The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Graying of America is stretching tax dollars

Agencies struggle as demand for senior services increases.

- By Antonio Olivo

More and

WASHINGTON — more these days, when paramedics in Fairfax, Virginia, respond to emergency calls, they find an older person who has fallen, broken a bone or suffered a heart attack.

Meanwhile in nearby Montgomery County, Maryland, authoritie­s are investigat­ing an increasing number of elder- abuse cases and crimes targeting senior citizens. In Chicago, New York City and elsewhere, more money is being allotted to government buses that take seniors to exercise classes and social workers who help families at a loss for how to care for aging loved ones.

Rising demand for services for elderly people is taking a toll on local government­s, as communitie­s nationwide seek to accommodat­e a growing senior-citizen population while still tending to schools, roads, parks and other needs.

By 2030, 1 out of 5 U.S. residents — 70 million people -

will be 65 or older, according to population estimates. At the same time, federal funding for senior-citizen programs has decreased by about 19 percent since 2010, to just less than $8 billion, according to the National Associatio­n of Area Agencies on Aging. It is expected to shrink further under President Donald Trump.

Policy experts say battles over spending, services and zoning will only worsen as baby boomers

enter into stages of greater dependency, creating a headache for local budget offifficia­ls whose constituen­ts already feel taxed to the limit.

“If you have to build

schools and you also have to add more transporta­tion and senior centers for older adults, where does the money come from?” said Howard Gleckman, a senior fellow at the Urban Institute who writes about tax policy

and elder care. “It’s a very hard question to answer.”

In suburban Washington, Fairfax County, Virginia’s largest and most economical­ly powerful jurisdicti­on,

embodies the challenge many local government­s face. The two fastest- growing age groups in the county of 1.1 million are schoolchil

dren and people older than 65. The elderly population is expected to grow from 135,000 to 172,000 over the next eight years.

A Washington Post review of 13 agency budget reports showed that services for seniors has helped drive up spending by about $43.8 million since 2014 - nearly 10 percent of the county’s overall spending growth during that period. Some of that money went to initiative­s created through the Fairfax 50-plus Community Action Plan, which focuses on transporta­tion improvemen­ts, affordable housing and social programs to help elderly residents age in place.

At the same time, the county denied or trimmed funding requests for

employee raises, police reforms and education, and voters resounding­ly rejected a meals tax to generate new revenue for the fast-growing school system.

“We need to make sure that folks can continue to live within the community where they raised their families,” said Sharon Bulova, chairman of the Board of Supervisor­s. “But we’re also doing so at a time when we’ve had

the Great Recession and have had to make reductions across the board in all the services we provide.”

The

Fairfax County Fire and Rescue Department is on pace to exceed 100,000 emergency calls this year - 10,000 more than in 2014. Patients age 65 or older represent 40 percent of the volume. The agency’s budget has grown nearly 19 percent in the past four years.

In 2016, the department began staffiffin­g a paramedic on every fire engine and ambulance, to better deal with severe emergencie­s like cardiac arrest or car crashes. It also launched a program to encourage elderly residents to keep their medical histories readily accessible inside vehicle glove compartmen­ts or posted on their fridge. Dorothy Carter, 83, had

not done so when county firefighte­rs and paramedics showed up outside her apartment one morning this summer. The former nurse’s aide had been gardening when she tripped and fell. By the time her roommate found her, she’d been laying in the hot sun for more than fifive hours, with bits of mulch clinging to her hair.

“I’m sorry,” Carter muttered while emergency workers helped her sit up.

“No, ma’am,” paramedic Steve Urban replied. “Don’t be sorry. I’m here for you.”

Carter was loaded into an ambulance and taken to a hospital, where she was treated for high blood pressure.

Elderly slip-and-fall cases are a huge concern as senior citizens become less mobile, said Rodney Harrell, a public policy director at AARP. That has contribute­d to a rising demand for assisted-living centers and nursing homes. In Fairfax and elsewhere, proposals for new or expanded facilities have sparked major zoning battles and concerns over the

cost of and efffffffff­fffect on roads, sewers and other services.

“The vast majority of people want to stay in their communitie­s as they age, but many of those communitie­s weren’t designed for that,” Harrell said. “We’ve spent decades, and maybe even centuries, not planning for aging and designing for aging.”

Paramedics have seen some extreme cases, such as the 66-year-old man they found dead near his bed earlier this year, apparently of cardiac arrest. His bedroom was fifilled with paperwork and junk-food cartons. On the bureau were three large plastic cups of urine — a sign that the home’ s occupant had not left the room in days.

In Maryland, John Kenney, chief of Montgomery County’s Aging and Disability Services program, said offiffi

cials in the state’s most populous jurisdicti­on are worried about a rise in fifinancia­l crimes against seniors, and a lack of a ff ff ff ff ff ff or dab le housing for them in an era of shrinking resources.

“There is always this competitio­n in trying to establish what our priorities are,” Kenney said. Fairfax’s

Division of Adult & Aging Services, which connects elderly residents to county programs and operates a hotline for seniors

and their caregivers, has increased its budget by $986,000 since 2014.

Last year, the hotline took in nearly 17,000 calls, up from 15,400 in 2013. They varied from pleas for Medicaid assistance to arranging rides to doctor’ s appointmen­ts and setting up in-home care. Calls to the hotline led social workers to open 2,714 cases for adult protective services, which applies to people who are no longer able to function independen­tly.

“He was drinking and

cut his foot?” social worker Bonita Stokes calmly asked one harried apartment manager whose tenant, age 69, had stepped on a broken wine bottle.

Karen Hannigan, the division supervisor, said the county walks a fine line in deciding whether to merely counsel a caller on how an elderly person might live more safely at home, or recommend that they move somewhere they can get health and life-care services.

“When they get the gray hair or are on walkers or in wheelchair­s, people immediatel­y want to put that label on them of lacking capacity,” she said. “When you can see they’re completely out of it, that’s easy. Or when they’re completely sharp as a tack, that’s easy. Most of our clients are in between, so we have to fifigure it out.”

The county is also dealing more with the deteriorat­ing effects of Alzheimer’s disease. Social workers help patients fifind support groups, long-term care and transporta­tion. Police and fifire agencies respond to domestic violence and missing-persons investigat­ions that can be linked to the disease. Judith Branagan turned to

aging services for help with her husband, Tom, 73, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2007. Three years ago, she enrolled him in a day program near their home in Burke that relies on volunteers trained to help Alzheimer’s patients with physical and mental exercises. As the elderly population continues to grow, more programs - and volunteers - will be needed, Judith Branagan said.

“That’s going to have to be the Plan B,” she said. “The government funding isn’t always going to be there.”

Last year, the county’s voters approved $37 million in bonds to replace one aging senior center in Chantilly and build a new one in Lorton, where senior programs currently take place in leased space inside a neighborho­od strip mall. Offifficia­ls decided to wait at least until 2024 to ask voters to approve a $16 million bond for another senior center in Springfifi­eld, however. In the meantime, the county wants to secure funds to upgrade its sewer system,

fifix deteriorat­ing parks and tend to other infrastruc­ture needs.

The shortage of space for recreation programs led to the creation in 2009 of the county’s Senior Center Without Walls program, where

libraries and local houses of worship host discussion groups and classes. On a recent day, the line-dancing class in a library community room was so crowded the dancers had little room to maneuver.

“When we started this program, we only had 75 people. Now, we have 1,000 members and a growing waiting list,” said co-founder Corazon Foley. “Some of

the facilities that helped us are dropping out. They fifigured they would be helping us for only one or two years. It is a scramble.”

Frank Shafroth, director of George Mason University’s Center for State and Local Government Leadership, said the needs of the nation’s aging population is something most local government­s “haven’t adequately prepared for.”

“This generation is living longer lives than previous generation­s,” Shafroth said. “You’re going to get this huge tension over taxes

and what people are willing to pay for older people who can no longer take care of themselves.”

 ?? EVELYN HOCKSTEIN / WASHINGTON POST ?? In Burke, Va., Judith Branagan turned to senior services for help with her husband, Tom, 73, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2007.
EVELYN HOCKSTEIN / WASHINGTON POST In Burke, Va., Judith Branagan turned to senior services for help with her husband, Tom, 73, who was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2007.

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