topnav

Home Issues & Campaigns Agency Members Community News Contact Us

Community News

Open dialogue among community members is an important part of successful advocacy. Take Action California believes that the more information and discussion we have about what's important to us, the more empowered we all are to make change.

Showing posts with label elderly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elderly. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

One in Five California Seniors Live in Poverty

A new report from the Kaiser Family Foundation finds that one out of five California senior citizens lives in poverty. Nationally, the figure is 15 percent – far higher than the nine percent “official” figure (based on the federal poverty level) that is commonly used in such calculations.
This disturbing finding – which has serious implications for proposals under consideration in Washington to reduce cost-of-living adjustments to Social Security benefits – isn’t news to Greenlining. Two years ago, our report, “The Economic Crisis Facing Seniors of Color,” found much the same thing: Official stats greatly underestimate poverty among the elderly. And because they tend to have less in savings and are less likely to have a retirement plan at work, seniors of color are disproportionately likely to be poor.
We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again: With a fair tax system – for example, one that doesn’t reward corporations for stashing profits in overseas tax havens – we wouldn’t need to even thinking about balancing the budget on the backs of the elderly.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

New California bill would require adult care homes to notify families, police when residents go missing


A Contra Costa state assemblywoman has introduced a bill that would subject adult care facilities to strict notification requirements when a patient goes missing.
Assemblywoman Joan Buchanan's bill, AB 620, would require adult care facilities to create safety plans and contact police and family members of residents who vanish. Currently, the facilities are required only to notify the state.
"It's common sense for you and me," said Gayle Larson, a field representative for Buchanan, a San Ramon Democrat. "But it's not required. If it's not required, things can slip through the cracks. And people have slipped through the cracks with pretty significant consequences."
Two such cases in Concord -- one with fatal results -- were detailed in this newspaper in November.
The fatal case was the story of 86-year-old Yolanda Membreno, who walked away from Julia's Home in Concord on Sept. 30. Employees did not contact police until more than an hour after noticing her missing. A few hours later, she was found dead on a playground about 100 yards away. An autopsy determined she died of heat stroke.
In the second, Caitlin Lester, a 24-year-old developmentally disabled woman, left a Concord facility last year and wandered the streets for several hours until police were contacted.
Buchanan's bill came at the urging of Caitlin's mother, Denise Lester.
"I am just beside myself with joy," Lester said Wednesday. "It's encouraging -- there's strength in numbers."
Caitlin Lester expressed her happiness non-verbally during a conversation with her mother.
"I explained to her how a bill works, how it ends up at the governor's desk," Denise Lester said. "I told her, 'We're going to make it so that this isn't going to happen anymore, what happened to you.' And she gets it."
In its current form, Buchanan's bill does not spell out the maximum length of time a patient is missing before facility workers must contact police and family. Larson said that will be negotiated later.
The bill will first be assigned to a policy committee before it winds its way through the legislative process. If approved, a person who violates the provisions of the bill could be found guilty of a misdemeanor.
"Everyone's reaction is 'Of course you'd call police immediately,' " Lester said. "When you tell them 'No,' that's when people's jaws drop. Basic human dignity is missing in this equation."