The landmark law supports community-based and nutrition services for older adults and their caregivers and is critical to improving the lives of seniors
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Washington, D.C.—The U.S. Senate unanimously passed the Supporting Older Americans Act.
The bipartisan legislation, authored by U.S. Senators Susan Collins
(R-ME) and Bob Casey (D-PA), the Chairman and Ranking Member of the
Aging Committee, would reauthorize and strengthen the Older Americans
Act (OAA), the nation’s preeminent law focused on the wellbeing of
seniors. The bill has now been sent to the House for its consideration
before heading to the President’s desk to be signed into law.
Since 1965, the OAA has supported and improved
the lives of seniors—particularly those who are low-income—through
programs that promote nutrition (e.g. Meals on Wheels), improve
transportation options, support caregivers, offer employment and
community service opportunities, and prevent abuse and neglect. This
critical law was last reauthorized in 2016.
“For more than half a century, the Older
Americans Act has served as a lifeline for millions of seniors by
enriching their lives and improving their overall health,” said Senator Collins.
“This bipartisan legislation will help ensure that the OAA continues to
match the goals we set to permit seniors to age with dignity, respect,
and community. As Chairman of the Senate Aging Committee, it is one of
my highest priorities to get this bill across the finish line to
strengthen the OAA’s programs while providing more flexibility for
states to meet local needs. I am pleased that the Senate unanimously
passed our legislation, and I urge the House to approve it swiftly so
that it can be enacted into law.”
“The Older Americans Act serves more than 10
million Americans each year, including 400,000 people throughout
Pennsylvania. It represents our commitment to the generations who made
us who we are today and lifts up the seniors who need our help the most.
I’m pleased that this bill has broad bipartisan support in the Senate
and look forward to getting this bill signed into law,” said Senator Casey.
“This legislation will direct resources to support grandparents and
older relative caregivers as well as multigenerational engagement and
will ensure that our Area Agencies on Aging are prepared to meet seniors
where they are – in their homes and communities.”
“On behalf of the Leadership Council of Aging
Organizations (LCAO), we appreciate the bipartisan, and bicameral
proposal to reauthorize the Older Americans Act (OAA),” said Debra
Whitman, Chair of LCAO, the coalition of national nonprofit
organizations working on behalf of America’s older adults. “We
enthusiastically endorse the Supporting Older Americans Act of 2020,
H.R. 4334, and look forward to its passage to support our growing aging
population and help assure their healthy longevity.”
“The Supporting Older Americans Act builds on
OAA’s powerful legacy of providing our loved ones with the support they
need to live independently and with dignity as they age,” said Megan O’Reilly, Vice President for AARP Government Affairs, Federal Health and Family. “Over
the years, OAA has helped so many older Americans across the nation
stay in their communities among friends, neighbors, and family through
caregiver support, home-delivered meals, and transportation. AARP
commends Special Committee on Aging Chair Susan Collins and Ranking
Member Bob Casey for their leadership in ushering the bipartisan
reauthorization of this legislation across the finish line in the
Senate.”
“n4a is thrilled that the Senate has passed the Supporting Older Americans Act of 2020,” said n4a CEO Sandy Markwood.
“This bill is the result of months of negotiations among Senate and
House leadership, as well as aging policy advocates and n4a members here
in Washington and around the country. For more than 50 years, the Older
Americans Act has funded services that support older adults and enhance
their ability to continue living in the community. These programs
reduce the likelihood that older adults will experience hunger,
malnutrition, social isolation and elder abuse. The Older Americans Act
also supports the continued ability of older adults and their caregivers
to access services that provide transportation, caregiver supports,
meals, in-home services and so many more programs that are essential to
community living.”
"Reauthorization of the Older Americans Act is a great victory for the aging services network and those we serve, said Dyan Walsh, MSW, Executive Director of the Eastern Area Agency on Aging in Maine. “There
are many important provisions in the bill, not the least of which is
the focus on research to study the negative consequences of social
isolation and loneliness which impacts so many rural older adults. We
look to the future with a renewed focus to integrate innovative
strategies that will advance our mission to support communities and
those who are the most vulnerable.”
Administered by the Administration for Community
Living (ACL), the OAA authorizes an array of services through a network
of 56 State Units on Aging and more than 600 Area Agencies on Aging
(AAAs) serving older Americans throughout the nation.
In the last year alone, OAA programs:
- Served more than 700,000 caregivers; and
- Provided seniors across the country with 358 million meals.
In addition to supporting seniors, OAA programs
are cost effective. The average cost of serving one senior Meals on
Wheels for the entire year is $2,828, compared to the average of $2,424
it costs to stay for a single day in the hospital and the approximately
$2,530 it costs to stay just ten days in in a semi-private room in a
nursing home. By providing seniors with a hot meal, the Older Americans
Act improves nutrition and keeps seniors out of the hospital, allowing
them to age in their homes and communities. In fact, every $1 invested
into the Older Americans Act generates $3 to help seniors stay at home
and out of the hospital through low-cost, community-based services.
Specifically, the bipartisan bill would:
- Reauthorize the Older Americans Act for five years with funding levels that better meet the growing needs, including a 7 percent increase in the initial year, and 6 percent increase annually for the remainder of the authorization;
- Extend the RAISE Family Caregivers Act for one additional year;
- Extend the Grandparents Raising Grandchildren Council for one year;
- Improve the availability of transportation resources to seniors;
- Enhance flexibility for states to better address the needs of grandparents raising grandchildren;
- Ensure that those living with younger onset Alzheimer’s disease are included in key OAA services;
- Increase the focus on addressing detrimental impacts of social isolation;
- Advance support for age-friendly communities.
- Improve elder abuse prevention activities through increased outreach and education activities.
- Increase transparency of home-modification opportunities for eligible older adults.
- Upgrade data collection methods to understand unmet need in nutrition programs.
- Promote multigenerational programming.
- Bolster innovation in the OAA through thoughtful evaluation of demonstrations and existing programs.
In May, Senators Collins and Casey held an Aging Committee hearing to highlight the importance of reauthorizing the OAA. In December, Senator Collins spoke on the Senate floor in support of the OAA’s passage.
Senators Collins and Casey’s bill is cosponsored
by Senators Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Patty Murray (D-WA), Martha McSally
(R-AZ), Doug Jones (D-AL), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), Tina Smith
(D-MN), Cory Gardner (R-CO), Gary Peters (D-MI), Steve Daines (R-MT),
Jack Reed (D-RI), Pat Roberts (R-KS), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Lisa
Murkowski (R-AK), and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Dan Sullivan (R-AK),
Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ), Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Thom
Tillis (R-NC), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Rick Scott (R-FL) and Jeanne Shaheen
(D-NH).
Full Article & Source:
Collins, Casey Bill to Reauthorize Older Americans Act Passes Senate Unanimously
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