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Report
shows federal poverty guidelines leave
California seniors destitute
September 2010--Data and research on
what it really takes for seniors to make
ends meet in each of California's 58
counties have been released .
The release is the latest update of the Elder
Economic Security Standard Index (Elder
Index), a tool that measures the actual
costs of basic necessities for older adults.
The Elder Index is quickly replacing federal
poverty level (FPL) guidelines as a new
standard for evaluating and meeting the
needs of seniors across California.
"This year, the federal government
officially acknowledged it's time to improve
the outdated federal poverty guidelines by
announcing that it will release a
'supplemental poverty measure' in the fall
of 2011 — a baby step in the right
direction," said state Assemblyman Jim Beall
Jr. (D–San Jose).
"California has the largest senior
population in the country, so we simply
can't afford to take baby steps. That's why
we are embracing the Elder Index, from City
Hall to the state Capitol."
Calculated by the UCLA
Center for Health Policy Research on
behalf of the Insight
Center for Community Economic Development,
the new Elder Index data show that the cost
of living for California seniors far
outpaces the FPL guidelines in every county
in California. Even in Kern County, the
county with the lowest Elder Index
ranking, real costs add up to $6,447 more
than the FPL's nationwide,
one-size-fits-all amount of $10,830 per
year.
"One size does not fit all," said Steven
P. Wallace, Ph.D., associate director of
the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
and the lead author of "Older
Adults Need Twice the Federal Poverty Level
to Make Ends Meet in California," the
policy brief containing the new data.
"California's high costs make a single
national income standard like the FPL
totally inadequate for seniors."
The inadequacy of the FPL is important to
California's older adults since it is used
to determine income eligibility for many
public programs and allocate funding for
other programs. It is also used as an
evaluation measure when determining program
effectiveness.
Yet unlike the Edler Index, the FPL is the
same dollar amount across the country, and
it is based on the cost of food alone.
As the FPL's inadequacies have become
evident, California leaders across the state
are increasingly using the Elder Index to
ensure that older Californians have the
resources to live with dignity and economic
well-being:
Sixty percent of the public Area Agencies on
Aging in
California now use the Elder Index in their
strategic plans to help older adults in
their efforts to age at home independently.
Senior service organizations such as the
Senior Community Centers in San Diego, St.
Barnabas Senior Center in Los Angeles and
the National the Council on Aging are using
the Elder Index to determine membership
costs for home-care programs, track older
adults' progress toward economic stability
and quantify the impact of their services.
State legislators, such as Assembly members
Beall and Yamada, are using the Elder Index
to more accurately evaluate the
effectiveness of existing programs and plan
for future solutions.
A national demonstration project launching
this month in Los Angeles uses the Elder
Index to assess the full array of economic
challenges seniors face.
This 'ElderConnect' program, a partnership
between the Insight Center, the city and
county of Los Angeles, and the National
Council on Aging, then matches 500 seniors
with programs and services that can help
them and follows up to ensure that these
older adults actually receive seamless
services over time.
"We are thrilled to see the enthusiasm with
which Californians have embraced the Elder
Index," said Susan E. Smith, director of the
California Elder Economic Security
Initiative at the Insight Center.
"Once again, California is helping to lead
the nation in what is fundamentally an issue
of justice — our parents and grandparents
deserve to be treated with the respect they
have earned. It is our responsibility to
help make their golden years as secure and
stable as possible."
Introduced just two years ago, the Elder
Index is far more accurate than the FPL
because it is a county-specific benchmark
that shows how much it costs retired older
adults to cover all of their most basic
needs — food, housing, health care, and
transportation — while living independently.
The data being released was calculated
using the most up-to-date publicly available
data from several different federal
agencies.
Read the policy brief, "Older
Adults Need Twice the Federal Poverty Level
to Make Ends Meet in California."
See the latest (2009) county-specific
Elder Index data, and compare with 2007
data.
See how the Elder Index is being
used by organizations across California.
Learn more about the Elder
Index.
The
Insight Center for Community Economic
Development is
a 40-year-old national research, legal and
consulting organization dedicated to
building economic health in vulnerable
communities.
The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research is
one of the nation's leading health policy
research centers and the premier source of
health-related information on Californians.