded to include a thrift store, moved to a new location provided by the City of Leavenworth, and became known as the Community Cupboard.

  • The Ministerial Association decided they needed to hire part-time staff to carry out the expanded vision of the Community Cupboard. Upper Valley MEND was formally incorporated under the laws of Washington State in 1988.

    Upper Valley MEND has since grown to meet additional community needs such as housing, healthcare and emergency financial services.

  • Upper Valley MEND’s Board of Directors made a commitment and investment to address the need for affordable housing in the area. Various options were explored, and in 1998 a local orchardist offered Upper Valley MEND the option to purchase 15 acres of land suitable for development within the urban growth boundary of the city of Leavenworth. The Board established a Community Land Trust as a way to make homeownership possible for low to moderate-income families.

    This effort became known as the SHARE (Securing Homes on Affordable Real Estate) Community Land Trust. SHARE uses the Community Land Trust model to provide and secure affordable housing in the greater Leavenworth area. There are currently two SHARE neighborhoods with 10 homes each in Leavenworth, Alpine Heights and Aldea Village.

  • Upper Valley MEND partnered with Cascade Medical Center to take over administering the Upper Valley Free Clinic. The Free Clinic was started in 2000 by Faith Lutheran Church members Karen Strom and Dr. Karl Kranz to support the medical needs of migrant workers in the Upper Wenatchee Valley. The Free Clinic provides free medical care, free dental consultations and referral services to residents of the Upper Valley who do not have medical insurance or cannot afford their copays. It is powered entirely by volunteer doctors, nurses and clerical staff and serves hundreds of people each year.

  • Upper Valley MEND helped several local families realize their dream of independent living for their children with developmental disabilities by building the Cornerstone Community Adult Family Home. Upon completion, Cornerstone was turned over to an independent board, although Upper Valley MEND retains oversight and two seats on the Cornerstone Board. Cornerstone is now a loving home and gathering place for six adults with developmental disabilities whose needs are met with dignity every day.

    Also in 2011, Leavenworth residents John and Mary Schramm gifted their store Jubilee Global Gifts to Upper Valley MEND. The Schramms had founded the store in 1995 to help alleviate poverty after seeing first-hand the needs of people, especially women, while travelling in Africa and Central America. Jubilee provides a variety of Fair Trade merchandise, helping more artisans around the world and providing more support for MEND programs within the Upper Valley and Cashmere communities.

  • Upper Valley MEND took over running an existing Wenatchee Valley gleaning program and our gleaning program was born. Gleaning is the act of harvesting excess or unmarketable produce, bringing nutritious fresh food to Community Cupboard shoppers and reducing food waste. Each year, gleaning volunteers glean tens of thousands of pounds of fresh produce from local orchards and farms and distribute it among food banks in Chelan and Douglas counties.

  • The thrift store, formerly housed at the Community Cupboard, moved into its own space and became Das Thrift Haus. Das Thrift Haus offers quality used clothing and household goods. Proceeds from sales support food purchasing for the Community Cupboard.

  • In 2020, Upper Valley MEND hired a full-time social worker to implement a holistic approach to help people in crisis. Many people in need first engage with Upper Valley MEND at the Community Cupboard food pantry. But they are often dealing with other underlying struggles, like housing insecurity, health issues, or lack of reliable transportation. Some of those underlying struggles are harder to solve. Our social worker is available to walk with them through their crisis and connect them with longer-term services available in the Wenatchee Valley.

  • Upper Valley MEND sold the 26‐acre property between Titus Road and Chumstick Highway to Weidner Apartment Homes. Selling the property allowed Upper Valley MEND to grow the community’s affordable housing portfolio so that more members of the Upper Valley’s workforce have the opportunity to live where they work.

  • 2023 saw the kick off of the Solid Foundations Campaign for affordable housing. The proceeds from this campaign as well as the sale of the Meadowlark property allowed MEND to purchase 31 apartments to be managed as an affordable workforce housing program going forward.

2022-2027
Strategic Plan

It is with great excitement that we present our 2022 – 2027 strategic plan. This plan is a collaborative effort between Upper Valley MEND board, staff and the entire Upper Valley community. It is the culmination of a year-long effort to represent the community’s vision of what Upper Valley MEND should be working to accomplish. With your help, this plan is a roadmap for the next five years.