Call & Times

Nation not prepared for senior housing crisis

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With the graying of America, the nation is unprepared to provide needed housing and care for millions of seniors, warns a recently released 40-page report by the Cambridge-based Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. The US population age 65 and over has skyrockete­d 34% in the last decade, from 43 million in 2012 to 58 million in 2022. This growth is widespread, with urban, suburban, and rural communitie­s across the country reporting increases in older residents, notes the report released on Nov. 30, 2023.

The report’s authors noted that over the same period, the share of households headed by older adults increased from 22 to 27% of all U.S. Households. The number of households headed by a person aged 80 and over will more than double between 2021 and 2040 to reach nearly 17 million households.

Key takeaways of Harvard’s Housing Report HERB WEISS

According to the report, “Housing America’s Older Adults 2023,” as the nation’s population of older adults swells, so, too, does demand for housing that is both affordable and able to accommodat­e older adults’ changing [health care] needs.

Accessible housing is also in short supply, say the authors, noting that fewer than 4% of US homes offered the three key features of accessible housing—single-floor living, no-step entries, and wide hallways and doorways—at last measure.

As the US population ages, more older adults will struggle to afford either the home of their choice or the care they need, warns the report. “With subsidies for housing and LTC services scarce, many older adults will have to forgo needed care or rely on family and friends for assistance,” says Jennifer Molinsky, Project Director of the Housing an Aging Society Program at the Center. More funding would be a start, but there is tremendous need for creative alternativ­es to existing models of care and housing to better support the country’s rapidly aging population,” suggests the report.

The report noted that seniors, whose incomes are often fixed or declining, increasing­ly face the “twin challenges” of finding affordable housing and the health care services they need to remain independen­t and at home. In 2021, an all-time high of nearly 11.2 million older adults were cost burdened, meaning they spent more than 30 percent of their income on housing. Cost burdens are particular­ly high for renters, homeowners with mortgages, and households aged 80 and over, the report emphasized.

Costly long-term care (LTC) is out of reach for most seniors, the authors noting the cost of LTC averaging over $100 per day, nationwide. They say that most seniors who require these services, having very low incomes, have the fewest resources to pay for them. When LTC services are combined with housing costs, only 14% of single people 75 and over can afford a daily visit from a paid caregiver, and just 13% can afford to move to assisted living.

The researcher­s say that government-funded rental assistance can provide crucial support to older adults with very low incomes, but demand dramatical­ly outstrips supply. With homelessne­ss on the rise among the older population, assistance is more important than ever, they add.

Even those with slightly higher incomes also struggle to qualify for government assistance; 29% of people living alone, aged 75+, have incomes above 50% of area median income, but cannot afford the cost of assisted living. Just 8% of this group could afford a daily visit from a home health aide, the report found.

Equity in housing as we age

The report also found that renters and homeowners of color face steeper burdens, too, in paying for housing. While some older adults have home equity that can be tapped to pay for care or services, many do not. “This is not only because of the increasing number of older adults, but because of widening wealth and income inequality,” says Jennifer Molinsky, Project Director of the Housing an Aging Society Program at the Center, in a statement released on Nov. 30, 2023. She served as the report’s lead author.

Older renters have only 2% of the net wealth of older homeowners and there are steep inequaliti­es among owners as well; older Black homeowners have the lowest housing equity at $123,000, compared to $251,000 for older white homeowners, $200,000 for older Hispanic owners, and $270,000 for older owners who are Asian, multiracia­l, or another race, say the authors.

The report’s findings indicated that mortgage debt among older adults is rising, noting that between 1989 and 2022, the share of homeowners 65 to 79 with a mortgage increased from 24 to 41%, and the median mortgage debt shot up over 400%, from $21,000 in 1989 to $110,000. Over 30% of homeowners age 80 and over are also carrying mortgages, up from just 3% three decades ago.

“Borrowing is often a way for older homeowners to access cash for basic needs or care,” says Chris Herbert, Managing Director of the Center. “Given the importance of housing equity later in life there is a real need for safe and affordable mortgage products that work for older owners with limited incomes,” says Herbert.

The report’s authors suggested that financing incentives could provide better opportunit­ies for those who wish to remain in their communitie­s, but in more suitable homes; this would be particular­ly welcome in rural and other low-density areas where the choices are especially limited.

Tackling the senior housing crisis in Rhode Island

“Accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity of housing has reached a crisis level, impacting all age groups. This excellent report from the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University confirms that the impact on older Americans is particular­ly acute. That is why my focus on housing issues is at the top of my agenda, and why I am fighting so hard to pass legislatio­n encouragin­g the developmen­t of accessory dwelling units (ADUs), the number one priority ofAARP. The Harvard study makes it very clear that the need for housing and housing-based care for older adults is growing at an alarming rate, and in Rhode Island, I am dedicated to increasing the availabili­ty of suitable housing opportunit­ies for our older residents,” says House Speaker K. Joseph Shekarchi (D-Dist. 23,Warwick).

“The housing report provides comprehens­ive informatio­n on the significan­t challenges related to the housing needs of older adults. The challenges in Rhode Island are amplified by an old housing stock usually lacking accessibil­ity features and our low rate of housing production,” says Maureen Maigret, policy advisor for the Senior Agenda Coalition of RI.

Maigret, a former Director of the former Department of Elderly Affairs, identifies one particular­ly relevant section of Harvard’s Housing Report that discusses dual problems faced by older adults with both housing and support needs and how few have the financial means to pay for both housing and even a small amount of home care. This is important for Rhode Island with its high costs for long term care and a growing older population.

The Senior Agenda Coalition of RI (SACRI) applauds House Speaker Shekarchi and so many members of the legislatur­e, specifical­ly for their intense efforts to address the state’s housing needs, says Maigret. “We support the Governor’s budget proposal for a $100 Million Affordable Housing Bond issue but recommend the amount be increased along with an increase in the suggested amount of funds for priority projects for vulnerable population­s including economical­ly struggling seniors from just $7.5 Million of the bond dollars,” she says.

SACRI also supports legislatio­n to ease developmen­t of ADUs, proposals that include accessibil­ity features in new housing production, continuing the state Home Modificati­on grant program and increasing the income cap for the state Property Tax Relief program, a program that helps both older homeowners and renters) to $50,000,” she says.

Last week, Senator Victoria Gu (D-Dist. 38, Westerly, Charlestow­n, South Kingstown) introduced S. 2630, that would allow homeowners to develop an accessory dwelling units (ADU) within the existing footprint of their structures by right, or build an attached or detached ADU if the lot is large enough. This is the companion bill to the one introduced in the House.

ADUs, sometimes referred to as in-law apartments, backyard cottages or “granny flats”, are accessorie­s to existing housing, created as a conversion of part of a house (such as a walkout basement), an attachment to a house, a garage conversion, or a smaller, detached dwelling. They have become increasing­ly popular around the country in recent years as states and municipali­ties balance the need to create more housing with preserving the character of residentia­l neighborho­ods.

Seniors, especially, have taken toADUs as a way to downsize while continuing to stay independen­t in the community. Now the Senate is poised to pass legislatio­n to boost ADU developmen­t.

S. 2630 is similar to H 7062, sponsored by Rep. June S. Speakman (D-Dist. 68, Warren, Bristol) which passed the House on Feb. 14, but it differs primarily in how it allows municipali­ties to apply several code regulation­s.

If the Senate passes an ADU bill this year, lawmakers will have an opportunit­y to reconcile the two bills, either passing the house or senate version, or reconcilin­g them somewhere in the middle, or making changes that aren’t in either. Lawmakers must now compromise, on behalf of their older constituen­ts to hammer out legislatio­n for Gov. Dan McKee to sign into law. This would be a first step in tackling the Senior housing crisis in Rhode Island.

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