Minnesota nonprofits bracing for deeper financial woes in 2021 are pleading for more help from government leaders.
By the end of December, Patrick Rowan will have exhausted $4 million that Metro Meals on Wheels received in emergency federal aid, preventing layoffs and buying extra food for the growing number of Minnesotans in need of help during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"We don't know what we're going to do January 1," said Rowan, who runs the association that represents 32 Meals on Wheels programs in the Twin Cities, adding that he will either have to turn away people in need of help or go bankrupt.
On Monday, U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar urged support for a measure she introduced in May that would create a $50 billion grant program for nonprofits. With the year winding down, she said it's crucial to bolster support for organizations on the front lines of the growing hunger crisis.
"Need is soaring," she said. "When you look at the numbers, it's pretty extraordinary."
In Minnesota, 5,300 nonprofits — more than half of those in the state — received forgivable Paycheck Protection Program loans from the federal CARES Act, according to a new report from the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits. Another $12 million in CARES funding will go out this week to more than 200 hunger-relief nonprofits, totaling $21 million this year from the federal aid. But the money has to be spent by Dec. 31, and some of Minnesota's largest social services nonprofits were disqualified from the federal loans because they have more than 500 employees.
"Programs after December 31 are out of money and that means people are out of food," said Colleen Moriarty, executive director of Hunger Solutions, a statewide advocacy organization that has urged Congress to pass another COVID-19 relief package before January.
Statewide, many food shelves are serving double or triple the number of people they did before the pandemic and spending more money on extra vehicles to deliver food, sanitizing equipment and freezers to store meals.