Dear Friends and Partners,
This is the May 23rd update of Wright County’s Care and Nutrition Partnership in support of Seniors (60+). We are starting our 62nd week of response to COVID-19. Wright County Community Action (WCCA) has a support line for seniors; please encourage seniors to call (320) 963-6500 ext. 274. As a community, we want to help with our most vulnerable neighbors’ challenges, including isolation and the impact that results, assistance with grocery access through education, grocery delivery, senior mobile food shelf needs, frozen meal support, assistance in scheduling vaccine appointments, prescription access, and needs like housekeeping, chores, assisted transportation and other logistical issues as they present.
A blog is
available to follow the story throughout the pandemic: WCCA
Senior Care and Nutrition Blog.
Western Hennepin
In addition
to our work in Wright County, NourishingHOPE is extending frozen meal
support just beyond the Wright County Line to the east into Western Hennepin
County. Seniors there in Western Hennepin County can reach out to NourishingHOPE
to learn about frozen meal support in their local community. Communities
in Western Hennepin include Corcoran, Greenfield, Hamel, Hassen, Loretto,
Rogers, Delano, Hanover, Maple Plain, Otsego, and Rockford. For more information
about Western Hennepin services, please contact nourishinghope.oflc@gmail.com or call (763) 477-6300.
Please
share this email so all our seniors and their family and friends have access to
this information and can confidentially check into resources they may need.
WCCA
Senior Aging Alliance
Wright County Community Action (WCCA) B.R.E.A.D. Program
If your church or civic organization would like to learn more about partnering with the WCCA B.R.E.A.D. program to support socialization opportunities for our local aging friends, please contact WCCA Aging Alliance staff at (320) 963-6500 Ext 274 or agingservices@wccaweb.com.
WCCA is also working to develop expanded access for senior housekeeping and chore services. Let us know if we can help someone you know at the email or phone number above.
We can use more volunteers to call seniors just to check-in. If you would be willing to volunteer your time to make calls to local seniors, please contact WCCA Aging Alliance staff at (320) 963-6500 ext. 274. WCCA will equip volunteer callers with a WCCA cell phone to facilitate more calls to our seniors.
Wright
County is currently leading the State average of seniors vaccinated by a very
slim margin of 90% verses 89%. We can do even better.
Senior Vaccination Scheduling
90% of our seniors (65+) have been vaccinated to date (14,644 of about 16,361). Another 186 Wright County seniors were vaccinated this week. J We have just 1,717 seniors left to go. Let’s keep encouraging our seniors to get their COVID-19 vaccination. Please check on your friends and neighbors to help them to register, if they could use your help.
If you know a Senior (60+) who has limited or no access to email or is just unsure of what to do, WCCA Aging Alliance is working with seniors to help schedule or arrange for the vaccine. If you are a senior (60+) and need help making an appointment or need special arrangements, please call (320) 963-6500 ext. 274
Eric
Nagel WCCA Aging Alliance Manager said “Getting vaccinated is a key to our
ability to get back into the community. Something we all want, but older adults
really need to stay healthy. We can reduce their isolation by getting seniors
vaccinated.”
Wright County Vaccination by age group
Shout-out to Strategic Partners, WCCA Staff, and Volunteers
In the past
two weeks the Annandale Food Shelf has shared 1,800 lbs. of chicken
and 534 lbs. of ham (52 hams). Thank you Annandale Food
Shelf!!! What a great way to partner just in time for frozen senior
meal production needs.
(L-R)
Annandale Food Shelf Volunteers holding
chicken: Mike Earley, Nita Cherry, and Tom Cherry
Tom Cherry that is quite a mustache – really appreciate all three of you!
8 boxes totaling 360 lbs. of chicken, making its way to Twin
Cities Relief Initiative. This chicken will be cooked at a pop-up
kitchen that Twin Cities Relief Initiative is doing nightly at North
Memorial Hospital.
Ray Andrzejewski of Twin Cities Relief Initiative
Grace Place helping with water filter
pitchers in Montrose
Grace
Place in
Montrose has offered their support as a distribution site for Montrose
residents needing filtered water support. Particularly, we hope young
families with infant children and seniors needing a water filter pitcher will
feel comfortable going to Grace Place to get a pitcher. Specific
groups that are very vulnerable include our local infants, the elderly, and
those with liver disease (ref).
Seniors
of Montrose (60+), if you need a water filter pitcher, please let us
know by calling our WCCA Aging Alliance number at (320) 963-6500 Ext. 274. While water pitchers are currently available for pick up
at Grace Place, we will do our best to bring it to you if you are unable
to pick it up yourself.
Senior Nutrition Partnership Frozen Meal
Packing
Thank you American ingenuity and access to the vaccine! – don’t the smiles make all the difference?
WCCA’s
Joel Klaverkamp and our faithful friends from eQuality
Farms – Jeremy and Ryan
We could use your help, too!
If you have a team that might want to help us pack frozen meals on a Thursday morning, please let us know. Packing usually happens at least once per week and takes less than two hours. Each packing can be done with up to 4 or 5 volunteers. Call 763-658-4414 if you want to learn more about this volunteering opportunity.
If
you are willing to help deliver meals to seniors’ homes, please call 320-963-6500 Ext 274 and let us know so that we can find the best place to plug you in.
Wright County COVID-19 IMPACT
As
of May 20th we’ve had 16,197 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Wright County. This
measurement began March 13th of 2020. The chart below
demonstrates the daily trend of cases since mid-March. We’ve had 192 new confirmed cases since
this last week. Our numbers have fallen a little bit more this week J.
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/026d05fb250c47e08ceb0700bfcd00ee
Wright
County is currently well behind the state average in people with at least one
dose of the vaccine with 40%. The State average is 50%.
https://mn.gov/covid19/vaccine/data/index.jsp
WCCA is working to register seniors 60+ to get their vaccination. Vaccination and the patience of area seniors is saving lives. Herd immunity is near and we are seeing more confidence in our seniors that have been vaccinated. Please call Wright County Community Action at (320) 963-6500 ext. 274 if you are a senior (60+) and have not registered for your vaccination and need assistance. We want you also to gain the confidence you need to reengage with friends and family.
18 Wright County Vaccine
Locations - newest locations in Wright County – Walgreens Monticello
and St. Michael Thanks again Walgreens for all you do!
https://mn.gov/covid19/vaccine/find-vaccine/locations/index.jsp
Local
Wright County vaccine locations include:
- Allina
Health Annandale Clinic – Annandale (612) 262-5533 (Appointment required) www.allinahealth.org/coronavirus-covid-19/vaccines
- Allina
Health Cokato Clinic – Cokato (612) 262-5533 (Appointment required) www.allinahealth.org/coronavirus-covid-19/vaccines
- Allina
Health St. Michael Clinic – St. Michael (612) 262-5533 (Appointment required) www.allinahealth.org/coronavirus-covid-19/vaccines
- CentraCare – Monticello (320) 200-3200 (Appointment
required) covid19.centracare.com/covid-19-vaccine-information/
- Coborns
Pharmacy #2029 – Albertville (763) 497-1139 (Appointment
required)
- Coborns Pharmacy #2008 –
Clearwater (320) 558-2454 (Appointment
required)
- Coborns Pharmacy #2028 – Delano
(763) 972-8385 (Appointment
required)
- Coborns Pharmacy #2047 – Otsego
(763) 328-1701 (Appointment
required)
- Cub Pharmacy #1929 – Buffalo (952) 445-6344 (Appointment
required)
www.cub.com/pharmacy/services/covid-testing-information.html
- Cub Pharmacy #1632 – Monticello
(763) 270-7473 (Appointment
required)
www.cub.com/pharmacy/services/covid-testing-information.html
- Cub Pharmacy #1965 – St. Michael
(320) 759-1135 (Appointment
required)
www.cub.com/pharmacy/services/covid-testing-information.html
- CVS Pharmacy #17260 –
Monticello (888) 300-4419 (Appointment
required)
www.cvs.com/immunizations/covid-19-vaccine
- Thrifty
White Pharmacy #787 – Annandale (320) 274-3062 (Appointment required and
Pre-registration) www.thriftywhite.com/covid19vaccine
- Walgreens
– Monticello (763) 295-5890 (Appointment required) walgreens.com/schedulevaccine
- Walgreens
– St. Michael (763) 497-8530 (Appointment required) walgreens.com/schedulevaccine
- Walmart
#1577 – Buffalo (763)
682-2963 (Appointment
required, Pre-screening, and Pre-registration) www.walmart.com/covidvaccine
- Walmart #3624 – Monticello (763) 295-9813 (Appointment
required, Pre-screening, and Pre-registration) www.walmart.com/covidvaccine
- Wright
County Public Health – Buffalo (763) 682-7607 **COVID-19
Vaccine Clinic at the Buffalo office Thursday May 27th –
Johnson and Johnson’s Janssen vaccine provided (Appointment required and
Pre-registration) check here for availability http://www.co.wright.mn.us/997/COVID-19-Vaccine
Trailblazer
Transit –
is providing no cost rides to COVID-19 vaccinations.
Trailblazer Transit is offering transportation at no cost to customers for any rides related to a COVID-19 vaccination. Caretakers and children may also ride along at no cost. Customers will need to coordinate with their health care providers or the vaccination clinics to schedule the appointments for the vaccines and then contact Trailblazer to schedule the transportation.
Rides for vaccinations are scheduled subject to bus availability and are coordinated with other rides in normal fashion. Trailblazer Transit may extend hours into the evening or add hours on Saturdays for the purpose of providing COVID-19 vaccination transportation. Please call toll-free 1-888-743-3828 to ask any questions and to schedule your transportation. The buses are clean, safe, and comfortable. Masks are required on the bus and social distancing polices are in effect. https://www.trailblazertransit.com/program-overview/
If
you just want to know a little bit more about the basics of the vaccine,
checkout this Vaccine Fact Sheet:
http://www.co.wright.mn.us/DocumentCenter/View/21224/Vaccine-Fact-Sheet?bidId=
New CDC Guidance - When You’ve Been Fully Vaccinated
Last week on May 13, 2021, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) released updated safety guidance for people fully
vaccinated against COVID-19. In a major departure from its past guidance, the
CDC states that fully vaccinated people do not need to wear
a mask or physically distance in any indoor or outdoor setting, unless required
by federal, state, local, tribal, or territorial laws, rules, or regulations.
The new guidance also clarifies that fully vaccinated people do not need to
test, quarantine, or be restricted from work following a known exposure to
COVID-19, if they are asymptomatic, unless they are residents or employees of a
correctional or detention facility or a homeless shelter.

· If you are fully vaccinated, you can resume
activities that you did prior to the pandemic.
· Fully vaccinated
people can resume activities without wearing a mask or physically distancing,
except where required by federal, state, local, tribal, or territorial laws,
rules, and regulations, including local business and workplace guidance.
· If you haven’t
been vaccinated yet, find a vaccine.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/fully-vaccinated.html#vaccinated
If
you or a potential partner would like to help expand food resources to our
seniors expressly on Highway 12, please consider donating to the “COVID-19 Food” fund at the Delano Loretto
Area United Way:
Write a check to: Delano Loretto Area United Way
In the memo line, write: “COVID-19 Food.”
Mail
to:
P.O. Box 578
Delano, MN 55328
Or visit the Delano Loretto Area United Way Website http://www.delanolorettouw.org/ and click “Donate” -- donations via credit card or PayPal (click on “write a note”, write “COVID-19 Food”)
If
you want to target expansion of frozen meal delivery in other parts of Wright
County including the Highway 55 corridor and I-94 corridor, please consider
donating to the “COVID-19 Food” fund at Wright County Community Action:
Write a check to: Wright County Community Action
In the memo line, write: “COVID-19 Food.”
Mail
to:
P.O. Box 787
Maple Lake, MN 55358
Or visit the Wright County Community Action Agency Website (dedicate to: “COVID-19 Food”) https://www.wccaweb.com
The entire community of Wright County is in this together! (see current partner list below)
Please forward this email to potential partners!
Thankful,
Jay
Weatherford
WCCA
Executive Director
For more information for Wright County senior support services:
https://www.wccaweb.com/Home/Index (click current programs)
or
email: agingservices@wccaweb.com
or call:
(320) 963-6500 Ext 274 – Aging Program Manager - Eric Nagel
(320) 963-6500 Ext 241 – Dispatch
1-800-333-2433 – Senior LinkAge Line
Delivered
Frozen Meal Program(s) – WCCA at (320) 963-6500 Ext 274 or Catholic Charities Meals on Wheels program located in Maple
Lake: (320)
963-5771,
Annandale: (320) 274-3891 and Buffalo: (763) 682-6036
To volunteer:
Contact (320) 963-6500 Ext. 225 –– Jen Liebeck jliebeck@wccaweb.com
Or enroll on Website: https://www.wccaweb.com/Home/Volunteer
New Partner and First Time Reader Overview
Farmers: food shelfs and senior programs can use
your support. Please share this email with your Wright County
farmer friends potentially able to contribute, or other Food Security Partners
that could use this produce to support their efforts. For large
donations, WCCA will use its resources to make distributions happen.
Again, going forward we hope to expand this list of local food security
recipients that could use fresh vegetables when they become available. If you
are serving local individuals at no cost and would like to be included in this
potential fresh vegetable distribution opportunity, please email me a cell
phone number to text. When an opportunity arises, a rapid response will
be needed. Based on a first come first serve distribution and
availability, Wright County Community Action will do our best to share these
resources as they come in and deliver them to partner locations.
Partner support
·
Second Harvest – free
and reduced cost bulk raw food products for frozen meal production.
·
Delano Coborn’s – weekly
food rescue makes a tremendous impact on food security resources.
·
Local Farmers –
Untiedt’s Vegetable Farm and Dechene Corporation of Big Lake Minnesota –
contributing produce for senior meal support and local food security needs.
·
Waverly Café - ingenuity
and giving spirit including their PPP loan directed at paying their staff to
produce senior meals, catering expertise, and use of their commercial kitchen.
·
Hunger Solutions –
assistance and funding support for food rescue and concept building
·
Catholic Charities
partially funded by Central MN Council on Aging – frozen meals contribution and
Meals-on-Wheels referral partner.
·
Cargill – ongoing senior
breakfast meals support.
·
J&B Group – bulk warehouse freezer storage including bulk prepared meal
storage and bulk raw food storage; not to mention helping us resolve logistical
issues, as well as supplying a really great box with the outcome of providing
so many solutions to challenges we have faced in our production process.
·
Buffalo Crossings LLC
and member Joel Nystrom, owner of Oriental Buffet in Buffalo – commercial
walk-in freezer, commercial walk-in cooler, and commercial kitchen to pack and
store senior meals and produce.
·
Water Companies –
Culligan of Buffalo, Bernick’s of St. Cloud through a partnership with Wright
County Economic Development, Dahlheimer Beverage of Monticello, Capital
Beverage Sales, L.P. and Zero Water.
·
Local Food Shelves –
produce distribution, local frozen meal and bulk food storage, as well as
senior services registration (Annandale Food Shelf, Buffalo Food Shelf, Monticello Help
Center, Meek Area Food Shelf, and Waverly Food Shelf).
·
Trailblazer – daily volunteer based County-wide local senior meal delivery.
·
eQuality Farms –
volunteer packing, loading and off-loading senior meals, as well as helping to
recycle boxes using their employed adults with disabilities to break the boxes
down into compost layering, making tinder for wood stoves, and bedding for
chickens.
·
Delano Senior Center –
senior services application fulfillment, frozen meal distribution, produce
distribution, as well as Meals-on-Wheels referral partner.
·
NourshingHOPE – senior
services applications fulfillment, frozen meal distribution, and produce
distribution.
·
Forgotten Harvest and Twin Cities Relief Initiative
– metro area frozen meal distribution and produce distribution.
·
Wright County Human
Services/Public Health – volunteer recruitment support, data support,
instructional materials design, and logistics support.
·
St. Cloud Refrigeration
– emergency air conditioning for the Waverly Café kitchen.
·
Electrical Workers
Union, IBEW Local 292 – brought to the partnership Olympia Tech Electric to
support new electrical service needed at Waverly Café
·
Olympia Tech Electric –
installing new electrical services at Waverly Café needed for additional
freezer capacity
·
Local Lions Clubs –
local community freezer development and contributions to the cost of frozen
meals (Waverly, Montrose, Howard Lake, Maple Lake, Loretto, and Monticello).
·
Local Municipalities –
local freezer storage funding support (City of Waverly, City of Montrose, City
of Howard Lake).
·
Health Care Partners –
Allina Health (financial support)
·
Other Local Corporations
– Citizen State Bank of Waverly (freezer funding support), HWY 55 Trailer Sales
of Buffalo, and Walgreens
(shopping bags).
·
Local Faith-based
organizations – many very giving churches for many years have been active in
financial support for food security across Wright County (too many to mention
them all – but you know who you are) . – in addition, Love INC, St Mary’s
Catholic Church, Alleluia Lutheran, Our Father’s Lutheran, St. John’s Lutheran,
Grace Place, North Ridge Fellowship Small Group and friends, Montrose United
Methodist Church, Zion Lutheran, Living Water Christian Fellowship, Buffalo
Covenant have provided support for senior call center activity, B.R.E.A.D
program outreach, volunteer administrative services, food security, food
preparation, and meal and food storage - access and delivery.
·
Initiative Foundations,
Delano Loretto Area United Way, Wright County Area United Way, Mardag
Foundation, and St Paul and Minnesota Foundations including funding for
COVID-19 direct response, Catchafire membership, and B.R.E.A.D. program
funding.
·
State Live Well at Home
Funding and Federal Title III funding support administered by the Minnesota
Board on Aging and Central Minnesota Council on Aging.
·
Oliver Equipment Lease
for the required equipment to seal the senior meal trays.
·
AMI Group and IDA Foods
– access to airline meal vendors adding senior meal production capacity and
contingency support. This opportunity to purchase over stock of
first-class airline meals due to drop in air travel and our partners sharing
their relationships.
·
Tireless WCCA Staff
support from multiple programs working to braid any allowable resource to make
a difference for our seniors.
·
Countless community
volunteers - everything from administrative services support, logistics and
storage coordination, bulk food and materials transport, senior transportation,
local meal delivery, meal packing, senior call center activity, PPE production
and product support, volunteer coordination, food rescue, and so many more
details where you fill the gap (you too, know who you are – we are so
grateful for your courage and willingness to step forward to meet needs).
Call to Action
There is still much more opportunity for local
corporate and civic partners to get involved. It’s simple solutions like
packing meals in the Walgreens shopping bags or storing bulk meals or protein
on the warehouse freezer floor at J&B Group that have made all the
difference. Given the chance there are many incredible businesses that
have unique resources, relationships, buying power, and experience.
We really hope to find more corporate partners willing to leverage their earned
knowledge and distinctive talents to improve this support for our seniors
during the pandemic. Leveraging what they do best including their
marketing, buying power, and connections brings together powerful
partners. When we put our heads together, we dig up unique ways like
those mentioned briefly above. These often come from you readers. So please share this email with your
friend, neighbor, or corporate partner so that this story can be told, and those big thinkers out there
have the opportunity to step forward and do what they do best.
Its leaders like Waverly Café, J&B Group,
Cargill, St. Cloud Refrigeration, Buffalo Crossing, and Untiedt Vegetable Farm
that are showing us ways for other corporate partners to leverage their buying
power, innovation, and economy of scale that will most likely take this
delivery system to the next level. We need you thinkers to help refine
our process as a community, interested in protecting our most vulnerable
population by leveraging their lessons learned; those lessons that have brought
your businesses to the success they are today. Share this message with your friends: during the same years that many of your
companies were established and being built to thrive, the people we are
trying to protect were your customers. This might be a great
opportunity to now give back to the ones who supported you and help them
thrive.
We need to refine solutions in local communities
for freezer storage, access to bulk buying, shared and efficient transportation
opportunities, HR teams organizing volunteers to support local distribution in
their community, corporate giving through community investment and
matching. We need volunteered ingenuity from our bankers and other
corporate partners that can bring their experience to this effort to
shore up and produce a stronger, even more sustainable model than we have
today. It is partners with their buying power, innovation, and economy of
scale that are now needed to continue to refine our process. There is
still local ingenuity to leverage in this crisis seeking local solutions that
will only enhance, extend, and sustain the investment of the federal and state
agencies.






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