| Increased services also means increased economic benefit to the region. Most funding distributed by NeighborImpact comes through federal and state grants which are redirected from Salem and Washington, D.C., to the Central Oregon region. During the 2024–25 program year, NeighborImpact distributed $21.9 million in direct assistance. An additional $30.2 million was leveraged through programs and partnerships. These resources flowed dollars directly back into communities, supporting local businesses, landlords, utilities and other job- and income-generating activities.
“These are real dollars moving through the local economy and reaching households when it matters,” Cooper said. “The entire region is better off when its people are adequately fed and housed, and when there is help with utility and child care bills. This number shows what it takes, at scale, to keep households from falling through the cracks.”
NeighborImpact’s annual service report provides a comprehensive snapshot of how service demand, resource distribution, and household needs intersect over the course of the year. Together, the figures illustrate not just the volume of work performed, but the role NeighborImpact plays in supporting people and strengthening communities during periods of economic strain.
The report also showed an increase in volunteering—an important source of labor that helps sustain the organization’s work. NeighborImpact used 1,225 volunteers who contributed 15,102 hours of time in 24-25. The total number of volunteers utilized was up 78 percent over 5 years ago.
“The economy is complex for everyone. Working families can’t keep up with the cost of living, even with two-incomes,” Cooper said. “Food prices were up 16 percent at the end of 2025 over where they landed in 2024. Electricity costs 55 percent more than it did in 2020. Childcare costs have risen by a third since 2023. NeighborImpact’s services have never been more critical, and our numbers reflect our community’s dependence on us. It’s a privilege to be able to help, and we’re grateful to the community for its support through local, state and federal officials who advocate for us, donors who supplement our funding and volunteers who are the hands that make the work happen. “ |