Skip to main content

Gas, food prices pinch elderly meal programs
7/1/2008, 6:58 a.m. EDT
By P.J. DICKERSCHEID
The Associated Press

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) — Ruth M. Jones doesn't know what she'd do without hot meals delivered daily to her home. The 81-year-old Charleston widow can't walk or drive since a car wreck nine years ago left her stricken by arthritis.
"A lot of times I can't even get into the kitchen," said Jones, who relies on her Social Security check to cover the soaring costs of food and utilities.
Those same costs are squeezing the estimated 20,000 senior nutrition programs across the country that serve Jones and millions of elderly and frail Americans.

While most needs are still being met, advocates from California to New York worry that seniors will go hungry. They blame a nearly 20 percent increase in fuel and food prices over the past year, flat or reduced government funding, and an ailing economy that yields fewer donations.
"All of that is generating a lot of anxiety," said Bob Anderson, associate director of the Metropolitan Area Agency on Aging in Minneapolis-St. Paul.
Across the country, nearly 60 percent of the estimated 5,000 programs that belong to the Meals on Wheels Association of America have lost volunteers who can't afford gas, said Enid A. Borden, president and CEO of the program that has been providing meals to Americans in need since 1954.
Nearly half the programs have eliminated routes or consolidated meal services. Some 38 percent have switched to delivering frozen rather than hot meals, while about 30 percent are cutting personal visits from five days a week to one.
"We're in a crisis and it's just getting worse and worse," said Borden, who is urging Congress to increase money for senior nutrition programs by at least 10 percent.


Two pending bills don't come close to that amount, said Peggy Ingraham, the association's senior vice president for public policy. A House subcommittee is considering a 6.5 percent increase for senior nutrition programs for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, while a Senate subcommittee is considering a 5.7 percent increase. The federal earmark for the current fiscal year is $758 million.
Cuts are already inevitable in New York City, said Marcia Stein, executive director of Citymeals on Wheels, where meetings are under way this week to work out details such as who will no longer receive meals. Read page 2 http://www.nj.com/newsflash/index.ssf?/base/national-10...storylist=topstories
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

There was a spot on WAFF48 last night about the State no longer paying the Medicaid premiums and how that was going to put a pinch on fixed incomes as well. While it upsets me for some, there was a man on there that was complaining about it. He looked like he was in good health and 2 of the "medicines" that he flashed on the tv to show he has 10 or so he HAS TO HAVE every month -- 2 of those were benzos that shouldn't be prescribed together at the same time...It's people that are milking the system that are causing pinches as well as the economy...
It all comes down to the immense greed thats so prevalent in our society and will eventually lead to our downfall. Our politicians, both Republican and Democrat constantly cater to special interest in return for fortune and personal power. The vultures have sold out and made it easy and favorable for foreign countries to acquire our manufacturing base and the little base we have left, has to compete with goods produced minus the ungodly regulations imposed on American industry.I have not heard one person running for office advocate enforcing the anti-trust laws which regulate essential goods where there are only one or few players that can fix prices. I think we're in for some really tough times and don't see much way out of the mess.

Add Reply

Post

Untitled Document
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×