Despite strong demand for people wanting massage therapy, COVID-19 restrictions were too much to handle financially for CenterPoint Massage and Shiatsu School & Clinic in St. Louis Park.
The school will close June 30, liquidating its inventory at K-Bid.com/auction/33062. It has stopped enrolling new students and it is trying to negotiate a deal where current students can transfer to Northwestern Health Sciences University (NWHSU) in Bloomington.
Student clinic and all hands-on classes were canceled March 17 at CenterPoint after the governor's directive.
"We tried to project into September with a 70% decrease in revenue or wait until January for hands-on classes," said Cari Johnson Pelava, director of CenterPoint School. "But there was no way we could wait. People are not flocking to the program during COVID."
The school received a Paycheck Protection Program loan but had to return it because of its restrictive nature. Even with a relaxation of the loan paybacks from eight to 24 weeks, Johnson Pelava said it was too little, too late.
The school negotiated an early exit with its landlord and the debt-free school didn't want to take on new long-term loans.
Even before the pandemic, the number of massage schools had been in decline. The Twin Cities metro boasted more than 40 massage schools in the 2004 to 2010 peak. By 2012, enrollments were decreasing nationally, dropping by half.
CenterPoint's enrollment was down 25% from five years ago and 35% from nine years ago when there were about 100 students, Johnson Pelava said. The decline is typical for most U.S. massage schools.