
Our mission is to provide reliable access to healthy food, build connections with community partners, and empower neighbors to meet their basic needs.

Our mission is to provide reliable access to healthy food, build connections with community partners, and empower neighbors to meet their basic needs.
Our mission is to provide free veterinary care and related services to pets of people experiencing homelessness. Using a One Health approach to street medicine and pop-up street clinics, we care for lives on both ends of the leash. For a slideshow overview, click here. For a “This Is Us” info sheet, click here.
We believe every nail hammered, every wall raised, is a rejection of hate and a step toward a future where everyone – irrespective of class, color or creed – has a decent life.
Since 1984 we have built 115 houses and renovated or repaired hundreds more. Topeka Habitat for Humanity builds strong and stable neighborhoods by building strong and stable homes.
To break the cycle of poverty, low and medium income individuals and families need their income spent on housing that provides a decent, affordable place to thrive and build wealth through home ownership.
Since 1995, NGWR provides education, advocacy and support for the veterans suffering from the complexities from today’s battlefields.
Holton Community Theatre was accidentally founded in 2014. One summer day, Shannon Wittmer and Carolyn McKee felt that the community was missing something. They decided to offer a dinner theatre experience in October of 2014 on the evening after the yearly Holton Fall Fest.
That first play was Cafe’ Murder. It was a horribly written play that was “tweaked” profusely before auditions took place. Originally, this event was created as a one time event, however, the success was so spectacular that another show was scheduled for summer 2015. HCT held their first summer drama camp and produced the all kid musical, The Big Bad Musical. Nunsense followed close behind and soon a theatre Facebook page and website were created out of necessity.
NOTO offers something for everyone! It is home to some of the most celebrated art galleries, shops, and experiences in the region with beautiful parks, outdoor art, and plenty of free parking. NOTO is comprised of independent small businesses who set their own hours of operation. Visitors should contact businesses directly to confirm hours.
NAMI Topeka is a non-profit organization that helps individuals, families, and loved ones understand mental illness and build a community that helps start and enhance the process of recovery.
In September 2022, United Way of Greater Topeka and United Way of Douglas County officially merged to become United Way of Kaw Valley.
United Way of Kaw Valley (UWKV) brings together people, companies, and nonprofits to help individuals and families not just survive but thrive. We work to solve issues no single donor, charity or government agency can handle alone. By focusing on the whole family, we help more children graduate and achieve employment success, help more families move from crisis to financial stability and prosperity, and improve the health of individual and families in our community.
Over the past decade, UWKV has invested in the areas of Early Education, On-Grade Achievement, Financial Stability, Health, Substance Abuse, Racial Equity, and Basic Needs.
UFM Community Learning Center is a creative educational program serving Kansas State University, Manhattan and communities across Kansas. UFM offers a variety of noncredit and credit classes for all ages and interests.
Based on the philosophy that everyone can learn and everyone can teach, UFM provides opportunities for lifelong learning and personal development. Instructors represent all areas of the campus and community and have ranged in age from 6, sharing knowledge about rabbit care, to 98, teaching a class on healthy living. Topics include arts and hobbies, cooking, languages, martial arts, aquatics, career and computer skills, recreation and fitness, health and wellness and youth. Over 15,000 people participate in UFM programs and activities each year.
UFM serves as a forum for the exchange of ideas and as a catalyst for new programs and services that enhance the quality of life for all. In addition to the noncredit and credit classes, UFM coordinates several other programs.
UFM Community Learning Center Annual Report – FY22
Andre Banks started saving aluminum cans about five years ago when he realized he could cash them in to treat the neighborhood kids. Then one day, Banks realized he could do this on a much larger scale. Today, people throughout the city are saving cans to donate to the cause.