Submitted by: North Shore Area Partners
Without your voice greater Minnesota stands to lose critical support for community-based services. The Minnesota Board on Aging is tasked to create an equitable funding formula. The outcome of the proposed formula would mean funding cuts to greater Minnesota; this includes our North Shore communities. The existing formula is heavily weighted on population and not need. We need a formula that works for rural Minnesota. Locally, the cuts would affect organizations such as Arrowhead Agency on Aging, Community Partners of Two Harbors, North Shore Area Partners in Silver Bay, Care Partners of Cook County and other senior programs. We need your help to prevent these cuts. Protecting aging in our communities assures that our neighbors, families, and friends can age well at home. When aging in place is supported, the entire community benefits. Beyond the health and wellness benefits, community members can benefit from the wisdom that older adults can share from their life experiences.
The Older Americans Act (OAA) funds critical services that keep our nation’s seniors healthy and independent, including meals, homemaker assistance, chores, caregiver support, transportation, and more. Paramount to the successful leveraging of OAA funds is the requirement that these funds be the payer of last resort. States and regions have the duty of exhausting all other funding options first, and OAA services are often the only services available in our greater MN communities. Additionally, rural Minnesota lacks robust philanthropic funding or a booming network of non-profits to step in and fill gaps when needed. Therefore, it is imperative that OAA funding is allocated to afford rural Minnesotans the same opportunities as the Metro area population.
Rural communities face closed hospitals or unreachable health care services, a deepened digital divide, lost jobs at industries economically anchoring rural communities, and greater food insecurity for older adults. The need for a conversation around rural service funding seems more critical than ever. The challenges to providing services in rural environments include few transportation options and poorly maintained roads, older housing needing repairs, limited senior housing, and limited technology in areas, including broadband. Several services would be decreased in the northeastern region, including Meals on Wheels, grocery delivery, trips to medical appointments, social gatherings, and shopping. The cuts also include adult day programs, snow removal, lawncare, and respite for caregivers.
As a community that values older adults, we are tasked to voice our concern for the reallocation of funding that would decrease resource in outstate MN. How do we value and support aging in rural communities? We can do this by individually commenting and asking neighbors, state and county elected officials to provide their comments to the Minnesota Board on Aging. Ask the MBA to decrease 60+ Population to 20%, decrease 60+ with Disability to 5%, increase 60+ Rural to 25% and increase 60+ Living Alone to 10%. This would increase funding to all outstate Area Agencies on Aging in Minnesota and increase funding in our local communities. For easy access to state and county elected officials go to https://www.greaterminnesotaaging.org/contacts-information . PREVENT CUTS! PROTECT AGING IN NORTHEASTERN MINNESOTA.