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Elderly New Yorkers angry as crisis hits poorest
Claudia Parsons, Dawn News
July
5, 2012
NEW YORK From housebound grandmothers
who rely on charity meal deliveries, to ailing
retirees who cannot pay rising costs for medications,
older Americans feeling the pinch of the financial
crisis are getting angry and forming groups with names
like “Senior Outrage.”
In New York, with city and state tax revenues
tumbling, benefits and services to the elderly are
being cut, and many older residents are furiously
drawing comparisons to the billions of dollars spent
to bail out banks – and pay Wall Street bonuses.
Dolores Green, 68, retired as a home help worker and
lives on a government Social Security check of $740 a
month. She pays $719 a month in rent, leaving just $21
for everything else.
To eat, she relies on the federal food stamp
assistance programme, and worries that her cost for
some medication she needs for her diabetes has gone up
to $8 from $3.
To get by, she said “I run errands for seniors. They
may hand me $2 or $3 or something.”
Green says she sees more people seeking government
assistance, such as her daughter, who lost her job
after 25 years.
“She`s just applied for food stamps; she`s got two
kids,” Green told Reuters at a community centre where
some 25 elderly New Yorkers were eating a lunch of
sandwiches, a gelatine dessert, milk and tomato juice.
“That`s why she can`t help me, because she`s got to
help her children.”
“Maybe I`ll move in with you,” she jokes to her friend
Alice Jordan, 80, a retired teacher who suffers from
osteoporosis and high blood pressure.
Jordan said her food stamp allocation had gradually
eroded to $54 a month from $180.
When she reads about the well-heeled victims of
financier Bernard Madoff`s suspected $50 billion Ponzi
scheme, she says she wishes they would spare a thought
for those who never had such wealth.
“Just like this guy Madoff ripped them off, how did
they feel when they lost their money and had to change
their style of living? Think of us. … How do you think
we feel?” she asked.
Big budget gaps
New York City`s Department for the Aging, which runs
more than 300 community centres for aging residents
and provides services such as food delivery to the
homebound, affordable housing and heating subsidies,
has cut its 2009 budget by $4 million to $285 million
and faces another proposed cut, of $9.5 million, in
2010.
The cuts are part of Mayor Michael Bloomberg`s bid to
close a $4 billion city budget gap caused by the
collapse of corporate tax revenues, especially from
Wall Street, which normally pumps a fortune into local
coffers.
New York state, which typically gets 20 per cent of
its revenues from Wall Street taxes, also is proposing
cuts in health care and services for the elderly as
part of a drive to close a $13 billion 2009 budget
gap.
Among the proposals is a cut in the state contribution
to the Federal Supplemental Security Income, or SSI,
for elderly, blind or disabled people with little or
no other income.
Parvati Devi, 62, says that would cut her SSI check by
$24.
“I can`t afford to have anything cut,” she said. “We
collect cans on the street; we do anything to
survive.”
A couple of hundred retirees attended a forum with New
York city and state officials this month to express
their anger at cuts they say are hitting the most
vulnerable people hardest.
“We are outraged that the government, which has spent
hundreds of billions of dollars to bail out financial
institutions – and they in turn have given $18 billion
as bonuses to their top executives – has no funds to
support vital services for their senior citizens,”
said Muriel Beach, New York City head of the State
Wide Senior Action Council.
State Wide and other groups formed the “Senior Outrage
Coalition” this month to mobilize protest among the
city`s 1.3 million citizens aged 65 and over.
“We are of a generation that fought in the sixties,”
she said. “We`re out there doing it again.”
City figures show that in 2006, one-fifth of New
Yorkers age 65 and older lived in poverty, twice the
national average.—Reuters
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