HomeMy WebLinkAboutSenior Advisory Board - Minutes - 11/18/19921-
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The regular meeting of the Fort Collins Senior Advisory
Board was held Wednesday, November 18, 1992 at the Senior
Center. Attendance: [Council liaison = Bob Winokur, absent]
MEMBERS
Pat Long
Peggy Santich
Wayne Moellenberg
Larry Chaussee
Margaret Watts
Marjorie McTaggart
Larry Heglund
Jill Taylor
Yvonne Myers
Kay Rios
STAFF -- Barbara Schoenberger (assigned)
GUESTS
Sally Gilmore
Lee Baccili
Al Baccili
Margaret Gorman
EXCUSED ABSENCE
Kathleen Jones
I. CALL TO ORDER -- Chairman Pat Long called the meeting to
order at 2:00 p.m.
II. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION -- Guests and board members intro-
duced themselves. Al Baccili announced that the local chapter
of AARP would be voting the next day to approve a version of
a health plan which they will then send to the national AARP.
He urged everyone to attend the meeting.
III. APPROVAL OF MINUTES -- It was moved, seconded and passed
unanimously to approve the October minutes as written.
IV. OLD BUSINESS
A. Volunteer credit exchange -- Kay handed out corrected
draft of letters and proposal. After some discussion about the
point system numbers, Larry Chaussee moved approval of the
proposal. It was seconded and passed unanimously. Kay will
make the corrections, and Marjorie will contact the City's
Volunteer Coordinator about the possibility of housing the
proposed project.
B. Seniors Airborne -- Results of 79 returns of the ques-
tionaire show weekday mornings are the best radio listening
times. The committee will meet, put together a 3-month format
and present the results and format to KCOL ASAP.
C. Outreach meeting -- General discussion found that the
format was good at the Good Samaritan meeting in October, but
there needs to be a better way to let seniors know in advance
(attendance was low, given the number of seniors who live
there.) Pat called county and state offices about the street
complaint, but learned nothing will be done about it. He will
let Good Samaritan's activity director know.
D. 1993 Work Plan -- Marjorie asked for any comments or
corrections to the draft sent to each member. The plan was
approved and will be forwarded to the city.
E. Senior Network lunch -- Discussion resulted in a
decision to re -present the proposal for funding to ARA, which
now has new personnel.
F. Process for review of City Council Agenda -- General
agreement that the telephone alert system is working.
G. December meeting -- December meeting will be a potluck
lunch meeting at 12 noon December 9th at Senior Center in the
Horsetooth room. Everyone is to bring a dish to share.
H. Health Care Access -- Kay reported that the original
task force group will continue to work on these issues. It was
suggested that the media needs to point out that the problems
continue to exist.
I. Building Committee -- Pat furnished positive feedback
from 3 groups about having Open House(s) about progress and
input on the senior center. Barbara asked for suggestions
about where to hold mid-December's Open House(s). Suggestions
were: Raintree Plaza, EPIC, Opera Galleria, Square or Fashion
Mall, and REA.
V. NEW BUSINESS
A. Service organzation reports:
1. Office on Aging -- Pat reported that the OOA bought
the I&R system through Helpline. He furnished copies of money
allocations that OOA made to agencies.
2. Senior Center Council -- Peggy reported that the
volunteer handbook is about ready for printing. The council
now has a vacancy due to a resignation.
3. PVH Aspen Club -- Jill summarized the activities of
a very busy October, and stated that the PVH Auxiliary is
helping with dollars for the Seniors pharmacy assistance
program.
4. RSVP -- Sally Gilmore, new volunteer coordinator,
asked for volunteers to help with the December 1st seniors
Shopping spree at the Fashion Mall. Buying Christmas tree
lights for trees set up in Fort Collins, Loveland and Estes
Park is a fundraiser.
5. Friends of the Senior Center -- Barbara reported
that the organization is getting a more solid base. They are
having a party December 17th.
B. 1993 Officer Nominations -- The following board members
were nominated and elected, to take office in January:
Chair: Kay Rios
Vice chair: Yvonne Myers
Secretary: Marjorie McTaggart
C. Card for Cathy Fromme -- Kay will send a card expressing
the board's sympathy to Cathy's family.
VI. OTHER BUSINESS
A. Pat reported that he received a letter from the city
asking all boards and commissions to figure out how to save
energy in 1993.
B. Barbara showed everyone the 3-fold prototype of the
seniors brochure, and asked Kay to edit it. She also pointed
out that, as a result of City Council action 11/17 re 1993
city budget, senior discounts will go into effect January 1st.
Mr. Baccili asked if fees on Transfort have changed. (Nobody
knew.)
C. Marjorie suggested a letter from the board be sent to
Public Service and Pipefitters Local #208 to thank them for
their "Heat's On" program which makes sure that seniors'
furnaces are ready for the winter season. The board agreed.
D. Yvonne informed the group that Columbine Company has
purchased 8 acres near the Care Center, and plans are under
way to build assisted living quarters.
VII. ADJOURNMENT -- The meeting was adjourned at 3:35 p.m.
Marjorie McTaggart, Secretary Pat Long, Chairman
Approved:
How Did
Senior
Issues Fare
as the
102nd
congress
Closed')
EARNINGS LIMIT REPEAL
MUST WAIT FOR THE 103RD
Working seniors will see no relief
from the Social Security earnings
limitation, even though both the
House and Senate took up the issue
this year.
Like hopes of correcting the Social
Security Notch, the drive to ease or
eliminate the earnings limit
foundered when it came up against
Senate rules.
It was a disappointing end to
what working seniors once saw as a
year of hope. Hopes were especially
high earlier this year when the
House voted to increase the annual
earnings limit to $20,000 per year
by 1997. Currently, Social Security
benefits are reduced for working se-
niors age 65-69 by $1 for every $3
earned over the current $10,200 per
year limit.
Earlier, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
had amended the Older Americans
Act reauthorization bill to eliminate
the penalty entirely.
However, due to the controversial
nature of the legislation, which op-
ponents contend would cost billions
to the Social Security Trust Funds,
Congress delayed consideration of
the bill. As the delay grew, many
feared that vital Older Americans
Act programs, such as Meals on
Wheels, would run out of money if
the issue was not resolved quickly.
"Although both the Older Ameri-
cans Act and the earnings limit re-
peal provision enjoy broad bi-
partisan support in the Senate, op-
ponents of the earnings limit provi-
sion have succeeded in delaying ac-
tion on the Older Americans Act for
nearly a year," said National Com-
mittee President Martha McSteen in
a letter to senators urging them to
act before adjournment. "The con-
tinuing stalemate jeopardizes fund-
ing for important new programs,
and enactment of an important
provision repealing an archaic and
unfair law."
Finally, not wishing to hold up the
reauthorization any longer, Mr.
McCain withdrew his amendment,
and, during the last weeks of the
session, added a similar one to the
Treasury Appropriations bill then
under consideration by the Senate.
This new amendment would have
raised the limit to $50,000 by 1997.
Because Mr. McCain's bill made
no financing provision to offset the
cost to the Social Security Trust
Funds, his amendment—lik: 'he
Notch amendment which ha en
considered before it —was s.. ;: _;ad
to a 'point of order.' In other words,
restrictions placed by the 1990 Bud-
get Act forced the Senate to seek a
super -majority to waive the formal
rules and consider the bill.
Unfortunately, proponents could
not muster the 60 votes needed. The
final vote was 51-42.
"This was clearly an unwise and
unfair vote. A minority in the Senate
successfully blocked the will of the
majority," Mrs. McSteen said. "Many
seniors need or want to stay in the
work force. It makes no sense to
shut people out who want to work
and contribute to the economy."
The National Committee has
vowed to continue its fight for repeal
of the earnings limit in the 103rd
Congress, she said.
FAMILY LEAVE BILL BACK
TO THE DRAWING BOARD,
AGAIN
American workers once again saw
hopes for government -guaranteed,
1a
November/December 1992 SH I Re 111[ 1 RDIENT
You Asked
unpaid leave to care for sick and
older family members fall victim to a
presidential veto.
Before adjourning, the House
failed to override a presidential veto
of the Family and Medical Leave
Act, which would have required em-
ployers to allow certain workers up
to 12 weeks unpaid leave to care for
newborn or newly adopted children,
or a seriously ill or older family
member.
The House fell 27 votes short of
the needed two-thirds majority
needed to override the veto. The
outcome was particularly disap-
pointing for the bill's supporters
who managed to garner enough
support in the Senate to get the veto
overridden there; in fact, it was the
first Senate override of any of Presi-
dent Bush's vetoes.
The House vote was the second
veto defeat for supporters of family
and medical leave. President Bush
vetoed similar legislation in 1990
and Congress failed to override the
decision.
The recently defeated bill was a
compromise measure which exempt-
ed businesses with fewer than 50
employees, meaning 95 percent of
employers in the United States —and
about half of all workers —would not
be affected by the bill. Additionally,
key employees —the top 10 percent
of wage earners —would have been
exempted.
just before vetoing the bill in Sep-
tember, President Bush tendered his
own proposal, offering tax credits to
businesses which voluntarily grant
family and medical leave. Weeks be-
fore Congress adjourned, Sen. Larry
Craig, A -Idaho, introduced Bush's
bill, S. 3265, the Family Leave Tax
Credit Act of 1992. No action was
taken.
The National Committee has long
supported enactment of a family and
medical leave act, and Mrs. McSteen
praised those senators and represen-
tatives who voted to override the
veto.
"Family members should not be
put in a position where they must
choose between their job and their
caregiving responsibilities, and this
measure would help ensure that
does not happen," she said. "All
family caregivers —whether caring
for an ill child or elderly parent —
need and deserve a safety net of
protection so their livelihood isn't
threatened when a family crisis
occurs."
Lawmakers pledged to reintroduce
the measure in the 103rd Congress.
At presstime, Democratic supporters
of family and medical leave were
hoping for a win from presidential
candidate Bill Clinton who had
promised to sign, such a bill.
SENIOR SERVICES CONTINUE
AS OLDER AMERICANS ACT
IS REAUTHORIZED, AT LAST
After months of delays, Congress fi-
nally reauthorized the older Ameri-
cans Act, which funds nutritional
and other service programs for
senior citizens.
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President Bush quickly gave the
measure final approval.
The reauthorization bill had been
held up in the Senate for nearly a
year while lawmakers disputed an
amendment to repeal the Social Se-
curity earnings test (see above). Just
weeks before final adjournment, the
Senate managed to pass a new ver-
sion of the reauthorization bill
which did not contain the controver-
sial amendment. That measure
quickly sailed through the House.
Reauthorization of the Older
Americans Act assures continuation
of the many senior service programs
it funds, including the popular Meals
on Wheels nutritional program,
senior legal and job assistance pro-
grams and others.
Advocates praised the passage of
the bill, which this year calls for ad-
ditional services, such as translation
services for seniors with limited
English speaking ability and mea-
sures aimed at protecting the rights
of nursing home residents.
"Our seniors who have given so
much of themselves... have turned
to the programs in the Older Ameri-
cans Act for help when they need
it," said Rep. William Ford, D-Mich.,
chairman of House Committee on
Education and Labor. "They deserve
our support —it is as simple as that.
Everything in this bill has been
earned and paid for by our seniors."
Although lawmakers approved the
Older Americans Act's reauthoriza-
tion, Congress also cut next year's
funding for the Administration on
Aging by $7 million. The Adminis-
tration on Aging is responsible for
most of the programs guaranteed
under the Older Americans Act. An-
other Older Americans Act program,
the Labor Department's senior job
assistance program, saw a $5.1 mil-
lion cut in funding for 1993.
WHITE HOUSE CONFERENCE
STILL IN HOLDING PATTERN
OVER FUNDS
Planning for the next White House
Conference on Aging is on hold
again.
No sooner did Congress reauthor-
ize the Older Americans Act —which
also gave approval for the White
House Conference on Aging —then it
passed an appropriations bill sans
money for the conference. As a re-
sult, the group likely will not con-
vene until at least 1994.
Preparations for the White House
Conference ground to a halt earlier
this year as Congress failed to reau-
thorize the Older Americans Act,
which traditionally funds the group.
Once that law was reauthorized,
however, Congress failed to give the
conference any funding. For that
reason, preparations for the confer-
ence must wait at least until the
next Congress convenes in January,
when more funds could be allocated.
The White House Conference, al-
ready two years overdue, first con-
vened during the Kennedy presiden-
cy as a forum to address the con-
cerns of seniors.
APPROPRIATIONS BILL
INCREASES SPENDING ON
MOST SENIOR PROGRAMS
In early October, Congress approved
$245 billion for the Departments of
Labor and Health and Human Ser-
vices, which are responsible for vital
federal senior programs. The appro-
priation reflects a $27 billion in-
crease over the current fiscal year.
Specifically, Congress approved
$83 million extra in operating funds
for Medicare contractors, the private
insurance companies which process
claims for the federal health insur-
ance program. Appropriate funding
levels for carriers are needed to as-
sure that Medicare beneficiaries
have their claims processed in a
timely manner.
The appropriations bill also in-
cludes $4.8 billion to administer the
Social Security program—$309 mil-
lion more than this year.
The proposed increase couldn't
have come at a more opportune time,
say National Committee officials.
In the wake of severe budget cuts
at Social Security during the past
decade, service to beneficiaries has
deteriorated and staff morale is at an
all-time low. The waiting list for dis-
ability determinations is months
long in some areas —so long, in fact,
individuals have died waiting for
their cases to be reviewed.
"These additional funds, which
are more than either the Senate or
the House previously approved, are
a good first step," says Mrs.
McSteen. "However, much more
money will be needed to restore the
quality of service which beneficiaries
have come to expect from the Social
Security Administration."
The approved appropriations bill
also gave a $17.6 million increase in
funding to the National Institute on
Aging, which finances the majority
of aging research in the United
States.
With the increase, the institute's
total federal funding will grow to
$401 million in 1993. V
—by 7htdi /o Davis and /eArcher
1F1.1 ial H1 1'1141'AEN1'
November/December 1992
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