Wave of rural nursing home closures grow amid staffing crunch


Marjorie Kruger visits with her son Dan White in her new room at the Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society nursing home in Waukon. Kruger transferred to the Waukon facility in September 2022 because Good Samaritan was closing its Postville home, where Kruger lived for six years.

WAUKON — Marjorie Kruger was stunned to learn last fall that she would have to leave the nursing home where she’d lived comfortably for six years.

The Good Samaritan Society facility in Postville would close, administrators told Kruger and 38 other residents in September. The facility joined a growing list of nursing homes being shuttered nationwide, especially in rural areas.

“The rug was taken out from under me,” said Kruger, 98. “I thought I was going to stay there the rest of my life.”

Her son found a room for her in another Good Samaritan center in Waukon, a small town 18 miles north of Postville. Kruger said the new facility is a pleasant place, but she misses her friends and longtime staffers from the old one.

“We were as close as a nice family,” she said.

The Postville facility’s former residents are scattered across northeastern Iowa. Some were forced to move twice after the first nursing home they transferred to also went out of business.



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