San Jose soup kitchen looking for new digs to call home

A well-known South Bay nonprofit that feeds tens of thousands of hungry and unhoused residents each year is searching for a new home.

"Trying to move a nonprofit is not easy," said Bill Lee, executive director of Martha's Kitchen.

This Herculean task lies at his feet. He said Martha's Kitchen, located in the Alma neighborhood of San Jose, once served 500,000 meals annually. It now serves 2.5 million meals a year, highlighted by Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners. The number of volunteers has also swelled, from 30 a week to roughly 300.

"We have grown to a point where we don't fit the facility we're in anymore," he said.

Lee is looking to spend $10 million or more on a warehouse space up to double the current 10,000 square feet he's renting from Sacred Heart of Jesus church. The target area is in south Central San Jose, north of Curtner Avenue, east of San Jose State, and west of Highway 87.

South Bay realtors have said it's challenging given the lack of inventory and financing requirements.

"There's very few of them out there and this is a very specialized need that they're looking for. And so, you've got to find the right opportunities that fit that need," said Gustavo Gonzalez, of the Santa Clara County Association of Realtors.

Featured

5 Bay Area cities, 2 counties get homeless removal funds

Gov. Gavin Newsom is awarding $131 million in grants to cities and counties that are seriously addressing homeless encampments. These grants come with stricter accountability measures than ever before. 

Those needs include space for oversized kitchen equipment, extra venting, and electrical wires and outlets.

Lee said Martha's Kitchen must remain accessible to those in need.

"Because we serve the poor, we need to remain in central San Jose where the poor can walk to our doors. And we're accessible to volunteers from the greater part of the valley," he said.

The imperative to move has created a Catch-22. "The Kitchen" needs money to buy a building, but donors aren't likely to contribute until a purchase agreement is signed, which requires money first.

Experts said during the season of charitable giving, small and corporate donors can create a win-win by giving money to Martha's so it can make a purchase, and the charitable donation creates a deduction for themselves.

"It's deductible from your income, so you pay less taxes right up front when you file your return," said Dr. Jim Mohs, an accounting & taxation professor at the University of New Haven. "People of means, and even people not of means, start looking to farm deductions for this current tax year."

Officials with Martha's Kitchen said they'd like to have a new site selected and the financing in place by early next year.

Jesse Gary is a reporter based in the station's South Bay bureau. Follow him on the Instagram platform, @jessegontv and on Facebook, @JesseKTVU. 

San JoseBay Area homelessness