
More Minnesotans turned to food shelves in 2024 than ever before
Last year proved to be a record year for food insecurity in Minnesota, as food shelves set record highs for visits statewide.
Minnesotans made nearly 9 million trips to food shelves, according to The Food Group, a statewide agency that announced its report Wednesday.
The 9 million visits are up 1.4 million from 2023 and are nearly 2.5 times higher than pre-pandemic levels set in 2019.
Visits are up an average of 18.4% across all counties.
"We're in a hunger crisis," Second Harvest Heartland CEO Allison O'Toole said. "This isn't an urban issue, this isn't a rural issue, it's an everywhere issue."
O'Toole says a 2024 study found nearly one in five Minnesota households couldn't afford the food they needed.
In Minnetonka, the issue is the same at ICA Food Shelf, which services about 1,800 families each month.
"We have just seen the food flying off the shelves right now," Erin Wiedenman, ICA's Food Shelf Specialist, said. "When I first started a few years ago, we were booking out like four-to-five days for appointments, now it's close to two weeks pretty consistently."
Wiedenman and O'Toole both point to the rising costs for groceries — which the Food Group study reports increased by an average of 28% per trip.
"People's grocery bills have gone up that it's just not affordable for people," Wiedenman said. "I honestly believe anyone could need (help) at any time — that's why we're here. We're here to help anyone that needs help at any time — that could be any one of us."
spending cuts Tuesday.
"These cuts and these proposals worry me. I hope that they worry everyone," O'Toole said. "The policies put in place, if there are cuts to those, it just turns a crisis into a catastrophe."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
4 hours ago
- Newsweek
Warning Issued Over $500 Million Loss From Medicaid Cuts
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Minnesota's Medicaid Director has warned that the state could lose $500 million in federal funding a year if President Donald Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" is passed in Congress. John Connolly said in a media briefing yesterday, as shared with Newsweek by the Department of Human Services, "the bill currently on the table is inefficient, ineffective, and fundamentally unfair." Newsweek has contacted the White House via email for comment. Why It Matters President Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" has sparked significant concern among some lawmakers, particularly over the subject of Medicaid. The tax bill would aim to cut around $600 billion from Medicaid, the federal program that provides health coverage to the country's most vulnerable, to enable the president to bring about $4.5 trillion in tax breaks. The Congressional Budget Office has predicted that more than 10 million Americans could lose their health coverage if the bill is brought into law, and health experts and lawmakers have warned that this could result in worse health outcomes across the country and, over time, an increase in medical costs. File photo: Thousands of protestors calling for a stop to the proposed cuts to Medicaid funding. File photo: Thousands of protestors calling for a stop to the proposed cuts to Medicaid funding. Katie Godowski/MediaPunch via AP What To Know Connolly said that hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans would lose their health coverage as a result, and that increases in medical debt could force some hospitals and clinics to close, leaving communities vulnerable. Around 250,000 in the state could lose their coverage, according to KFF estimates, and the Commonwealth Fund estimated 9,300 jobs would be lost. Connolly also pointed to the impact Trump's tax bill would have on family planning services in the state, as the legislation would provide no federal funding for them, alongside a $170 million cut for reproductive health services. According to a fact sheet shared with Newsweek by the Minnesota Department of Human Services, eligibility checks for the Medicaid program would also take place every six months instead of annually, which the Department said would double the workload for "backlogged" counties, "setting them up to fail." The Department added it "leads to enrollment churn where enrollees lose coverage as soon as their eligibility is reverified." Connolly also warned that the cuts would impact not only those who lose their Medicaid coverage but everyone in the state, as the increase in constituents without health coverage would lead to a reduction in preventative care and, in turn, a worsening of health outcomes that would ramp up medical costs for all. "If these cuts go forward, families will face impossible choices between caregiving and working, between food and medicine, and our hospitals, especially those in rural communities, will suffer and Minnesotans will fall through the cracks ultimately," Connolly said, according to the regional news outlet, InForum. Alongside proposed cuts in funding to Medicaid, Minnesota would be among one of the states penalized by Trump's tax bill for states for providing health coverage to undocumented migrants. The terms of the legislation would reduce the federal match rate for the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) in states providing health care for undocumented migrants from 90 percent to 80 percent. This would lead to a $330 million reduction in federal funding for the state, the Department of Human Services fact sheet reported. However, Minnesota has recently passed a budget bill suspending MinnesotaCare coverage for undocumented migrants starting from 2026, which is currently waiting to be signed off by Governor Tim Walz. What People Are Saying John Connolly, Medicaid director and deputy commissioner at the Minnesota Department of Human Services, said in a media briefing yesterday, as shared with Newsweek by the Minnesota Department of Human Services: "[The bill] achieves its purported reductions by slashing federal Medicaid funding. But those reductions are actually a cost shift - to states, counties, Tribes, providers and people themselves who will have to pick up the expense of health care no longer covered and the cost of increased administrative burdens." What Happens Next Lawmakers in Congress will continue to deliberate over Trump's tax bill until the current scheduled deadline of July 4.

Yahoo
20 hours ago
- Yahoo
Former Stewartville home park community operator agrees to pay $135,000 in settlement
Jun. 12—ST. PAUL — The former owner and operator of a manufactured home park community in Stewartville agreed to pay $135,000 after facing allegations that it submitted false claims to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. The state alleged that Sun Communities, Inc. violated three counts of the Minnesota False Claims Act, an act that works to combat fraud against the government. The civil complaint, filed in March 2024, alleged that Sun Communities attempted to evict several tenants for not paying their rent. However, in these instances, Sun Communities received the tenants' payments through RentHelpMN, a federally funded program created after COVID-19 that provides financial support to help Minnesota families pay rent. According to the complaint, Sun Communities "repeatedly affirmed" that it would not evict tenants for not paying rent after receiving their rent payments through the program. RentHelpMN required landlords like Sun Communities to comply with the "statutory and regulatory prohibition on evicting tenants." The state alleged that Sun Communities applied RentHelpMN to pay for "unlawful late fees, pet fees" and other unauthorized fees. Hennepin County District Judge Susan Burke ordered that $33,824.09 of the $135,000 be paid as restitution, which will be credited to the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency. "What Sun Communities did was unlawful," Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a release. "The pandemic created economic hardship, so the government stepped up and helped struggling families make rent payments. It is disappointing that any property owner would accept those payments and then still try to evict their tenants. Today, we are holding one of those property owners accountable. I am grateful to the whistleblower who helped bring this wrongdoing to light, and I encourage other Minnesotans who believe government funds are being misused to contact my office." Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP, who represented Sun Communities, did not immediately respond for comment. Sun Communities, Inc. previously owned and operated the community located at 105 20 St. NW, Stewartville.
Yahoo
21 hours ago
- Yahoo
Here's how the House GOP's proposed Medicaid cuts could impact Minnesota
Thousands of protestors gathered at the Minnesota State Capitol as part of the nationwide "Hands Off" protests condemning several actions of the Trump administration Saturday, April 5, 2025. (Photo by Nicole Neri/Minnesota Reformer) Minnesota could lose up the half a billion dollars annually if a GOP-backed tax bill becomes federal law, Minnesota's Medicaid director warned Thursday. That could mean fewer services or tighter restrictions on eligibility, affecting health care for hundreds of thousands of Minnesotans and the hospitals and other providers that treat them. The bill, which has already passed the U.S. House on a 215-214 vote, is still far off from becoming law; Senate Republicans are drafting their own version, and the GOP remains deeply split over how to pay for tax cuts, which is their ultimate goal. For now, the House legislation is the most detailed public plan for how Republicans will fund an extension of President Donald Trump's 2017 tax cuts, plus a bunch more. The tax cuts passed by the House would decrease federal revenue by about $3.7 trillion over the next ten years, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. To offset the loss of income, Republicans want to cut spending by $1.3 trillion, mostly by targeting Medicaid and SNAP, which helps low-income people buy food. (The $2.4 trillion gap between the revenue and spending cuts would be added to the federal debt, which will in turn increase what taxpayers must shell out in interest payments, which have surpassed $1 trillion annually.) Medicaid pays for health care for the elderly, low-income and disabled. The cost is shared between states and the federal government; last year, Minnesota spent $18 billion on Medical Assistance, which is Minnesota's version of Medicaid. The federal government covered $11 billion of that. More than 1.2 million Minnesotans rely on Medical Assistance, and deep cuts would cause 'serious harm' to Minnesotans, said John Connolly, Minnesota's Medicaid director. 'Our position at the Minnesota Department of Human Services is that the bill currently on the table is inefficient, ineffective and fundamentally unfair,' Connolly said during a press briefing. Minnesota is already grappling with how to pay for care for an aging population as health care costs continue to rise. The state Legislature made $270 million in cuts to Medical Assistance this year, as spending on the program has risen faster than tax revenues. DHS estimates that if the U.S. House tax bill were to become law, the state would lose out on $500 million per year. The bill would cause between 152,000 and 253,000 Minnesotans to lose health insurance, according to Kaiser Family Foundation. It would also push costs onto state and local governments, Connolly said, by requiring county and tribal governments to verify participants' eligibility twice as often as they do now, and increasing the administrative burden for the state. The largest chunk of the possible cuts to Minnesota comes from a provision that would reduce Medicaid reimbursements for states that subsidize health insurance for undocumented people. The Legislature voted this week to remove eligibility of undocumented adults for MinnesotaCare, a state- and federally-funded health insurance program for the working poor that is separate from Medical Assistance. As long as undocumented children remain eligible for MinnesotaCare — and if the House language becomes law — Minnesota would still have its federal funding cut by about $330 million, according to DHS. Senate Republicans are wary of deep Medicaid cuts, and are instead expected to target SNAP, the New York Times reported Thursday. The Senate has not yet introduced its version of the tax bill. A proposal to shift 25% of federal SNAP benefit costs onto states would shift up to $220 million annual cost to Minnesota, according to the state Department of Youth and Family Services. More than 440,000 Minnesotans rely on SNAP benefits, according to DCYF. More than one-third are children, 18% are seniors and 14% are adults with a disability. If these federal cost shifts and cuts become law, the Minnesota Legislature would likely be forced to return to St. Paul for a special session to either raise taxes, cut services or move money around to fulfill lawmakers' constitutional obligation to balance the budget.