HomeMy WebLinkAboutSenior Advisory Board - Minutes - 10/12/1994• •
SENIOR ADVISORY BOARD
Minutes of the October 12, 1994 Meeting
The October meeting of the Senior Advisory Board was called to order
by Yvonne Myers, vice chair, at 2:05 P. M. on Wednesday, October 12,
in the Canyon/Plains Room of the Senior Center, 145 East Mountain
Avenue. Attendance was as follows:
Members Unexcused Members Guests
Jane Goodhart
Ed Johnson
Marjorie McTaggart
Wayne Moellenberg
Kay Rios, chair
Jill Taylor
Stan Ulrich
Margaret Watts
Council Liaison: None
A quorum was present.
CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
None
Staff
Barbara Schoenberger
Steve Budner
Jean Helberg
Joe Curby
Judy Curby
Arlene Simon
Phillip Simon
Tracy Thomas, DVM
Fran Thompson
Several guests attended the meeting for citizen participation.
Arlene Simon, a former member of the SAB, voiced her objection to the
name of the new senior center and questioned the procedures used in
arriving at the name. Steve Budner, Program Administrator of the
senior center, answered her objections by reviewing the procedures
of the Naming Committee. When the building was first approved for
construction, Steve said he had approached the Building Team and the
SAB to conduct a contest for the naming of the new facility. A
committee was formed and its members represented City Council, the
Senior Center Council, the SAB, the Building Team and the Parks and
Recreation Advisory Board. Approximately 679 names had been sub-
mitted, and each member selected his top five picks. The committee
exercised the option to "massage" the names if one didn't particularly
stand out, and that is what happened, Steve stated. Foothills appeared
in one name and Oasis appeared in another, and the committee decided
to combine the two words. when the name Foothills Oasis was submitted
to the SAB for a vote, the Board amended the name to read Foothills
Oasis/Fort Collins Senior Center and approved the name as amended.
After further comments by Phillip Simon, Steve informed the spectators
that the name of the new senior center is up for review later on the
agenda. Fran Thompson suggested that the new: center should be named
the Foothills Senior Center and that Oasis should be dropped com-
pletely from the name.
At this point of the discussion, Kay Rios appeared and assumed the
chair.
MINUTES
The minutes of the September 14 meeting were approved as written.
SENIOR PET CARE PRESENTATION
Page 2, SAB Minut 0
October 12, 1994 0
For the convenience of the guest, Kay asked permission to move the
Senior Pet Care presentation from New Business to the first order of
business and introduced Tracy Thomas, DVM, a vet in Larimer County
for the past ten years. Tracy stated that she and her husband had
started a non-profit vet care program for seniors because they
realized that many seniors would like to have pets but they can't
afford to take care of them. Her organization is called Elder Pet
Care, which is supported by grants and donations. Fees are based on
a sliding scale, and all seniors get a 10 percent discount regardless
of need. Seniors with financial difficulties pay no fee at all. She
concluded by saying that Elder Pet Care is a full -service, in -home
program and also includes pick-up and delivery service if the pet has
to be taken to the hospital. A question -and -answer period followed
Dr. Thomas' presentation.
CORRESPONDENCE
Under Correspondence, Kay passed around the Colorado Senior Lobby
newsletter and a letter from Marge Walsh, director of Care -A -Van.
OLD BUSINESS
The first item under Old Business was reviewing the name of the new
senior center. Kay called upon Jean Helberg to give some background
information on the naming process. Jean stated that the committee
tried to work in everybody's best interest and that the process used
had been tested several times before and proved to be successful.
The process, she continued, is not the problem, but that everybody
had an idea for a name and everybody can't be pleased. One big
confusion in naming the center, Steve Budner added, was that many
people thought it was a popularity contest and that the name receiving
the most votes of the public would be chosen. He emphasized that that
was not the case. It was a committee process, and he wanted to make
that clear. Jean concluded her report by saying that she was attend-
ing the SAB meeting to get ideas and recommendations that she needed
to write a report.
During the question and answer period that followed, all agreed that
they respected the process through which the name was selected, but
several still strongly objected to the inclusion of oasis in the
name, but they would feel comfortable with calling it the Fort
Collins Senior Center. Ed Johnson moved" that the SAB should recom-
mend that the name of the new senior center should be re -named the
Fort Collins Senior Center. Wayne Moellenberg and Jane Goodhart
seconded it. The motion carried by a 9 to 1 vote with one abstension.
Senior Center Reoort
Ed Johnson gave an update on the construction of the new senior
center. The good news, he said, is that the senior center will
be finished. The bad news is that it won't be finished on time.
As of yesterday, the contractor was looking at a late November
completion date, and he felt that shouldn't be an unreasonable
goal. The contractor, Ed continued, is trying to seek an extension
because changes and delays had caused 87 days of delay, but the
city refused the extension. Steve added that the contract will be
mediated at this point and the architect, the contractor and the
Page 3, SAB Minut 10 October 12, 1994 •
city will meet to determine whether or not the extension will be
granted.
Ed added that the spa and the pool are being tiled, the cabinets
are installed in the kitchen and some of the crafts rooms are
being worked on. Most of the ceiling grid is in place, the
locker roans are being tiled, most of the windows are installed
and the doors will be hung next week. Outside, the curb and
gutter work have been started and the roads should be paved
within the next two weeks. The landscapers are working on a
plan to seed or sod the open areas. Most of the stone work has
also been completed. Power and temporary heat should be in the
building by the end of the week. That means that the tradesmen
will be able to work inside.
Chili Cook -Off Report
Kay reported that the Chili Cook -Off was a lot of fun this year
and very seccessful. Her team had won third prize for green
chili, tenth for red chili and first for People's Choice.
Forty teams had entered the cook -off and Barbara reported that
it should net between $1,700 and $1,800. The plaques are hanging
on her office wall, she added. Kay completed the report by
thanking the members who had helped in the project.
Dial -A -Ride
Kay stated that a Dial -A -Ride committee had been formed and that
she will represent the SAB on the committee. Other members will
probably be the chairperson of the Transportation Board and some-
one from Disabled Resources. Gina Janett and Will Smith and a
person from the city staff will also serve on it. The purpose
of the committee will be to find solutions to the transportation
problem and to form policies on the use of Dial -A -Ride. She
added that she had met with Shelley McGraw, director, Office on
Aging, and said that Shelley wants to work closely with the city
to form some city -county linkup. Shelley will recommend to
the Commissioners that her office should donate $20,000 that
the OOA has in its reserve transportation fund to help relieve
the Dial -A -Ride debt.
Ed Johnson added that a bus system should operate after 6:00 P.
M. at night because many users are discouraged from taking the
bus because they are not sure that they will be off the job in
time to catch a bus before 6:00 P. M. Yvonne Myers added that
most of the senior living centers can't rely on public transpor-
tation and had to buy their own buses or vans. Public transpor-
tation is really fragmented, she added. Ed also mentioned that
transportation is not provided to the part of town where he
lives, and he needs to drive if he wants to go anywhere.
More discussion followed on a seemingly duplication of services
because Care -A -Van still has its own dispatch service, and this
causes a lot of confusion. Kay suggested that one possible
solution would be to have a single county dispatch service that
would include city and county transportation needs.
Page 4, SAB Minu , October 12, 1994 •
Treatslvvania
Mary Alice Spelts stated that she had been having difficulty
finding 35 seniors to work at Treatsylvania on Halloween night,
and other groups may have to assist in supplying "bodies" to
operate the booths. She added that if she can't get the number
of seniors needed by a certain date, she will ask Steve to
find another organization that would help out.
Volunteer Exchange
Wayne reported that he and Yvonne have been having problems with
the Volunteer Exchange Program for several reasons: (1) the IRS
and the volunteer organizations are concerned that if volunteers
are compensated for their services, the organizations may lose
their tax-exempt, non-profit status; (2) many organizations that
keep track of volunteer hours have their own recognition program
and the Volunteer Program may want to piggy -back on those; and (3)
the inequality of hours worked. As an example, he mentioned that
hours spent with a hospice patient may be much more important than
hours spent at a desk.
Yvonne added that she might have a fourth issue: since city organ-
izations, such as the Lincoln Center, are already offering dis-
counts to seniors, they can't offer more incentives to volunteers
because they need to fill every seat with paying customers for
every event. Some organizations, she added, require a "big sell"
to offer discounts to seniors because the general conception of
the public is that seniors have "big bucks."
Wayne ended the report by stating that he and Yvonne have reached
an impasse, and they need direction from the SAB. Marjorie offered
the data that she had collected when she was heading the program,
and Barbara suggested that the committee should probably visit
the Boulder Volunteer Exchange Program because it seems to be
successful. Mary Alice also suggested that they contact builders,
contractors and handy repairmen because competition is becoming
stiff and those groups might be interested in volunteer work.
Wayne and Yvonne agreed to look into the proposals and report
back at a later time.
Liaison Network
Barbara asked each member to write down the organization with
which he/she is working as a liaison to the SAB. At the next
meeting, the SAB will then be able to determine where the gaps
are. At the present time, the liaison network has broken down
because new members had been added to the Board.
NEW BUSINESS
Meeting Time Discussion
Kay reminded the SAB members that meetings are usually two hours
long, but some may last longer because of necessary discussion.
A member had suggested that the open discussion of members should
be moved from the oattdm of the agenda to the top. Kay voiced
Page 5, SAB Minut October 12, 1994
0
her objection to moving the item to the top of the agenda because she felt that
open discussion at the beginning of a meeting would make the
agenda unwieldly and discussions could drag on and on. Although
no vote was taken, the consensus of the Board was to keep the
open discussion item at the end of the agenda.
Neighbor to Neighbor
Since Rusty Collins was unable to attend the meeting, he sent his
apologies to Kay and asked if he would be able to address the SAB
at the November meeting.
Concerned Senior Citizens
Judy Curby reported that she was attending the SAB as the liaison
for Concerned Senior Citizens of Colorado and mentioned that her
organization still meets on the third Friday of the month and it
would welcome participation from the SAB. She also mentioned
that Concerned Senior Citizens operates the SHARE Program in Fort
Collins and that she would be happy to answer any questions any
members of the SAB would have about the program. She added that
she had not heard about the Paint-A-Thon, but had found out about
it by accident. She saw a brochure in the Northside Community
Center.
Kay apologized for the lack of advance notice and mentioned that
the SAB had not gotten the information it needed until July and
had no time to publicize the event adequately. Kay also encour-
aged Judy to write a letter explaining the situation and she
would make sure that it reached the proper authorities.
Judy also stated that her organization is often confused with
the Senior Center and AARP. She often gets calls to find out
when the next classes will start at the Senior Center. The new
name Foothills Oasis will be much more confusing to seniors
because they will not be able to tie the name in with the senior
center, and she feels that the CSC will be getting even more
calls. Judy also mentioned that Transfort told her group that
it will add the new senior center to Route 10, but it will run
only one bus a day. Judy concluded her report by saying that
Concerned Seniors began a membership drive on October 1, and
all members will receive a calendar. Dues are $5.00 at the
present time, but that amount will increase to $7.00 on January 1,
1995.
Senior Wellness Fair
Kay stated that this item was placed on the agenda strictly as an
informational item. The fair will be held at The Square on Octo-
ber 29, and it will be sponsored by KIIX Radio.
Work Plans
Kay announced that Work Plans are due on November 30, 1994. She
added that the SAB is currently working on some programs and asked
the members if they felt others should be added to the list. She
Page 6, SAB Minute, October 12, 1994 •
concluded by saying that she will compile a list of our planned
activities for the following year and submit it to the SAB members
at the next Board meeting.
Service Reports
RSVP. Yvonne reported that she had talked with Jennifer
Kling about Christmas telephone calls for seniors. According
to Jennifer, seniors will be able to make a free twenty minute
telephone call to anywhere in the continental United States at
the Take Care Office. The service will begin on December 12.
Office on Aging. Stan reported that seven of the Office on
Aging Advisory Council members had attended the Governor's
Conference on Aging. Lyn Thor is working on setting up classes
at Front Range Community College, and Thor, Laurel Kubin and
Linda Ellis are conducting Healthwise for Life classes for
seniors. The first one was held at the Senior Center on
October 2. Others are scheduled in Red Feather Lakes, Loveland
and several other places. A schedule of the classes is posted
in Barbara's office. OOA;nhad sponsored a Violence Pre-
vention Conference in Loveland on September 22. Stan added
that it was a good conference, but attendance was light. The
newspaper articles about OOA and Care -A -Van were incorrect,
Stan continued. The OOA has already contributed about $8,000
to Care -A -Van, but they are withholding the other money allo-
cated to transportation until Dial -A -Ride's problems can be
solved. Two new members, Ellen Long and Gene Peterson, joined
the OOA Advisory Council. The Health Committee had performed
site visits and was favorably impressed with the facilities.
The Nutrition Committee is just beginning to do its site
visits. Barbara added that site visitations are part of the
Department of Human Services evaluation of their role in the
county structure and to see how well they are meeting the
needs of the community.
Seniors Airborne. Kay reported that she and Wayne had co -
hosted the last broadcast and that they had interviewed Al
Bacilli. She thought the program went well and it was fun
for her and Wayne. She added that if anyone knew of someone
who would be an interesting guest for the show, he/she should
let Bill Weddel or her know.
Aspen Club. Jill reported that the Aspen Club is in the
middle of flu shots and that they will "shoot" about 1,000
seniors before it is over. The Aspen Club is also working
with RSVP on the Medicare Counseling Training Program. In
November, the club will start its five pound de-icing dis-
tribution and she predicted that the Aspen Club will give
out more than 1,400 bags. Diabetic education and screening
will be coming up, as well as colorectal cancer screening
in December.
Senior Center Council. Mary Alice Spelts and Barbara said
they had nothing to report because everything they had planned
at their last meeting had been cancelled because of the non-
Page 7, SAB Minute, October 12, 1994
opening of the new senior center.
Friends of the Senior Center. Kay again mentioned that the
Friends of the Senior Center had just completed a successful
Chili Cook -Off and Barbara added that the Friends will be
going on a field trip to the Arvada Senior Center to look
at the Recognition Wall there on October 19. The only charge
will be each individual's lunch. The next meeting of the
Friends is scheduled for Thursday, October 27. The Friends
will also be hosting a social on December 15.
Art/Sculpture Committee. The contest for the sculpture
competition was completed the week before, Marjorie reported.
Fourteen artists had submitted proposals for the competition
that ended on Friday, October 7. The committee will meet
again next Wednesday to narrow down the selections.
Library Committee. Marjorie reported that the Library Com-
mittee had spent its book allotment of $1,000 for reference
books in 1994, even though the senior center is not open.
She also said that the committee had discussed a survey for users
to determine what they would like to have included in the
library in the future. Barbara added that the committee
also discussed allocating funds to purchase the book drop
at the Discovery Center. The money would come from project
funds rather than the $1,000 library fund.
City Council. Ed stated that the next meeting of the City
Council will be next Tuesday. Issues at the last Council
meetings were Dial -A -Ride and naming the new senior center.
Other Business
Kay Rios. Exercising her option as the chair, Kay decided
to report first. She mentioned again that BBC will be visiting
Fort Collins on Monday, October 31, and that the British
Broadcasting Company had become interested in visiting Fort
Collins after one of the executives had read about Fort Collins
in a news article that appeared in the Denver Post. The story
had contained a quote by Kay about the new senior center and
Dial -A -Ride. Obviously, the article hit the wire services
and the BBC official had read the story and contacted Kay
about doing a story in Fort Collins. BBC was particularly
interested in interviewing seniors about their impressions
about Fort Collins and Clinton's health care program. BBC
also wanted to visit coffee shops where seniors congregate to
get views of seniors in general.
Mary Alice Spelts. Mary Alice had nothing to report.
Jane Goodhart. Jane stated that she and Jill are currently
working on intergenerational projects with Poudre High School.
At present, she doesn't have much information because they
are still working on the initial stages.
Jill Taylor. Jill said that she didn't have any more to add
to Jane's report, but she added that she was sponsoring Up
Page S, SAB Minute Ocotober 12, 1994 •
With People members and she was having a lot of fun. Barbara
added that Up With People members were going to be working at
the Senior Center and with the Senior Chuckwagon Program in
particular. Jill also mentioned that RSVP had requests from
Up With People members to rake leaves for seniors who needed
help.
Barbara Schoenberger. Barbara reported that the Senior Center
Council had discussed a plan to organize a Pen Pal Program
with a senior center in the British Isles.
Stan Ulrich. Stan stated that he had been active in AARP
affairs and that he had attended the Governor's Conference
on Aging.
Wayne Moellenberg. Wayne stated that the Front Range Forum
is becoming more and more active and he hopes that it will be
melded into the activities of the new senior center. Yvonne
added that because of popular demand Wayne had resurrected a
program called Memory in Lifelong Learning and that he had
done a terrific job.
Marjorie McTaggart. Marjorie announced that she will be edit-
ing the newsletter for the SAB starting next year. She added
that she had attended the C3 Coalition for the first time the
week before and that she was impressed by the networking in
the group. The topic of discussion on the day she attended
was the Governor's Conference on Aging and she was so much
impressed that she used that as a topic for her next senior
column in the Coloradoan.
The last item under Other Business was a reminder that the next
meeting of the SAB will be held in the Activities Room of The Worth-
ington, 900 Worthington Circle at 2:00 P. M. on Wednesday, November
9, 1994.
ADJOURNMENT
Since there was no further business to conduct, the meeting was
adjourned at 4:16 P. M.
Stan Ulrich, Secretary
Approved
Kay Rios, Chair
Yvonne Myers, Vice Chair
OENIOR ADVISORY BOARD A(ODA
Wednesday, October 12, 1994
2:00 - 4:00 PM
Fort Collins Senior Center, 145 E. Mountain Ave. - Canyon/Plains Room
I. Call to Order
II. Attendance
III. Public Participation (limited to 20 minutes)
IV. Approval of Minutes
V. Correspondence
VI. Old Business
A. Senior center name
B. Senior center update
C. Chili Cook -Off
D. Dial -A -Ride
E. Treatsylvania
F. Volunteer Exchange
G. Liaison Network
VII. New Business
A. Meeting time and length
B. Senior Pet Care presentation ... Tracy Thomas
C. Neighbor to Neighbor ... Rusty Collins
D. Senior Wellness Fair
E. Work plan
VIII. Service Liaison Reports
A. RSVP
B. OOA
C. Seniors Airborne
D. Concerned Seniors of Colorado
E. Aspen Club
F. Senior Center Council
G. Friends of the Senior Center
H. Sculpture Committee
I. Library Committee
J. City Council Report
IX. Other Business
X. Board Member Reports
XI. Adjourn
S. A. G. E.
NET
(SENIORS AND THEIR GROWING ENDEAVORS)
A NETWORKING UPDATE FOR SENIOR ORGANIZATIONS AND AGENCIES SEPTEMBER 1994
Once again, we'd like to thank everyone who took part in our last
Network luncheon. The food was great (thanks to the efforts of the Senior
Center staff and volunteers) the music was superb (kudos to Vicki Loran), and
the company was stimulating. It gave all of us a chance to get to know each
other and find out what was going on in everybody's area.
Our next luncheon will be in May of 1995. Shelly McGraw, director of
the Office on Aging, has expressed interest in helping put the next one together.
We welcome additional offers of help or any other suggestions or comments
you may have. Plese forward these to Kay Rios at 482-0753 or drop a line to
the Fort Collins Senior Advisory Board, c/o Barbara Schoenberger, 145 East
Mountain, Fort Collins, Co 80524.
And while you're at it, send along contact names and phone numbers for
other agencies or organizations who might want to join us for our next event.
The idea is to set up a working network for any and all entities comprised of
seniors, or who serve seniors or are simply interested in the seniors in our
community.
DIAL - A - RIDE
City Council will again be
discussing who should be served and
at what price. The Senior Advisory
Board plans to be active in helping
to define goals and objectives for
this service. We'd also like to see a
sliding fee scale policy or some
form of contingency plan in place
before any rates are established.
We'd also like to see a coalition of
agencies who can provide funding
and policy suggestions. So, if you
have ideas, we'd really like to hear
them. We need input from the
agencies and from the users as well.
SENIOR EVENTS AIRED
The Seniors Airborne show is
still going strong. Co -hosts Bill and
Evie Weddel present the Senior's
Commentary on the first Friday of
each month on KIIX, 600 am. Then
on the third Friday, they feature an
interesting senior or an event or
they investigate a pressing issue of
concern to seniors. The co -hosts are
always looking for topics, for names
of interesting seniors or for
upcoming events. Phone messages
or written information may be left at
the senior center in their name.
COLUMBINE CARE Joan Deines 421 Parker Street
CENTER EAST Activity Director Fort Collins, CO 80525
482-1584
Long-term health care facility, Larimer County Resident Council involvement.
COLUMBINE CARE Marilyn Striffler 940 Worthington Circle
CENTER WEST John Hanna Fort Collins, CO 80526
Jenifer D'Arcey 221-2273
Long-term health care for elderly, activities to enhance quality of life both in and out
of the facility.
COOPERATIVE Laurel L. Kubin
EXTENSION/CSU County Director
200 West Mountain
Fort Collins, CO 80521
Mailing: P.O. Box 543
Fort Collins, CO 80522
498-7400
Agency staff and trained volunteers provide programs on food safety, nutrition,
parenting, caregiving, consumer information, money management, gardening and
more. Also provides programs and resources related to the aging process.
CONCERNED SENIOR Judy Curby 216 East Oak #B
CITIZENS OF Fort Collins, CO 80524
COLORADO 482-4287
Advocacy and information agency for senior citizens. Sponsors of the SHARE
program.
DISABLED RESOURCE Karen Hutchinson 424 Pine, #101
SERVICES Fort Collins, CO 80524
482-2700
Senior/Blind Outreach Services. Coordinates community resources and assesses other
needs for those 55 and older who experience significant vision problems.
9 •
HIGH HOPES Elnora Martinelli 2921 Terry Lake Road
(Senior Games) Fort Collins, CO 80524
482-6487
Involved in all types of games and exercise including: basketball, badminton,
bicycling, bowling, track and field, horse shoes, tennis, race -walking, swimming,
table tennis, cross-country and downhill skiing, skating. Members compete in the
Summer Games, usually in August, and the Winter Games in February. Underlying
philosophy is that regular exercise is beneficial for health and improves the quality of
life.
L.C.D.H.E. P. Morris 1525 Blue Spruce Dr.
ADULT HEALTH S. Osbourne Fort Collins, CO 80524
C. Bradrick 498-6731
Involved in conducting Adult Health Prevention Clinics, Gynecology Clincis which
include pap and mammogram, and flu clinics. We also provide numerous referrals
for seniors.
NEW MERCER COMMONS Yvonne Myers
OFFICE ON AGING Shelley McGraw
Director
900 Centre Avenue
Fort Collins, CO 80526
495-1000
1525 Blue Spruce Dr.
Fort Collins, CO 80524
498-6801
Responsible for local planning, program development and coordination, advocacy,
monitoring and resource development for persons over the age of 60.
LTC OMBUDSMAN Elizabeth Kelly 1525 Blue Spruce Dr.
Fort Collins, CO 80524
498-6803
Advocate on behalf of long-term care residents in Larimer County. Provides
education to staff, residents, others. Acts as resource for community as a whole on
LTC issues.
RETIRED SENIOR John Henry Peck 145 East Mountain
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM Jennifer Klink Fort Collins, Co 80524
(RSVP) 482-8943
Provides meaningful volunteer opportunities for seniors. Homecare/Job Corps, tax
and Medicare assistance, plus others. Volunteer at libraries, schools, hospital, plus
other places as needed. Coordinate with other organizations on starting new projects
such as "read -a -loud." Also administrators for the Senior Advisory Board's "Vet -Pet"
program which offer financial aid to seniors for well -pet care.
SENIOR CARE
CONNECTIONS
SENIOR CENTER
COUNCIL
Rosalie Angus
Marian Blauer
President
Poudre Valley Hospital
1024 S. Lemay
Fort Collins, CO 80524
495-8550
2207 Charolais
Fort Collins, Co 80526
224-3758
Serves as an advisory group to the staff at the Fort Collins Senior Center
SENIOR CHUCKWAGON Lynn Thor 1525 Blue Spruce
Linda Ellis Fort Collins, CO 80524
498-6800
SENIOR SINGLES Margaret Watts 1211 Lynwood Drive
Fort Collins, CO 80521
484-0181
This "young at heart" group meets the second Wednesday of each month for support,
socialization, dinner and programs at 5:15 p.m. at the Senior Center.
WE DON'T SMOKE Jean Keller 1041 Cragmore Drive
SENIOR BOWLERS Fort Collins, CO 80521
224-5736
Bowling. We are unique in being the only non-smoking league in Fort Collins.