- Strengthening the existing social safety net, including shoring up the insolvencies inherent in the Social Security program. Improving the Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and Supplemental Security Disability Income (SSDI) programs, and Medicare and Medicaid (CMS).
- Increase the available programs providing assistance with healthcare, including long-term care costs. Fully 70 percent of Americans over the age of 65 will require long-term care at some point in their lives.
- Advocate for federal support for a more robust long-term care safety net aside from Medicaid, an already strained system with long waiting lists to reside in often sub-standard facilities with poor infection control rates. There needs to be a solution for middle-income seniors.
- Reauthorize the Older Americans Act (OAA), which provides funding for seniors' critical services to remain living healthy and independent lives. Congress can renew its commitment to providing seniors with essential services by reauthorizing this Act.
Seniors in the US are Struggling to Make Ends Meet
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Antoinette Bone
It is nothing short of a national tragedy; 45 percent of aging Americans are not making it financially to meet their most basic needs. Many of these older adults must routinely shuffle their available resources in an attempt to keep quality health care, a roof over their heads, lighting, heating and air conditioning, cash resources for food and medicine, and other life basics. Living paycheck to paycheck has morphed into how do I live day to day? Choices like should I eat today or purchase high blood pressure medication are sadly becoming the norm for many. While this might read as dramatic, the truth is that envisioning lyrical "golden years" for nearly half of Americans 65 or more has become an illusion. Aging in America and living in poverty is synonymous with 6.4 million seniors. While the 45 percent statistic is of desperate social concern, projections infer that, by 2050, senior poverty will quadruple without major government policy changes. The significant steps that currently address education and jobs, such as poverty prevention programs, policies, and corresponding social movements, have made inroads reducing poverty levels for some. However, for the increasing population of low to no income seniors, these preventative measures do not address their demographic and are too late to save them. To fight senior poverty, TalkPoverty suggests the following: To comply with the U.S. Treasury regulations, we must inform you that (i) any U.S. federal tax advice contained in this newsletter was not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by any person for the purpose of avoiding U.S. federal tax penalties that may be imposed on such person and (ii) each taxpayer should seek advice from their tax advisor based on the taxpayer’s particular circumstances. Nothing in this message is intended to provide legal advice. This message is for educational purposes only.
Author BioAntoinette Bone
biography of the author



