More Minnesota nonprofits are facing financial crises than any year since 2020 as many continue to weather rising expenses amid stagnant or declining donations.
Nearly 80% of nonprofits in a new statewide survey reported that they have less than 12 months before they face financial distress — an increase from last year when nearly two-thirds of nonprofits said the same. In 2021 and 2022, about half of nonprofits said they had less than a year before they’d be struggling financially.
“It’s an alarming number,” said Kari Aanestad, associate director at the Minnesota Council of Nonprofits, which started surveying the conditions facing the sector in May 2020, when 81% of nonprofits said that they had less than a year until facing financial distress. “Nonprofits touch the lives of every single Minnesotan, but many Minnesotans probably don’t even realize it.”
The new data, released by the statewide association Thursday, shows the slow recovery of Minnesota’s nonprofit sector from the COVID-19 pandemic. In fact, more nonprofits may be hurdling toward a “financial COVID cliff” that experts warned about after extra pandemic-related federal grants ended and charitable giving waned following unprecedented levels of generosity.
“Are we at the COVID cliff or are folks falling off of it?” said Aanestad, who is tracking an uptick in the number of nonprofits going dormant or dissolving this year. “Even one group closing can have a significant impact on people and communities.”
In October, HUGE Improv Theater in Minneapolis is closing after nearly two decades while Agate Housing and Services is shutting down a Minneapolis shelter, low-income housing and food shelf, and laying off 23 employees.
Earlier this year, Minneapolis media arts organization Pollen Midwest shuttered after 14 years. The Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul, which manages museums and historic sites across the state, laid off seven employees. And Rainbow Health in Minneapolis, which advocated for LGBTQ patients, abruptly shut down.
All five organizations blamed financial troubles for cuts or closures.