There's the elderly woman with a paid companion to drive her for errands once a week; a Minneapolis mother who gets help buying fresh fruit; the air traffic controller facing a weekly furlough day; a military family stationed overseas.
These are some of the Minnesotans wrestling with uncertainty as $85 billion in federal budget cuts, including hundreds of millions of dollars in Minnesota, began taking effect Friday. The impact won't be immediate, but many already feel the anxiety.
"We need to see how the federal government plays out these cuts. We haven't gotten a lot of guidance," said Charles Johnson, chief financial officer at the state Department of Human Services.
From a distance, some cuts may not look severe. Hennepin County's Human Services and Public Health Department, for example, could lose $1.1 million from $465 million in annual federal funds. But many of the agencies facing reductions have run lean for years in a down economy, and the cuts would be felt, they say.
Peggy Compton hopes to hang onto the four hours a week that a companion helps her with errands, under a program run by Lutheran Social Services. Compton, 87, who doesn't drive, needs help getting groceries and to the doctor.
"I have a lot of respect for these people," she said. "They're barely getting paid anything and they're so good with the older people."
Under the cuts, about 30 Minnesotans who rely on the aides could lose them, said Lutheran Social Services spokeswoman Jackie Nelson. LSS gets help from the government in funding the program.
At Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, air traffic controller Sam Tomlin also worries about the uncertainty ahead.