Covenant Health Steps Up with $500,000 for Senior Services During Funding Crisis

The Council on Aging of West Florida is facing a critical funding shortfall that threatens essential services for thousands of seniors across Northwest Florida—but a significant investment from Covenant Health and Community Services may provide the lifeline needed to keep vital programs running.

  • Covenant Health announced $500,000 in funding for the organization, with $420,000 designated for immediate operational needs and an additional $80,000 for kitchen expansion to improve long-term sustainability.

The Perfect Storm

The funding crisis stems from multiple converging factors. Federal allocations under the Older Americans Act have decreased by $150,000 over the past year—the second consecutive annual reduction. Meanwhile, food costs have surged approximately 9%, far outpacing the modest 3% increases that federal funding historically provided. Additional cuts from the Department of Government Efficiency have compounded the challenge.

  • “Council on Aging of West Florida provides essential services that protect the health, dignity, and independence of thousands of older adults in our community,” said Josh Newby, President and CEO. “These reductions in funding jeopardize the very programs that allow seniors to remain safely in their homes and out of costly institutional care.”

Programs on the Line

The funding deficit has already forced difficult decisions. The Congregate Meal Program, which once provided hot meals five days weekly, now operates just three days per week with one meal being shelf-stable. The $170,000 allocation will restore full service.

Meals on Wheels demand continues outpacing resources. The $180,000 designated for this program will help align capacity with documented need, ensuring home-delivered meals and wellness checks reach vulnerable seniors…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS