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Mariposa shifts North County senior meals after voucher program ends; one‑day VFW site offers frozen and congregate options

July 15, 2025 | Mariposa County, California


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Mariposa shifts North County senior meals after voucher program ends; one‑day VFW site offers frozen and congregate options
County staff told the Board of Supervisors on July 15 that Mariposa's previous senior restaurant voucher program is no longer sustainable and the county has established a weekly congregate meal site at the VFW in North County while officials explore additional options.

"The restaurant program as it previously was ... was basically an open ended, allotted a certain amount of vouchers per week, and they could go to either a cafe and basically order whatever it is they wanted," Jeff Dilbeck, Deputy Director for Adult and Aging Services, told the board. "It's just not sustainable."

Dilbeck said the county established a North County site at the VFW that currently operates one day per week, on Thursday, offering a congregate meal plus two frozen meals to take home in place of the prior three‑voucher model.

He said program staff are monitoring participation and regional needs (Calderville, Greeley Hill, Lake Don Pedro) and will discuss transportation, frequency and other logistics in a planned meeting with participants and partners. "We're really seeing who is coming from where, and then really address those things as they come up," he said.

Board members and presenters clarified differences between the voucher model and the federally‑funded congregate/nutrition program the county must follow under Area 12/USDA dietary rules. Dilbeck noted the dietary requirements for federally funded meals were a material factor in restaurant operators' decisions not to continue the voucher program and that restaurants were offered the option to participate under the nutrition rules.

Board members asked HHSA to keep communicating updates and to look at transportation options for residents who cannot reach the site. HHSA staff said they will continue to meet with local partners and the public to refine service delivery.

The county emphasized that the change was due to funding and program constraints rather than a unilateral county decision to cancel services, and officials said they will continue seeking solutions that balance federal nutrition rules, provider capacity and community access.

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