Spring Lake Ranch seeks $1.5MM to “Raise the Barn” for their farm-based mental health programming

By Anna Sutton

Since 1932, Spring Lake Ranch (SLR) in Vermont has provided long-term treatment for adults experiencing serious mental illness and substance use challenges. Their unique approach adds therapeutic work on a farm to psychiatric care.

In addition to attending therapy, psychiatry appointments, and recovery group meetings, residents spend their days working with animals, gardening, woodworking, and maintaining the surrounding forests and trails. This time-tested and effective programming has outgrown the dilapidated barns that currently support SLR’s cows, chickens, pigs, and sheep. It’s time to build something new.

“This model works. Generations of residents and families have told us SLR made the difference when other treatment centers didn’t. It’s imperative our property can sustain programming for future generations,” says Rose McCracken, Development & Communications Director.

As a 501(c)3 nonprofit, Spring Lake Ranch relies on donations not only to provide access to their services, but also to fund facility upgrades. In 2024, SLR launched a three-year $18MM capital campaign. The campaign ends in December 2026, and SLR is asking donors to help them “raise the barn,” focusing their efforts on the $1.5MM still needed for a new farm complex.

Construction will replace the main barn, poultry barn, and resident workshop. SLR has engaged the Farm Viability Program at UVM as well as an animal housing expert to maximize the spaces and ensure long-term sustainability.

“We’re being intentional in our planning,” says Executive Director Rachel Stark, “so that we build exactly what we need in a way that supports the land and animals that mean so much to us. What we build now will serve its purpose for the next 100 years.

Donors are helping build more than barns; these structures are the heart of SLR’s therapeutic experience. A former resident said it best: “At a point when I really didn’t know how to take care of myself, Farm Crew asked me to show up and care for the animals. That responsibility mattered. It grounded me, and over time, it helped me start building those same skills for myself.”

Donations can be made at springlakeranch.org/raisethebarn. Naming opportunities are available. For questions, contact Rose McCracken, Development & Communications Director: ro***@*************ch.org, (802) 772-8342.