
West Seattle Cafe Needs Wednesday Volunteers for New Hours
A beloved community cafe is expanding evening hours and needs volunteers to help serve wine, snacks, and connection to West Seattle seniors. The center will even reimburse volunteers for required permit training.
Margie's Cafe at West Seattle's Center for Active Living is growing, and they're inviting community members to be part of something special.
Starting in March, the cozy onsite cafe will stay open Wednesday evenings from 3:00 to 5:30 PM, serving wine, beer, light snacks, and baked goods. The extended hours match new afternoon programming at the senior center, creating more opportunities for neighbors to gather and connect.
Here's the exciting part: the center is looking for volunteers to staff these new Wednesday shifts. If you've ever wanted to give back while meeting West Seattle's vibrant senior community, this could be your moment.
The role does require two permits: a Washington state MAST permit for serving alcohol and a King County Food Worker permit. Both can be earned through online courses, and the center will reimburse volunteers for the training costs. That means you can gain valuable certifications at no expense while supporting your community.

Danny Perez, the Volunteer Coordinator, is ready to answer questions at dannyp@wscenter.org. Interested volunteers can also complete an application online through the center's volunteer portal.
Sunny's Take
Margie's isn't just a cafe. It's where friendships form over coffee, where regulars know each other's names, and where West Seattle's older residents find community in a world that can feel isolating. By volunteering a few hours on Wednesday evenings, you're not just pouring wine or serving cookies. You're creating a gathering place where people matter, stories are shared, and loneliness loses its grip. The seniors who walk through those doors aren't just customers; they're neighbors with decades of wisdom and warmth to share.
This expansion shows that even in uncertain times, community spaces are growing, not shrinking. The center is investing in connection, betting that people still crave real face-to-face moments over screens and isolation.
If Wednesday evenings find you looking for purpose, Margie's Cafe just might be where you belong.
Based on reporting by Google: volunteers help
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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