So
Gloria, 73, asked a friend to take Arthur out for a few hours one
recent afternoon so she could grab a much-needed nap. She was lucky that
day because she didn’t need to call upon the home health aide who comes
to their San Mateo, Calif. house twice a week.
The
price of paying for help isn’t cheap: The going rate in the San
Francisco Bay Area ranges from $25 to $35 an hour. Gloria Brown
estimates she has spent roughly $72,000 on caregivers, medications and
supplies since her husband was diagnosed four years ago.
“The cost can be staggering,” said state Assemblyman Jim Patterson (R-Fresno), author of a bill that would give family caregivers in California a tax credit of up to $5,000 annually to help offset their expenses.
A
2016 study by AARP found that the average caregiver spends $6,954 a
year on out-of-pocket costs caring for a family member. The expenses
range from $7 for medical wipes to tens of thousands of dollars to
retrofit a home with a walk-in shower or hire outside help.
AARP,
a lobbying organization for people 50 and older, is pushing similar
bills in at least seven other state legislatures this year, said Elaine
Ryan, the group’s vice president of State Advocacy and Strategy
Integration. Arizona, Illinois, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Rhode
Island and Wisconsin are considering legislation, and AARP expects
measures also to be introduced in Florida, Massachusetts and Ohio.
Samantha Young is a correspondent for Kaiser Health News, an editorially independent publication of the Kaiser Family Foundation.
In Wisconsin, two Republicans and two Democrats are behind that state’s tax credit measure.
“We
need a whole discussion about how we can best keep people at home and
meet their needs,” said state Rep. Debra Kolste, a Democrat who
explained that most people know someone who is caring for a family
member. She hopes the measure can make it through the Republican
legislature and be signed by Wisconsin’s Democratic governor.
New
Jersey approved a state income tax credit in 2017 specifically for
caregivers of wounded veterans. However, efforts in other states have
failed, including in Arizona last year and Mississippi and Virginia this
year.
At
the federal level, bills that would have created a federal income tax
credit of up to $3,000 never got out of congressional committees last
year.
“Whether
I’m in Billings, Mont., or in Mississippi, the caregiver tax credit is
something that people are asking for,” Ryan said. “All they’re asking
for is a little financial help to offset these costs.”
A tax credit, said Brown and other caregivers, would be welcome relief to the estimated 4.5 million family caregivers in California
who care for a loved one with a chronic, disabling or serious health
condition. Nationwide, the AARP estimates there are about 40 million
people caring for family members.
The
Browns, who have been married 51 years, have good medical coverage, but
like most seniors, they live on a fixed income. As her husband’s
disease progresses, Gloria Brown expects costs to escalate. For
instance, she wants to install bars in the bathroom to help prevent her
husband from falling, and anticipates she will need more professional
help.
“I
think we’re just moving into that stage where I’m going to see the
dollars going out for things that will help to make things easier for
him at home and more comfortable,” Brown said. “It’s a cost you just
hadn’t anticipated.”
Long-term
caregiving has emerged as one of the major issues in California’s
Capitol this year, with proposals ranging from naming a state “Aging
Czar” to funding a new cash benefit for long-term care services. In his
State of the State address last month, Gov. Gavin Newsom called for a
master plan for aging.
“I’ve had some personal — and painful — experience with this recently,” Newsom told the joint session of the legislature.
Newsom, whose father had dementia and died last year,
also has tapped former first lady Maria Shriver to lead a new
Alzheimer’s Prevention and Preparedness Task Force, and has asked
lawmakers to approve $3 million in state funds for Alzheimer’s disease
research.
Patterson’s
bill would provide up to a $5,000 state income tax credit to family
caregivers for five years, starting in tax year 2020. They would be
reimbursed for 50% of eligible expenses, such as retrofitting a home,
hiring an aide and leasing or buying specialty equipment. The credit
would be available to individuals who make up to $170,000 a year, or
joint income tax filers who make up to $250,000.
Patterson,
a Republican in the minority, is hopeful he can convince his colleagues
that giving people a tax credit is financially sound because it would
enable caregivers to keep their loved ones at home rather than relying
on more expensive government services.
“If
members of the legislature and the governor would look through the eyes
of their own families, friends and neighbors … I think it can be passed
and be signed,” Patterson said.
But
the measure faces competition for a slice of California’s $21-billion
surplus, from proposals by the governor and lawmakers to boost funding
for education, healthcare, housing and dozens of other programs.
For
Pam Sogge of Oakland, Calif., a tax credit would allow her to hire a
home health aide for an additional three hours a week. Her husband, Rick
Sogge, 61, has early-onset Alzheimer’s and becomes frantic when left by
himself. Sometimes when she leaves him alone in another room of their
home, he searches for her every two minutes.
Because
Rick Sogge is still physically healthy, most of the couple’s caregiving
expenses pay for part-time help to take him on outings so Pam can work,
run errands or go to the doctor’s office.
“You
have a very uncertain financial future. You don’t know what’s going to
happen. You don’t know how long it’s going to take. So you’re very
conservative,” said Pam Sogge, 56, who has been caring for her husband
for five years. “A tax credit, in a way, it’s permission and
encouragement to get some help.”
Full Article & Source:
California among states considering caregiver tax credits
2 comments:
Now, we're talking!
Hooray! This is so needed.
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