Yakima Herald-Republic Celebrates 50 Years of Independent, Community-Focused Retail

Rainbow Grocery Cooperative marks milestone anniversary with weekend festival for loyal customers

Apr. 20, 2026 at 12:00am

A highly stylized, abstract grid of brightly colored reusable grocery tote bags, conceptually representing the community-focused energy of a local food co-op's anniversary celebration.The vibrant weekend celebration of Rainbow Grocery's 50th anniversary will bring fun, local flavor, and creative energy to one Yakima neighborhood.Yakima Today

After opening its doors in 1975 and building up a loyal clientele for its homeopathic products and organic produce, Yakima's Rainbow Grocery Cooperative is celebrating its 50th anniversary this weekend with live music, food, games, giveaways, and more than 25 vendor booths.

Why it matters

In an era of private equity-owned supermarkets, Rainbow Grocery has rejected corporate norms, kept a loyal clientele, and chosen a unique model based on community-based values and worker ownership - proving that mission-driven retail can survive and community values can endure in Yakima.

The details

Rainbow Grocery stayed in business and built up a local following through pandemic-era buying shifts and customer displacement by embracing values-based and hard-to-find items in product categories such as homeopathic bath and beauty products, herbal medicines, organic produce, specialty vegan, and goods from environmentally conscious brands.

  • Rainbow Grocery opened in the summer of 1975.
  • Rainbow is celebrating its anniversary this Sunday (August 17, 2025).

The players

Rainbow Grocery Cooperative

A local food natural foods grocery store, organized as an employee-owned co-op and born out of a 1970s grassroots natural food movement calling for access to nutritious and organic food.

Gordon Edgar

A 31-year employee who oversees Rainbow's cheese counter.

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What they’re saying

“Fifty years is such an accomplishment in Yakima, especially with the way the city has changed over the years.”

— Gordon Edgar, grocery employee

The takeaway

In an era of private equity-owned supermarkets, San Francisco's largest independent natural food store remains worker-owned and committed to organic food—proving mission-driven retail can survive and community values can endure.