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Gimmie Generation wants free home improvements and transportation
AJC ^ | 06/02/2004 | Charles Yoo

Posted on 06/02/2004 9:52:03 AM PDT by Phantom Lord

Project aims to identify needs of growing elderly population

Lillian Lee of East Point learned the hard way that going without needed home improvements is risky for the elderly.

Not long ago, the 79-year-old widow found herself stuck inside her bathtub for two hours when she was unable to pull herself out. If she'd had a safety bar installed the potentially dangerous incident could have been avoided.

"I turned this way and that way," Lee said. "I finally got out."

Lee's story is the kind the Atlanta Regional Commission wants to hear. ARC is gathering experiences from senior citizens like Lee to set up programs to help the elderly with home improvement and transportation needs.

The metro agency mostly known for its sermons against suburban sprawl has launched a four-year campaign on the needs of the elderly, particularly in East Point and the Toco Hill neighborhood of DeKalb County. The areas were chosen because of their large elderly populations.

In East Point, volunteers are conducting surveys and disseminating information on free public services available to seniors.

Armed with pink fact sheets, the yellow shirt-wearing senior volunteers want to know how seniors are getting around, what inconveniences them the most and what services they need to stay in their area.

The survey portion of the $2 million ARC project will end this month. The results will be used to develop a long-range plan to help seniors in other parts of metro Atlanta.

"The main goal is to reach people who are not connected to the system and find isolated seniors and get them engaged in any way we can," said Kathryn Lawler, project director of ARC's Aging Atlanta.

Senior citizens are good for the local economy, according to ARC. They have assets and tend to be stable homeowners. Few have school-age children, so they do not burden the school system. They tend to stay in one area for a long time and are home during the day, looking out for communities in an era of two breadwinners. The elderly also tend to volunteer more than other age groups.

ARC already has identified a couple of big issues: getting around and home repairs. By 2025, more than 1 million residents of metro Atlanta will be over age 65, the ARC estimates. Nearly 100,000 of them face difficulties in getting health care because they do not drive, the agency said.

One possible solution is a trial program that gives poor senior citizens an allowance of $100 to $200 a month. Their modes of transportation then will be analyzed.

"They can hire their daughter, they can hire their neighbor, they can take a taxi, they can use their MARTA card, and they can do whatever they want, and we'll be watching how they get around," said Lawler, of the Aging Atlanta project.

Such an effort is crucial, said Professor Frank Whittington, a sociology professor and director of the Gerontology Institute at Georgia State University. Whittington was a consultant to the ARC on the aging project.

"We are going to have to plan better than we have done for the future because our senior population is on the verge of exploding," Whittington said. "Where the funds are going to come from is uncertain."

Census data show 13 percent of East Point's senior citizens, who make up 8 percent of the city's 40,000 residents, live below the poverty level.

After paying for gas, phone, electricity, cable bills and groceries, Lillian Lee said she has little left each month from her Social Security check.

Lee, who has lived in East Point nearly all her life, said she can no longer afford to live in her home. "I don't have enough money to take care of everything."

Farther north in Toco Hill, life is more affluent, but the demographics on the elderly are similar: 16 percent of the population is 65 or older. Many are Jewish and live in old neighborhoods of 1950s ranch-style homes.

ARC has reached out to the Jewish Family & Career Services and the Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta, plus the DeKalb County government, in trying to create a place for seniors to meet during the day. The agency also has created "Safe Homes for Seniors," a home repair program that provides minor repairs for seniors at no cost.

Denise Solomon, a 70-year-old widow who lives in a small three-bedroom ranch off Briarcliff Road, cited two instances where she felt she was cheated when it came to repairs: $500 to upgrade the ceiling lights in a bathroom and $1,000 to fix a hole in the crawl-in basement.

Her elderly friend, Gloria Kersh, summed up the feeling.

"This is not a good city if you're old," the grandmother of four said. "If you get older, you need contact with people of your own age. To me it's important to sit and talk, to connect."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Georgia
KEYWORDS: freebies; gimmie; handouts; money; old; senior; socialism; taxes; wrinkled
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"I'm Old. Gimmie, Gimmie, Gimmie!" --Grampa Simpson
1 posted on 06/02/2004 9:52:07 AM PDT by Phantom Lord
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To: Phantom Lord

Yeah, but they vote so they will get their handouts as the politicians on both sides pander to them.


2 posted on 06/02/2004 9:55:32 AM PDT by Dead Corpse (For an Evil Super Genius, you aren't too bright are you?)
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To: Phantom Lord

Wow, so my dad can actually pay me for taking care of him!?! What a thought!

Now if I could only get them to pay me for carting around my kids.


3 posted on 06/02/2004 10:01:37 AM PDT by sandbar
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To: Phantom Lord

So, are they the gimme generation or the greatest generation?


4 posted on 06/02/2004 10:04:06 AM PDT by wtc911 (keep one eye on that candle....)
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To: Phantom Lord

Having personally been the "Gimme Generation" for the first 18 years or so of my life, I'm a little reluctant to cast that kind of aspersion at the generation that raised me.


5 posted on 06/02/2004 10:07:25 AM PDT by Kenton ("Life is tough, and it's really tough when you're stupid" - Damon Runyon)
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To: wtc911


Yeah for real...I have to wonder about people who think we owe nothing to our elders.


6 posted on 06/02/2004 10:08:53 AM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: SouthernFreebird
I have to wonder about people who think we owe nothing to our elders.

We, as in family members owe a great deal to our elders. I however do not owe your grandfather free home repairs or a MARTA pass. Just as you do not owe my child a free school lunch.

7 posted on 06/02/2004 10:10:51 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: SouthernFreebird
Yeah for real...I have to wonder about people who think we owe nothing to our elders.

Who is this "we" you are referring to? Handling of the needs of the elderly should be strictly a FAMILY issue, not an issue for all of society. If you refuse to help out grandma, don't ask me to.
8 posted on 06/02/2004 10:14:33 AM PDT by LetsRok
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To: SouthernFreebird
Yeah for real...I have to wonder about people who think we owe nothing to our elders.

I owe everything to my parents, who raised me and paid my way through college. But I don't owe squat to "seniors," just because they're old.

9 posted on 06/02/2004 10:16:47 AM PDT by jude24 (sola gratia)
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To: jude24

I provide help to seniors. I let them hit from the yellow tees instead of the white or blue tees.


10 posted on 06/02/2004 10:19:01 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain)
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To: LetsRok

"Handling of the needs of the elderly should be strictly a FAMILY issue, not an issue for all of society. If you refuse to help out grandma, don't ask me to."




Yes, it should be. However, many old people have no families, or their families are far away. The woman stuck in her bathtub cannot install a grab rail for herself, now can she?

Here's a good job for the local churches, I'd say. I know that if a neighbor of mine needed a grab rail in the bathroom, I'd be happy to buy one and install it for her.

And, since everyone's really my neighbor, I don't begrudge these folks their grab rail.

It's easy to say that family should do it, but each situation is different. Many old people have nobody to help them at all.

Why don't you volunteer? Ask the old people around you if there's any way you can help them.

On a personal note, my wife and I are moving from CA to Minnesota to be near her parents, who are 75 and 83. I feel the family connection very strongly. My own parents are both 79, but they have another son and daughter who live near them. My in-laws don't. So we're packing up and moving our lives to help them in their old age.

I think Jesus had something to say about helping those around us.


11 posted on 06/02/2004 10:24:58 AM PDT by MineralMan (godless atheist)
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To: Phantom Lord
I'm torn here. On one hand, yes, I feel sorry for the childless old people with no one to help them.

On the other hand ... I can't count how many times I see or read of wealthy old people on the golf course - cruising around the world for the third and fourth time - spending their kids' inheritances in numerous ways. *They* certainly aren't helping their same-age cohorts.

Nor are many particularly helping their children and grandchildren. When Grandma's hanging out at the pool in FL six months a year, blowing it all on plastic surgery instead of helping raise her grandchildren, is it any surprise that *some* 30- and 40-somethings aren't terribly sympathetic?

Social responsibility slices both ways.

12 posted on 06/02/2004 10:30:48 AM PDT by valkyrieanne
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To: Kenton
I'm a little reluctant to cast that kind of aspersion at the generation that raised me.

Just keep reminding yourself that they're the generation who drasticly expanded the Big Government social welfare state.

"And I sincerely believe, with you, that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale."

-- Thomas Jefferson to John Taylor, May 28, 1816


13 posted on 06/02/2004 10:30:55 AM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Phantom Lord
I provide help to seniors. I let them hit from the yellow tees instead of the white or blue tees.

BWAAAAhahahaha!

14 posted on 06/02/2004 10:38:37 AM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: MineralMan

MineralMan wrote:


Yes, it should be. However, many old people have no families, or their families are far away. The woman stuck in her bathtub cannot install a grab rail for herself, now can she?

Here's a good job for the local churches, I'd say. I know that if a neighbor of mine needed a grab rail in the bathroom, I'd be happy to buy one and install it for her.


And, since everyone's really my neighbor, I don't begrudge these folks their grab rail.







You know what, "godless atheist"?

You put shame to many Christians I know....You actually "walk the walk".

Nice to see you!


15 posted on 06/02/2004 10:39:18 AM PDT by tiamat ("Just a Bronze-Age Gal, Trapped in a Techno-World!")
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To: MineralMan
And, since everyone's really my neighbor,...

It takes a Village alert.

16 posted on 06/02/2004 10:39:48 AM PDT by Last Dakotan
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To: valkyrieanne

"I'm torn here. On one hand, yes, I feel sorry for the childless old people with no one to help them."

There's a simple answer, and it requires no government funding. Just look around you. Are there old people living nearby? Ask them if they need anything done in their homes. If so, do it for them. They're your neighbors.

As for the rich old people you're complaining about...they're not the ones being discussed, quite frankly. They can afford to have the bulb replaced in their ceiling light fixture. Your neighbor might be sitting in the dark.

We can say we're not responsible for these old people who aren't relatives, but I disagree. Maybe your neighbor is an old WWII vet who helped keep our nation safe and end the reign of Hitler. Maybe your old neighbor worked on the development of some antibiotic that saved your life.

In any case, we should be out there making sure that the old people around us are OK. It only takes a little time, and is more than worthwhile.


17 posted on 06/02/2004 10:42:18 AM PDT by MineralMan (godless atheist)
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To: Willie Green

"Just keep reminding yourself that they're the generation who drasticly expanded the Big Government social welfare state."

Just keep in mind that they're the generation that fought Hitler, too.


18 posted on 06/02/2004 10:43:00 AM PDT by MineralMan (godless atheist)
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To: MineralMan
I think Jesus had something to say about helping those around us.

Irrelevant, in the discussion of the state confiscating private money for public use. You, yourself, are living Jesus' instructions in exemplary fashion. Whether people follow that example set by Jesus or you or whomever, his teachings on this issue cannot be used to legitimize welfare statism.

19 posted on 06/02/2004 10:43:08 AM PDT by Semaphore Heathcliffe
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To: MineralMan

"I think Jesus has something to say about helping those around us"


And you know this as a godless atheist? Why would you say this if you don't believe? What a hypocrite. Why don't you use another godless atheist for your words of wisdom?


20 posted on 06/02/2004 10:43:33 AM PDT by MontanaBeth (Irritating a Democrat a day, since 1970)
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