For 15 years, Vern Maetzold was a regular at Minneapolis' Southwest Senior Center. It was a place close to home where he could eat lunch, take an exercise class or just spend time with his friends.
"It's been very significant for social support and providing some structure for my life," he said. "I live alone in an apartment, and it's been something I can count on to be there."
But after 40 years in south Minneapolis, Southwest Senior Center closed in June, a casualty of a funding cut. It was the third senior center in the Twin Cities to close in less than a year — St. Paul's City Passport closed in November, and downtown Minneapolis' Skyway Senior Center closed in March, both because of financial challenges.
"What's shocking is that as baby boomers age, we're going to need more senior centers, not fewer," said Michele Coppin, who taught visual art at the Southwest Senior Center. "It seems so illogical for this to be happening."
Southwest Senior Center programs drew about 1,000 participants over the course of a year, according to a spokesman for Volunteers of America (VOA), which operated the center. Those who used the center described it as a one-stop shop with an array of services from financial counseling to dance classes.
"I'm going to have to be checking out other programs now — they gave us a long list of referrals," said Judy Prentiss, who started going to the center after she retired from nursing about five years ago. "But who knows if they have the same things that I've been offered here?"
The Southwest Senior Center's financial troubles hit abruptly in April, when Greater Twin Cities United Way announced funding cuts stemming from a $6 million shortfall. VOA lost $150,000 — half its United Way funding.
"The Southwest Center depends on United Way funding for a large portion of its operating expenses," the VOA said in a news release. "The loss of this support created an unsustainable long-term funding gap."