I wish I could have said it first. Check out the comment on the BCCT news blog entry about the borough council voting on Gateway tomorrow night.
Concerned Mom Says:
May 14th, 2008 at 9:06 pm
These Borough Officials of ours couldn’t vote themselves out of a paper bag - they are scared of making ANY decision that means “progress” in Morrisville. WAKE UP PEOPLE! All you need to do is rely on our Borough Solicitor to draft your motion for Monday’s meeting; do you really think he would draft something that would not protect you and hang you out to dry? I don’t think so…. Stop being such cowards up there on your thrones and do what you were SUPPOSED to do when we vopted for you: REPRESENT YOUR CONSTITUENTS and VOTE “YES” — a “YES” vote for a “concept” … and let the process of Zoning, Land Development, etc. that we have in place here take care of all the rest!!! COME ON AND GET ON WITH IT ALREADY!!! UGH….
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Bucks a pricey place to live for seniors
Another dispatch from the front lines of everyday life posted by Captain Obvious. I sit here watching the gas prices approach and overwhelm the $4.00 mark. When the oil company comes to fill my fuel oil tank, I wonder if they should be wearing a mask and carrying a gun. Ditto for the cashier at the local grocery store. It's not just an "elderly" problem, but it hits the fixed income people pretty hard.
I'm not indifferent to the plight of the elderly. I once lived next door to an old widow. She had been in her home since the mid 1940s, and alone since her husband died in the mid 1970s. I knew her for about the last ten years of her life. My family, and the other neighbors, did what we could. We made sure her walks and driveway were shoveled and the grass mowed. We invited her to dinners in a round robin format so that at least one or two full meals a week were a guarantee, in addition to the Meals on Wheels she received. We did repairs on her house as if it was our own.
She should have moved into an assisted living facility, but the waiting list was too long and once she got to the top, even with selling her house, the price was too much to bear. She was not on good terms with her children and steadfastly refused the many entreaties from them for her to come live with them. It would have meant a move to Kentucky or Oregon depending on the child she chose, but she wanted her own home.
Was that a smart decision? I don't know. It wasn't my decision to make. I think emotion played a much larger role in this decision than a clearheaded and sober evaluation of the realities.
Retirement planning is a tricky piece of work. Many a nest egg was wiped out in the Great Depression, the 1970s recession, and other lesser economic downturns. It will be no different this time around. The economic laws are pretty brutal and inflexible.
Retirement is something that lives in a galaxy far, far away. Until the day it knocks on the door and shouts, "Surprise!" Americans in general are the proverbial grasshopper, not saving for a rainy day, but existing in the present. As the Boomers edge into retirement, I wonder how many of them are ready. I've already seen too many people mentioning that they will need to work until they die.
The answer is not to starve and to price fixed income seniors out of their own homes. But is the answer to provide handouts at the expense of the rest of the community? The Social Security taxes I pay are crippling on their own, and what will be my return on that money? My estimates are zero, and falling. The home mortgage speculators are looking for government handouts to bail them out of their greedy short sighted decisions. The homeowners who bought more house than they could afford also need to be held accountable. I'd like to tell them all to take a flying leap. They made their beds and didn't share the gains when times were good. Why do they want a handout now when times are bad?
Do you have any solutions?
Bucks a pricey place to live for seniors
By CRISSA SHOEMAKER DEBREE
Bucks County Courier Times
Senior citizens living in Bucks and Montgomery counties need almost twice their annual Social Security payments to live comfortably in their homes — and that's if they're healthy.
In fact, the two counties are behind only Chester as the most expensive counties for seniors to live in, according to the Elder Economic Security Standard, a joint publication between a national nonprofit group and university researchers.
You don't have to tell Pauline Bailey that. The 83-year-old widow from Warrington relies solely on Social Security.
“I cut down on what I can,” she said. “But you can only do so much.”
Bailey volunteers at the Benjamin Wilson Senior Community Center in Warminster, where she goes twice a week for lunch. She keeps the heat low and has cut back on errands.
But that doesn't help when she's paying $4.79 a gallon for heating oil. It cost her almost $800 to fill half a tank — and gasoline is just as high.
According to the Elder Economic Security Standard, a Bucks County resident like Bailey — a single senior living in a home she owns mortgage-free — needs $20,701 a year just to pay basic living expenses. The average Social Security payment, meanwhile, is $14,053.
“This is as fixed [an income] as you can get,” said Neil Fisher, director of the Warminster senior center.
Somerset County in southwestern Pennsylvania and Union County in central Pennsylvania were the cheapest counties in the state to live in. An individual senior still paying a mortgage could get by in both counties with $18,324 a year. A couple in the same situation would need $26,491. Both those amounts are still several thousand dollars more than the average Social Security payment, the index says.
Wider Opportunities for Women, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit, launched the Elder Economic Security Initiative in 2005. The ultimate goal is to have a national database on living costs for every county in the U.S., said Ramsey Alwin, the initiative's director.
The index was developed by the organization and the Gerontology Institute at the University of Massachusetts-Boston.
In Pennsylvania, the organization is partnered with Pathways PA and the United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania.
For seniors in good health, the greatest expense is housing, Alwin said. But their costs of living can triple quickly if they fall ill, she said. Adding home-based assistance or going into a nursing home can add $6,514 to $35,241 a year to a senior's cost in Bucks County, the index shows.
“Some of this data oftentimes is not a surprise to some of the direct-service providers,” Alwin said. “But it does quantify what they've known to be true for a long time, and plays a critical role in helping seniors identify [that] it's not their fault. They're suffering in silence, not wanting to go get help. It's very clear that their incomes are coming up short.”
Alwin said the index doesn't include small luxuries like leisure spending.
“It is a barebones budget,” she said. “It doesn't include gifts for the grandchildren, a night out for pizza, or [a movie at] Blockbuster. It's true income and health security.”
Brian Duke, director of the Area Agency on Aging in Bucks County, said the number of seniors struggling financially is increasing. The agency connects them to services for help.
“We have heard stories of people that have been challenged with day-to-day living expenses,” he said. “We try to assist them here.”
Alwin said the goal of the initiative is to help seniors make informed financial decisions, and to help policy makers shape programs to assist seniors.
Daniel Goldsmith of Horsham said something has to be done about gas prices.
The 76-year-old retiree said it's becoming increasingly difficult to live on what he gets from Social Security, a pension from Lockheed Martin and interest on savings.
The pension never increases, the interest on his savings is decreasing and Social Security isn't rising fast enough to cover price increases in food and other necessities, he said.
“I have enough to survive, but it's becoming tougher and tougher and tougher,” he said. “Everything is going up. But my income is not increasing that much. At some point, I'm not going to be able to make ends meet anymore. Then what will I do?”
Where to get help
If you're a senior in need of financial or other assistance, contact the Bucks County Area Agency on Aging at 215-348-0510 or the Montgomery County Office of Aging and Adult Services at 610-278-3601.
On the Web
Find out more about the Elder Economic Security Initiative at http://www.pathwayspa.org/.
I'm not indifferent to the plight of the elderly. I once lived next door to an old widow. She had been in her home since the mid 1940s, and alone since her husband died in the mid 1970s. I knew her for about the last ten years of her life. My family, and the other neighbors, did what we could. We made sure her walks and driveway were shoveled and the grass mowed. We invited her to dinners in a round robin format so that at least one or two full meals a week were a guarantee, in addition to the Meals on Wheels she received. We did repairs on her house as if it was our own.
She should have moved into an assisted living facility, but the waiting list was too long and once she got to the top, even with selling her house, the price was too much to bear. She was not on good terms with her children and steadfastly refused the many entreaties from them for her to come live with them. It would have meant a move to Kentucky or Oregon depending on the child she chose, but she wanted her own home.
Was that a smart decision? I don't know. It wasn't my decision to make. I think emotion played a much larger role in this decision than a clearheaded and sober evaluation of the realities.
Retirement planning is a tricky piece of work. Many a nest egg was wiped out in the Great Depression, the 1970s recession, and other lesser economic downturns. It will be no different this time around. The economic laws are pretty brutal and inflexible.
Retirement is something that lives in a galaxy far, far away. Until the day it knocks on the door and shouts, "Surprise!" Americans in general are the proverbial grasshopper, not saving for a rainy day, but existing in the present. As the Boomers edge into retirement, I wonder how many of them are ready. I've already seen too many people mentioning that they will need to work until they die.
The answer is not to starve and to price fixed income seniors out of their own homes. But is the answer to provide handouts at the expense of the rest of the community? The Social Security taxes I pay are crippling on their own, and what will be my return on that money? My estimates are zero, and falling. The home mortgage speculators are looking for government handouts to bail them out of their greedy short sighted decisions. The homeowners who bought more house than they could afford also need to be held accountable. I'd like to tell them all to take a flying leap. They made their beds and didn't share the gains when times were good. Why do they want a handout now when times are bad?
Do you have any solutions?
Bucks a pricey place to live for seniors
By CRISSA SHOEMAKER DEBREE
Bucks County Courier Times
Senior citizens living in Bucks and Montgomery counties need almost twice their annual Social Security payments to live comfortably in their homes — and that's if they're healthy.
In fact, the two counties are behind only Chester as the most expensive counties for seniors to live in, according to the Elder Economic Security Standard, a joint publication between a national nonprofit group and university researchers.
You don't have to tell Pauline Bailey that. The 83-year-old widow from Warrington relies solely on Social Security.
“I cut down on what I can,” she said. “But you can only do so much.”
Bailey volunteers at the Benjamin Wilson Senior Community Center in Warminster, where she goes twice a week for lunch. She keeps the heat low and has cut back on errands.
But that doesn't help when she's paying $4.79 a gallon for heating oil. It cost her almost $800 to fill half a tank — and gasoline is just as high.
According to the Elder Economic Security Standard, a Bucks County resident like Bailey — a single senior living in a home she owns mortgage-free — needs $20,701 a year just to pay basic living expenses. The average Social Security payment, meanwhile, is $14,053.
“This is as fixed [an income] as you can get,” said Neil Fisher, director of the Warminster senior center.
Somerset County in southwestern Pennsylvania and Union County in central Pennsylvania were the cheapest counties in the state to live in. An individual senior still paying a mortgage could get by in both counties with $18,324 a year. A couple in the same situation would need $26,491. Both those amounts are still several thousand dollars more than the average Social Security payment, the index says.
Wider Opportunities for Women, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit, launched the Elder Economic Security Initiative in 2005. The ultimate goal is to have a national database on living costs for every county in the U.S., said Ramsey Alwin, the initiative's director.
The index was developed by the organization and the Gerontology Institute at the University of Massachusetts-Boston.
In Pennsylvania, the organization is partnered with Pathways PA and the United Way of Southeastern Pennsylvania.
For seniors in good health, the greatest expense is housing, Alwin said. But their costs of living can triple quickly if they fall ill, she said. Adding home-based assistance or going into a nursing home can add $6,514 to $35,241 a year to a senior's cost in Bucks County, the index shows.
“Some of this data oftentimes is not a surprise to some of the direct-service providers,” Alwin said. “But it does quantify what they've known to be true for a long time, and plays a critical role in helping seniors identify [that] it's not their fault. They're suffering in silence, not wanting to go get help. It's very clear that their incomes are coming up short.”
Alwin said the index doesn't include small luxuries like leisure spending.
“It is a barebones budget,” she said. “It doesn't include gifts for the grandchildren, a night out for pizza, or [a movie at] Blockbuster. It's true income and health security.”
Brian Duke, director of the Area Agency on Aging in Bucks County, said the number of seniors struggling financially is increasing. The agency connects them to services for help.
“We have heard stories of people that have been challenged with day-to-day living expenses,” he said. “We try to assist them here.”
Alwin said the goal of the initiative is to help seniors make informed financial decisions, and to help policy makers shape programs to assist seniors.
Daniel Goldsmith of Horsham said something has to be done about gas prices.
The 76-year-old retiree said it's becoming increasingly difficult to live on what he gets from Social Security, a pension from Lockheed Martin and interest on savings.
The pension never increases, the interest on his savings is decreasing and Social Security isn't rising fast enough to cover price increases in food and other necessities, he said.
“I have enough to survive, but it's becoming tougher and tougher and tougher,” he said. “Everything is going up. But my income is not increasing that much. At some point, I'm not going to be able to make ends meet anymore. Then what will I do?”
Where to get help
If you're a senior in need of financial or other assistance, contact the Bucks County Area Agency on Aging at 215-348-0510 or the Montgomery County Office of Aging and Adult Services at 610-278-3601.
On the Web
Find out more about the Elder Economic Security Initiative at http://www.pathwayspa.org/.
BCTHS Funding Discussion
Proposed funding formula revisions to be discussed Tuesday
Posted in News
on Saturday, May 17th, 2008 at 4:36 pm by Joan Hellyer
Members of the Bucks County Technical High School’s governing body will try Tuesday night to make some progress on revising the comprehensive tech school’s funding formula.
A proposal has been under consideration for several months where the special education part of the formula would go from a charge for each sending district based on a percentage to a charge based on actual usage. But not all of the six sending districts are in favor of the change.
BCTHS serves the Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy, and Pennsbury school districts.
The joint board’s implementation/assessment committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the tech school off Wistar Road in Bristol Township to see what can be done to try to reach some resolution, officials said.
The implementation/assessment meeting will be followed at 8 p.m. by the joint board committee’s regular voting session. Call 215-949-1700 for more information.
Posted in News
on Saturday, May 17th, 2008 at 4:36 pm by Joan Hellyer
Members of the Bucks County Technical High School’s governing body will try Tuesday night to make some progress on revising the comprehensive tech school’s funding formula.
A proposal has been under consideration for several months where the special education part of the formula would go from a charge for each sending district based on a percentage to a charge based on actual usage. But not all of the six sending districts are in favor of the change.
BCTHS serves the Bensalem, Bristol, Bristol Township, Morrisville, Neshaminy, and Pennsbury school districts.
The joint board’s implementation/assessment committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the tech school off Wistar Road in Bristol Township to see what can be done to try to reach some resolution, officials said.
The implementation/assessment meeting will be followed at 8 p.m. by the joint board committee’s regular voting session. Call 215-949-1700 for more information.
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