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Northeast Iowa Area Agency on Aging asks Winneshiek County for $6,500 to expand local senior services

January 26, 2026 | Winneshiek County, Iowa


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Northeast Iowa Area Agency on Aging asks Winneshiek County for $6,500 to expand local senior services
The Northeast Iowa Area Agency on Aging asked the Winneshiek County Board of Supervisors to include $6,500 in the county's 2027 budget to support in-home benefits enrollment, caregiver supports and nutrition services for older residents.

Lisa Wetzel, the agency's funds development director, described a recent case in which staff helped a 79-year-old woman apply for SNAP, a Medicare savings program and a property tax credit, producing more than $300 in monthly savings. "She was approved for SNAP benefits, receiving $48 per month," Wetzel said, and added that the Medicare savings program would cover more than $200 a month in Medicare premiums for the client. "These life-changing savings relieved significant financial stress and allowed her to remain safely and independently in her home," she said.

Agency presenters told the board the organization provides four main service pillars: connections to independence-support services, evidence-based health programs, caregiver supports and nutrition services, including home-delivered meals and pop-up congregate sites. They reported local-year figures including about 181 information-and-assistance contacts, 47 case-management clients and 2,889 home-delivered meals in Winneshiek County.

Board members asked how services are delivered. Wetzel said the agency contracts with local home-health providers for personal care and uses RSVP volunteers to assist with home-delivered meals; homemaker services require a documented physical need and are income-based. The presenters said limited funding has produced wait lists for homemaker, respite and meal delivery services.

The agency asked the county to contribute $6,500—described by presenters as roughly 3% of the county's local investments in the agency's services—and noted the organization's recognition as a benefits-enrollment center by the National Council on Aging.

The board did not take a final appropriation vote during the meeting; supervisors discussed running the agency's full ask in the county's upcoming first-run budget and noted options to adjust funding before final adoption.

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