Posts Tagged ‘aging’

No Cuts to SOFA!

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

CSCS is pleased to inform you that the NY State Office for the Aging was not cut. There was a proposed $5.5 million cut which would have impacted the SNAP home-deliver meals program, EISEP case management and home care, funding for transportation, and other services.  CSCS worked closely with the state legislature to prevent the cuts. There was a 12.5% across-the-board cut to all Senate member item funds. Please check with your State Senator to follow up on this. Please urge your Senator to keep your funding as a priority as it is up to the Senator where to cut funds.

Please send thank you letters to Governor David Paterson, the Assembly and Senate Aging Chairs and your local state representatives.  Thank them for not cutting the services listed above that seniors depend upon to age in place in their homes and communities. It is important to thank them as there will likely be more proposed state budget cuts next year.

Governor David Paterson
State Capitol
Albany, New York 12224

Senator Ruben Diaz, Sr.
Chair, Committee on Aging
900 Rogers Place
Bronx, NY  10459

Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz
Chair, Committee on Aging
3107 Kingsbridge Avenue
Bronx, NY 10463

Health care reform - no one’s pulling the plug on grandma!

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

With all the misinformation flying around these days, CSCS’ testimony at a recent hearing tried to dig up the truth about health care reform not pulling the plug on grandma. Couldn’t be further from reality.

After reading Section 1233, “Advance Care Planning Consultation”, in HR3200, it is evident that the idea of “death panels” is totally ungrounded:
Section (5) “actionable medical order relating to the treatment of that individual that”…section (5)(A)(ii), “effectively communicates the individual’s preferences regarding life sustaining treatment (emphasis added), including an indication of the treatment and care desired by the individual;”.

Read the text of the HR3200 yourself

I have a living will and health care proxy. So does my 91 year old mother and other members of my family and friends. It is progress to have Medicare cover the cost of individuals developing their end of life plan with a health care professional and was originally inserted as part of the Medicare Part D legislation passed in 2006 under President George Bush. No one objected to this then and some now objecting voted for this as part of the Medicare Part D legislation without a problem. So, why are the voices so loud opposed to this now? Rather than a “death panel”, this should be called “end of life dignity”.

To read more of Bobbie’s testimony head to our website

Websites providing independent, objective information about health care reform:

For more information on HR3200 and Medicare check out the Medicare Rights Center

Wendell Potter, the former head of public relations with Cigna, one of the largest health insurance companies, is now a chief whistleblower speaking out on the abuses of health insurance providers. His interview with Bill Moyers is very revealing as to how the health insurance industry has worked to use less and less money to pay claims and keep the status quo in current efforts to reform health care: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mv1FwOCNoZ8

What do you think about the health care legislation?  Did President Obama’s speech last night address your concerns?

Charter Senior Centers Announced

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Would you like to see new programs at senior  centers? What would you want? What would you think if Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced a $25 million new initiative for senior centers? Well, he did on  August 25, 2009.

CSCS developed the idea of Charter Senior  Centers, which would allow some senior centers to create new programs and  services they don’t already offer or expand what they already do - arts,  computer training, tai chi, yoga, health and wellness classes - and maybe an  idea you have. The NYC Department for the Aging would allow senior centers more  flexibility in how they operate every day - lighten up the heavy hand of  government bureaucracy that can waste time and create unnecessary headaches.  Like charter schools, the idea is to bring in new energy and money to senior  centers and lessen bureaucratic control of the every day operations of senior  centers.

So, whaddya think?   Head to the CSCS website for the latest news on Charter Senior Centers.

Health Care Reform on my mind - speak up!

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

With Congress home for the August break, we each have to contact our Congressmembers and Senators Schumer and Gillibrand to make sure Medicare and Medicaid stays in financial shape to serve today’s seniors and tomorrow’s boomers when they become seniors (even though Boomers hate to think about that fact). Medicare does not cover long term care services to keep someone in the community and people have to go into poverty to get Medicaid long term care services -  and there is still a lot of silence on this issue from Washington. Break the silence!

Do you think Congress and the President will really reform health care to make it more affordable, eliminate pre-existing conditions, have a public plan and everything else they are promising? Does Medicare or your health insurance (if you have any) work for you? Do you think Washington understands the pain on the street for Americans and health care?

Health Care reform: Leave no senior behind

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Are you taking care of your spouse, elderly parents or loved ones to keep them home?  Is Congress and the White House including medical and neighborhood services in health care reform to let people stay home and live with dignity? See the National Council on Aging (NCOA) for more information on health care reform. CSCS thinks there is NO TIME TO WAIT for affordable long term care services.

Call your Congressmember and Senator to say - include “long term care services” in health care reform. You can’t leave any seniors behind.

To Find your Congressmember and Senators click here

What are your ideas about what is needed to keep elderly loved ones at home and independent? What would you want for yourself?  We want to hear from you.

300 Seniors Attend Aging Committee Budget Hearings

Saturday, April 4th, 2009

CSCS organized a March 30th City Hall press conference with 80 senior citizens from senior centers in all five boroughs. Over 300 seniors attended the City Council Aging Committee budget hearing. This was the new DFTA Commissioner Liliam Barrios Paoli’s first hearing. You can see a summary of her remarks on the CSCS website. CSCS’ joint testimony for the hearing is also on the website with a chart of all the cuts being proposed.

New Cuts Proposed in FY10 budget

Friday, February 6th, 2009

Senior services continue to take hit after hit. Mayor Michael Bloomberg released his FY10 preliminary budget on January 29th. The proposed plan includes $22 million in cuts to the Department for the Aging - cuts to senior centers, case management, elder abuse, and a pulling back on a planned expansion of meals-on-wheels. It also did not include City Council funds for rent, meals, and vans. DFTA already got cut by $13 million last year and is sustaining state cuts. DFTA eliminated funding for adult day services, intergenerational programs, a gamut of other services plus a 30% cut to caregiver funds. Only elder abuse funds were restored, but for 6 months only.

There continues to be waves of cuts on aging services. With the aging population growing in number and growing poorer in these bad economic times, the city should not be fraying the safety net for seniors even further. Please go to www.cscs-ny.org for our action alert.

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