Deb Taylor's Minnetonka nonprofit is scrambling to help an increasing population of older adults and their caregivers.
But fewer organizations are stepping up to fund services for aging Minnesotans, leaving her nonprofit, Senior Community Services, with a deficit and searching for new ways to boost donations.
"Babies and puppies get all the funding. We're just looking for equity in funding," said Taylor, the nonprofit's CEO and a board member on the Minnesota Leadership Council on Aging. "It's inconceivable to me [to cut funding] … as the number of older adults increases. The needs are growing."
The number of Minnesotans age 65 and older is expected to eclipse the state's K-12 population for the first time in history. Nonprofits are helping older adults continue to live on their own with services such as transportation, meals, lawn care and housekeeping. But funding for older adults and aging services has lagged behind the growing demand and even decreased, leaving Minnesota nonprofits struggling to fill in the gaps.
State and federal funding has essentially stayed stagnant while Minnesota has a shrinking number of foundations and organizations that specifically fund aging services and older adults. In 2018, the Greater Twin Cities United Way, which nonprofits said was the biggest nongovernment funder in the metro for aging services, narrowed its priorities, eliminating grant-making categories for independent living, which often helped seniors and people with disabilities. Nonprofits said the Park Nicollet Foundation did the same in 2017.
"Private philanthropy's investment in aging services is contracting significantly," said Rajean Moone, the executive director of the Minnesota Leadership Council on Aging. "Minnesota is one of the most giving states. [But foundations] give barely nothing to aging."
According to the most recent report by the Minnesota Council on Foundations, less than 1% of total grant dollars in 2012 went toward aging, elderly and senior citizens, down from almost 2% the year before. Children and youth received nearly 30% of funding while the most went to the "general public or unspecified." Foundations that fund seniors usually back innovative or expansion projects, not day-to-day operations.
At the Greater Twin Cities United Way, the changing funding strategy followed a funding shortfall in 2016.