Democrat and Chronicle

Thousands weigh in on NY plan to aid aging residents

State spends billions on care for growing group

- David Robinson

The state plan for addressing complex financial, social and health ills plaguing New York’s aging population is taking shape as Albany’s 2024 political session launches in earnest.

Currently, New York has the fourthlarg­est population of older adults nationally, with 3.8 million people over age 60.

The high stakes of the Master Plan for Aging, which will impact how billions of your tax dollars get spent each year, attracted more than 5,000 public comments in recent months. The flood of input prompted regulators to extend the survey effort another month.

Anyone interested in helping to shape the plan now has until Jan. 31 to complete the survey. For further details, visit the plan website via ny.gov or call NY Connects’ hotline at 1 (800) 3429871.

An interim report on the effort was due Tuesday, with the final plan expected later this year.

To improve understand­ing of the issues involved, the USA TODAY Network interviewe­d one of the top state health officials leading the plan, Adam Herbst. That conversati­on and related informatio­n has been edited for clarity and follows below.

Why is NY’s Master Plan for Aging important?

“The big thing is it’s not just for people over a certain age. It’s intended to be relevant to and important at all ages and stages of life in New York,” Herbst said.

“This is a unique opportunit­y to make the state a more vibrant place to age – no matter how old you are or how old your loved ones might be.”

What are New Yorkers concerned about?

“A lot of the challenges that we have all been familiar with in terms of demographi­cs and families and caregiving and the state’s economy and long-term care and housing,” Herbst continued.

“There are also issues with living alone, isolation, economic security. These things impact not just people over a certain age.”

What does the aging population look like?

An early report on the aging plan noted “if structural changes are not advanced, current demographi­c trends

will increase the strain on benefits, supports, service systems and community infrastruc­ture, as the average age of the state increases.”

Among the trends:

● By 2030, more than 25% of New York will be over the age of 60 in 51 counties across the state, with approximat­ely 5.5 million New Yorkers aged 60-plus.

● Meanwhile, 70% of New Yorkers over the age of 65 are likely to need some form of long-term care.

● Long-term care expenditur­es represent about 50% of the Medicaid budget and are the largest cost driver in the state budget.

Recent efforts to reverse those trends, however, have struggled as New York led the nation in population loss since 2020, dropping more than 631,000 residents, Census data show.

What is NY aging plan’s goal?

“This is supposed to be a living document and relevant for years to come,” Herbst said. “It will be a set of recommenda­tions and policies and budget initiative­s that are real and relevant and achievable.”

“Ultimately, the plan will result in some budget allocation­s and the governor is committed to ensuring investment in older adults.

And it’s just that; an investment. It benefits everyone when New Yorkers can stay in their community and careers as long as possible.”

 ?? SETH HARRISON/THE JOURNAL NEWS ?? Maggie Ornstein, 44, takes her mother, Janet, 77, for a walk in their Queens neighborho­od on March 24, 2022. Janet suffered a cerebral aneurysm in 1996 when Maggie was 17 years old. She suffered cognitive impairment and has required constant caregiving ever since. Maggie, who holds a doctoral degree and three master’s degrees, has spent her entire adult life living with and caring for her mother.
SETH HARRISON/THE JOURNAL NEWS Maggie Ornstein, 44, takes her mother, Janet, 77, for a walk in their Queens neighborho­od on March 24, 2022. Janet suffered a cerebral aneurysm in 1996 when Maggie was 17 years old. She suffered cognitive impairment and has required constant caregiving ever since. Maggie, who holds a doctoral degree and three master’s degrees, has spent her entire adult life living with and caring for her mother.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States