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Conference on Aging
White House Seeks State Aging Solutions
By Christine Vestal,
Stateline.org Staff Writer
Nov. 18, 2005 - On the brink of the first baby boomers turning 60,
the White House is about to assemble 1,200 state delegates to focus on
ways state aging departments, the private sector and federal officials
can gird for the nation’s much-heralded retirement stampede.
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The
White House Conference on Aging, convened almost every 10 years
since 1961, opens Dec. 11 with the goal of making recommendations to
President Bush and Congress to help guide aging policy over the next
decade.
The four-day conference will vet proposals
recommended at some 400 state and regional pre-conferences held over the
past year. The 2005 meeting is distinguished by its focus on technology
and private sector solutions, as well as its promotion of healthy life
styles for seniors, said conference executive director
Scott Nystrom.
Past White House conferences -- in 1961, 1971, 1981
and 1995 -- have had major influences on today’s aging policy.
The first resulted in enactment of 1961 Social
Security amendments that provided additional support to beneficiaries,
and the Older Americans Act, which funded a variety of state aging
programs and which Congress is due to reauthorize next year. The1971
conference spawned the U.S. House Select Committee on Aging, the 1981
meeting focused on needed Social Security adjustments, and the 1995
meeting affirmed the value of Medicare, Medicaid and the Older Americans
Act.
“Everyone keeps saying ‘The boomers are coming, the
boomers are coming.’ This is a chance to do something about it,” Nystrom
said. “Our expectation is that the delegates will develop workable
solutions that will benefit today’s seniors, boomers and ultimately all
citizens.”
The goal of the conference is to winnow 50
proposals from the hundreds the White House received and come up with
practical plans for implementing them. Proposals submitted by state
aging departments and other groups run the gamut from improving the
quality of nursing home care and providing better transportation
services for the elderly to guaranteeing state pension funds and
developing senior-friendly communities.
While each state proposed a unique set of
priorities, long-term health care for the elderly is among the top 10
issues on most state lists.
Alaska delegate Patricia Branson, Executive
Director of Senior Citizens of Kodiak, says “the most important issue,
by far, is long-term care. No one is addressing how we’re going to take
care of our age 85-plus citizens and keep them in the community.”
Alaska, which has a higher-than-average cost of health care,
suggests the federal government ensure that reimbursement rates for
elders on Medicare and Medicaid are high enough to cover the patients’
bills.
Rhode Island proposes a national funding program that would follow
seniors through the long-term care continuum so that “no elder is left
behind.” Nevada calls for a community-based system of care for the
elderly, instead of the “institutionally-based system that currently
exists.”
California proposed policies that would stimulate workplace
opportunities for older workers, including second career options, while
Georgia suggested a program to provide “flexible, affordable
transportation options for seniors,” according to pre-conference
resolutions forwarded to the White House.
Alabama delegate Melissa Galvin said an overarching
issue is that future aging policy must be shaped, at least in part, by
seniors. “As it is now, aging policy is designed by doctors, government
officials, pharmaceutical companies and practically everyone else, but
seniors,” says Galvin, associate dean of the University of Alabama
School of Public Health.
Galvin’s view -- that seniors must be part of the
solution -- is shared by conference organizers. A majority of the 1,200
delegates are age 55 or older. Delegates were appointed by governors,
members of Congress and the National Congress of American Indians, as
well by the White House conference’s policy committee, which is made up
of members of Congress, administration officials, industry experts and
leaders of nonprofit organizations.
On the first day of the meeting, delegates will
choose their top 50 priorities from a list the policy committee culled
from hundreds of pre-conference proposals. On day two, delegates will
work with experts to develop strategies for turning those policies into
workable programs. “This is the first White House conference to focus on
developing realistic action plans to ensure that delegates’ efforts are
successful,” Nystrom said.
Afterward, the policy committee will compile a
final set of resolutions for review by governors from all 50 states.
Once governors’ comments have been included, the resolutions will be
sent to the president and Congress.
For more state
news from Stateline.org, a Pew Research Center website - click here
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