
Paul Kleyman
New America Media
While advocates for elders are decrying political proposals that would cut
budgets “on the backs of seniors and the poor,” Howard Bedlin of the National
Council on Aging says that’s already happening.
Bedlin, NCOA's policy and advocacy chief, said in an interview that much of the
media’s attention to “drastic” proposals to reduce the national debt by
House Republicans and the White House fails to reflect the deep cuts to
seniors’ program that have already been made in the 2011 budget.
The 2011 compromise budget, he said, includes stark reductions for seniors in
such safety-net programs as low-income housing, home-energy assistance for those
in extreme weather, and job training and placement.
Bedlin and other experts on aging are dissecting how the national budget crunch
will impact older Americans at this week’s Aging in America conference in San
Francisco.
“One out of three seniors in the United States is economically insecure,”
Bedlin stated, living under twice the federal poverty line, or $22,000 per
person. “Yet the public perception is that seniors are doing fine and not
struggling."
In addition, according to the Social Security Administration, ethnic seniors are
especially vulnerable. About half of African-American, Asian and Latino elders
in the United States rely on Social Security for at least 90 percent of their
income, compared to only one-third of whites.
“We want to underscore the disproportionate effects of these budget cuts,”
said Sandra Nathan, who heads the council’s Economic
Security Initiative. For example, she said, 46 percent of participants
in the Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP) are in ethnic
communities, and 60 percent are women.” The program trains older workers and
places them in community jobs.
NCOA’s new One Away
campaign for elder economic security just released a national survey, conducted
for the organization by Harris Interactive, which revealed widespread
misperceptions about the financial vulnerability of seniors.
Among the survey’s findings are:
• Less than one-third of Americans knew that low-income elders now pay 25
percent of their incomes for health care out of pocket, despite having Medicare.
• Only one in six people understood that 40 percent of seniors recently faced
such housing problems as being unable to pay their mortgages or living in
dilapidated housing.
• Only one in five knew that nearly 6 million older Americans are at risk of
going hungry.
• Fewer than one-fifth of those surveyed knew that average credit-card debt
for seniors was $10,000.
“The unemployment rate for older workers is 25 to 30 percent, the rate of
foreclosures is very high, and their credit card debt is the highest of any
group,” Nathan said. “African-American and Latino elders use credit cards
for rent, food – just to cover their basic needs.”
Strikingly, even though few respondents were aware that so many older adults
were struggling, nearly two out of three Americans surveyed said that they
personally knew a senior who was struggling economically—and that figure was
even higher (70 percent) among young people ages 18 to 34.
'Foolish' Cuts to Jobs Programs
For this fiscal year, Congress and President Obama agreed to slash 45
percent of funding for SCSEP, eliminating 59,000 training and employment
positions for older workers – a move Bedlin called “pennywise and pound
foolish.”
A new analysis
of SCSEP by Northeastern University’s Center for Labor Market Studies shows
that even without the cuts, the program only helps one in nine of the 1.1
million impoverished Americans 55 or older who are eligible for the program.
In the study, the center’s Ishwar Khatiwada and colleagues called the
program’s already low funding a “massive underutilization of the nation’s
low-income work force.”
Underfunding SCSEP, they wrote, creates a “lose, lose, lose” situation, with
lost earnings, reduced physical and mental health, lost output for society,
reduced taxes and an increased burden on strained public programs from Medicaid
to food stamps.
Anthony Sarmiento, head of Senior
Service America (SSA), which commissioned the study and, like NCOA, runs
some of the SCSEP jobs
programs, noted that all of the local programs have long waiting lists.
“If politicians really believe it’s all about jobs, why are they cutting
SCSEP?” Sarmiento asked.
“I want to be able to take care of myself,” said Iola Lowe, 59, of Sioux
City, Iowa, who learned computer skills and got on-the-job experience at the
community’s nature center through the program.
After training older workers, SCSEP pays them a stipend to gain work experience
at local nonprofits or community agencies.
Lowe, who previously had a heart attack, said her “health and mental state are
a lot better. Now, I feel there’s nothing I can’t do.” She currently has
an unpaid position at Wal-Mart.
Willie Ford, 63, of Chattanooga, Tenn., a former factory worker, leaned computer
skills so well through SCSEP’s Digital Inclusion Initiative that the Alexian
Brothers Senior Neighbors program asked her to serve as their computer coach.
(“They love Facebook,” she said of the seniors in the program.)
High ROI
For SCSEP’s employment program alone, NCOA’s Bedlin noted, “The return on
investment to communities is enormous. For every dollar spent on the program,
$10 to $20 comes back to the community,” making the cuts to this program that
much more “incoherent.”
“We’re trying to address the fact that we now have a frayed social safety
net that might be torn apart,” said Bedlin. House Republicans are proposing
cutting both Medicare and the federal-state Medicaid program, while governors of
both parties are looking to cut state Medicaid programs.
At the federal level, in addition to the senior employment reductions, the 2011
budget agreement President Obama recently signed for next year will do such
things as axe $425 million of Section 202 housing subsidized for seniors
(cutting current funding in half); slash $390 million from the Low-Income Home
Energy Assistance Program, including eliminating funds to help protect seniors
from dramatic price hikes and extreme weather; and delete funding for housing
counselors who help homeowners avoid mortgage scams.
The president’s budget proposal for 2012 is not much better, said Bedlin, and
Republicans are calling for even deeper cuts to social programs.
“If there’s a compromise somewhere between the House bill and the White
House,” he said, “we’ll be in pretty deep trouble.”
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Paul Kleyman is Ethnic Elders Editor for New
America Media. This story is reproduced by RedwoodAge with
permission.

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