Angie Stanislowski was inspired to volunteer during the COVID-19 crisis, but nonprofits near her Andover home had scaled back volunteer activities or canceled them altogether.
Stanislowski had never heard of East Side Neighborhood Services, but at a friend's suggestion, she started driving to Minneapolis each week to volunteer, packing boxes with food each week for residents in need.
"I was just moved by this need to not sit on your couch and binge watch [TV]," said Stanislowski, 46, a piano teacher and worship director. "There are people putting their lives on the line every day. It's a small thing; I can't do nothing."
Nonprofits across Minnesota, which has among the highest rates for volunteering in the country, are scaling back events to adhere to physical distancing rules, shifting to activities done at home or online, or canceling volunteer programs. Yet, some nonprofits report a surge in the number of Minnesotans who want to help — many, like Stanislowski, volunteering for the first time.
"I think there's been a resurgence in volunteers stepping up," said Tracy Nielsen, who heads Minneapolis-based HandsOn Twin Cities, which connects volunteers to organizations and has seen a 140% increase in the number of volunteer opportunities since the pandemic began. "Nonprofits are thinking about how to completely reinvent what they do."
Metro Meals on Wheels started a volunteer waiting list for the first time after thousands of people applied to deliver meals to doorsteps of seniors and people with disabilities.
"We haven't seen anything like this before," said Pat Rowan, executive director of the association of 32 Meals on Wheels programs. "We've had people really step up during this pandemic."
At East Side Neighborhood Services, the Minneapolis nonprofit halted food shelves that pop up at low-income high-rises in Hennepin County and instead, volunteers put together 300 boxes a day of grocery items delivered to residents. Volunteers have their temperatures checked, wear gloves and masks and stay 6 feet apart.