San Diego Union-Tribune

Artist, 95, sells her paintings to help pay for assisted living

- DIANE BELL

It is a sad state of affairs when a 95-year-old woman is forced to turn to painting and selling her artwork to ward off discharge from an assisted living facility.

Patricia Barnett, who turns 96 in October, racked up a lifetime of civic service.

She delivered Meals on Wheels, supported a home for abused women, donated her graphic arts talents to nonprofit causes. Over the years, the Cornell University graduate campaigned for welfare rights, clean water and other environmen­tal issues.

More to the point, her résumé shows a history of fighting for housing for the needy, both as past president of a New York agency set up solely to fund affordable housing and as the head of her state’s League of Women Voters, through which she also campaigned for fair rent and low-cost housing.

Now the San Diego resident of 49 years finds herself in desperate need of those services she spent years trying to secure for others.

Barnett’s legacy of civil service has been carried on in San Diego by her son, Scott Barnett, a familiar face in the local community.

He was a Del Mar City Council member at age 21, led the San Diego County Taxpayers Associatio­n when it establishe­d its trademark Golden Fleece and Watchdog awards to disclose government boondoggle­s and try to keep spending in check.

He founded a research service called the Taxpayers Advocate and served for four years on the San Diego Unified School District board.

Scott’s mother lived with him in her senior years. But four falls in 2016, failing health and increasing frailty have made assisted living and ongoing care a necessity. Now she is running out of money.

Barnett spent her life being frugal and careful with her finances, running a small graphic design business, saving for retirement and paying premiums for longterm health care insurance. But she couldn’t foresee the 2008 stock market crash, nor did she anticipate living well into her 90s.

In desperatio­n, Scott, along with his brother, David, and sister, Catherine Anderson, set up a GoFundMe campaign in late April to help their mother with food, rent and basic bills. To date, it has generated slightly more than $3,000.

Barnett explained in her GoFundMe appeal: “The economic crash in 2008 wiped out half of my lifetime savings and forced me to sell my home. Now, the remainder of my savings and long-term care insurance policy has run out.”

Her long-term health insurance coverage ended in April, leaving her primarily dependent on her monthly Social Security check of about $2,300 to pay some medical expenses and a monthly assisted living facility bill of about $5,700.

“After a lifetime of selfsuffic­iency, I am asking for your help to stay in assisted living,” she wrote.

Originally, Barnett’s children had added informatio­n about her career in community service to her GoFundMe bio but she made them trim it out: “She did not want us ‘bragging’ about her,” Scott says.

Her touching appeal surely represents the story of the parents of many of today’s baby boomers and Gen-Xers. These are senior

citizens who worked and saved throughout their lives but have been overrun by the inflationa­ry cost of living and rising cost of goods following the pandemic.

Social Security benefits have not kept up, making it difficult to make ends meet in costly states such as California.

The lack of affordable assisted living facilities is putting an economic strain on their children and grandchild­ren already burdened with their own financial obligation­s. Or as Scott puts it, “It’s a ticking time bomb for us boomers. I just turned 60.”

Barnett, who attended classes at the Toledo Museum of Fine Arts in her teens, had stored her paint brushes after suffering a stroke in 2004. But she dusted them off in 2019 and, despite inoperable cataracts in one eye, is now turning out a colorful painting every eight to 10 days.

She has finished about 150 artworks since entering assistedli­ving3 1⁄2yearsago.

Scott posted an album of “Grandma Pat’s” paintings on Facebook. Many are whimsical, bold landscapes bursting with colorful flowers and patterns.

Her family connected her to a website that sells her art for wall decor, T-shirts, mugs, beach towels and other items. But returns to the artist are small.

David Barnett has been working with her Brookdale Senior Living facility, which has waived some late fees and offered a small rent reduction or placement in a slightly less expensive room or more economical sister facility. But the rent cost still outstrips her income.

“If residents cannot comply with the payment requiremen­ts of their residency agreement, we try to help them find a workable solution,” explained Heather Hunter, Brookdale communicat­ions manager in Tennessee. She said help can include referrals to other providers and informatio­n regarding other types of assistance.

“A Medi-Cal-funded facility (for low-income residents) is currently the only option for her,” says Scott, whose mother has been approved for Medi-Cal. “We started calling as soon as it was clear that she would be out of money (in April). The number of available beds is significan­tly less than the need. So there are long waiting lists.”

Sunita Upchurch, the county’s long-term care ombudsman, says there are less costly options that may not be on a family’s radar.

Along with four- or six-bed home care facilities, the elderly can be placed in senior living communitie­s and senior apartments where they are visited by home health care nurses and linked to Meals on Wheels food delivery. They also can be enrolled in and transporte­d to adult day care programs.

“By 2030, California­ns 60 and older will comprise onequarter of the population,” says Blanca Castro, longterm care ombudsman with the California Department of Aging. “Older adults who rely solely on Social Security for their income on average receive $1,200 per month, which must go to pay for all essential needs.”

The department has helped draft a 2030 state Master Plan for Aging with a top goal of addressing rental cost and making investment­s in affordable housing. But that is years away.

Scott calls his family’s GoFundMe campaign a Hail Mary attempt to hopefully fill the gap. Ultimately, he says, his mother will have a roof over her head but surely not with the luxury of space to be able to paint in her room.

“It’s been stressful,” says Barnett, who is not sleeping well. “I wake up and worry about where I am going to live.”

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 ?? SCOTT BARNETT ?? Patricia Barnett, 95, set up a painting studio in her assisted living facility but no longer can afford to live there. She produces a painting every eight to 10 days.
SCOTT BARNETT Patricia Barnett, 95, set up a painting studio in her assisted living facility but no longer can afford to live there. She produces a painting every eight to 10 days.

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