Minnesota nonprofits are turning to new ways to tackle unprecedented staffing shortages, raising employee pay and offering sign-on bonuses and other new incentives to bolster workforces.
Guild, an east metro-based mental health provider, this month raised wages for 70% of its workers, increasing minimum wages from $17 to $20 an hour. In Minneapolis, Simpson Housing Services is giving employees free state park passes or a wellness stipend, in addition to other benefits.
And in Minnetonka, disability services provider Opportunity Partners is boosting benefits — ranging from sign-on bonuses to tuition reimbursement and some pet-friendly worksites — and spreading the word through billboards, career fairs and outreach to college students as it seeks to rebuild staffing levels, down about 30% from pre-pandemic levels.
"We're not hiring fast enough," said Bill Schultz, CEO of Opportunity Partner. "We're working really hard to be creative ... to find the right people who this is a good fit for."
Nonprofit staffing shortages worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic, when furloughs and layoffs affected about a third of the sector early on. Employees continue to leave for jobs that offer better pay and benefits in what's been dubbed the "Great Resignation."
The result: while Minnesota's nonprofit sector still makes up about 14% of the state's workforce, the number of workers has shrunk by nearly 30,000 since before the pandemic.
In a report released by the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits, more than half the nonprofits surveyed said they're facing staffing shortages and turnover; at the same time, most are reporting higher demand for services. Burnout and wages were the top reasons the nonprofits cited for struggling to retain and attract employees.
While nonprofits have long found it hard to match the pay and benefits of for-profit or government jobs, they face a harder time competing for workers now in the hot labor market. Staffing shortages are squeezing businesses from airports and hotels to restaurants.