Before the pandemic, Caleb George-Guidry lived in a group home with a circle of friends and staff who understood his spirited personality. He also attended a day support center where he enjoyed a wide range of activities, from painting to yoga, designed for adults like him with significant disabilities.
Now, more than two years later, George-Guidry's life has been turned upside down. Because of severe staffing shortages, the 31-year-old last fall was forced to move out of his group home of the past 12 years and into a new house with strangers who did not comprehend his way of communication. Then George-Guidry's day center in St. Paul abruptly suspended his services after nine years — leaving him isolated and depressed. Today, George-Guidry, who was born with a rare disorder that affects his physical and cognitive development, spends much of his time watching videos and playing games in the common space of the house.
"Most of us are moving past this pandemic, but there's a whole community of people with disabilities who have not been able to move on," said Matt Guidry, his father, who lives in Minneapolis. "It could and should be different."
Even as the worst of the pandemic has eased, the state's carefully stitched safety net for adults with significant disabilities remains badly frayed amid a severe and worsening workforce crisis. Adults with cerebral palsy, autism and other disabilities — who took pride in living independently — are being forced to move back home with their parents or into larger, congregate-care settings where their daily choices are often carefully controlled. Many with intense medical needs feel abandoned and neglected, as their social media feeds are filled with relatives and friends returning to normal lives.
Across Minnesota, more than 3,500 adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities are still waiting to return to day and employment centers that have curtailed services since the pandemic began, according to the industry group that represents these providers. Waiting lists at some large day centers, where individuals make social connections and participate in learning activities, have swelled to hundreds of people. With nowhere to go during the day, many are languishing at home.
"The system is in ruins, and we all feel stretched beyond our capacity," said Stacey Vogele of Cottage Grove, whose 21-year-old daughter, Tana, has multiple disabilities and has been waiting for more than a year to be accepted into a day support center.
The chief cause is a critical shortage of people willing to care for adults with disabilities and high medical needs. Amid a tightening job market, in which the state's unemployment rate recently dipped to an all-time low of 2.2%, thousands of openings for caregiving jobs have gone unfilled. Vacancies for home health and personal care aide jobs ballooned nearly 70% over the past year to 9,110 at the end of 2021, up from 5,383 vacancies at the same time in 2020, according to the most recent state data. The median wage for direct support positions has inched up to nearly $15 an hour, still too low to attract workers from less-demanding jobs, say disability service providers.
In a sign of how severely the safety net is strained, state lawmakers took the unusual step this spring of expanding the licensed capacity of care facilities for people with disabilities. Group homes that for decades have been mostly limited to four people could temporarily house up to six; and licensed six-bed homes, known as "intermediate care facilities," would be permitted for up to eight, under the provisions. While the changes would last only a year, they were opposed by some disability advocacy groups.