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International Association of Homes and Services for the Ageing
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The Long-term Care Solution Project
AAHSA's Long-term Care Solution Project

Feb. 4, 2008

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Contacts:
Lauren Shaham, AAHSA, 202-508-1219

Statement from Larry Minnix, President and CEO, American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging on the President’s FY2009 Budget

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The budget proposal President Bush submitted to Congress today sets out priorities that are completely at odds with the tremendous growth in this country’s aging population.

America’s elders deserve an aging-services system that will enable them to receive the services they need, when they need them, in the place they call home.

Yet, at a time when there are 10 older people on a waiting list for every federally-subsidized Section 202 housing unit that becomes available, the President’s budget proposal would cut funding by $195 million, or 25 percent. The President’s budget also falls short of providing sufficient funds to renew all project-based Section 8 accounts.

The members of the Greatest Generation now are in their 80s and 90s. They are nursing home residents, older people and their families living at home, many with dementia, Parkinson's disease or other serious chronic conditions. They need a wide array of health care services, both in nursing homes and in the community.

And yet the President is proposing to cut $28 billion out of Medicare over the next five years by denying skilled nursing facilities and home health agencies any inflation adjustment in their payments. This cut would remove the resources that long-term care providers need to cover the costs of qualified staff and other essential elements of quality.

Furthermore, we fear the automatic triggering of a 0.4 percent across-the-board Medicare payment cut if, as appears likely, general tax revenues are about to exceed 45 percent of Medicare funding.

We support the Bush Administration’s initiatives giving older people more choices to receive care in the community. And yet the budget proposal would hold even important service programs such as congregate and home-delivered meals and family caregiver support at current levels, without adjusting for the rapid growth in the elderly population. Social Services Block Grants, an important source of funding for adult day services, would be cut by 30 percent below current funding, and Alzheimer’s Disease demonstration grants would be zeroed out of the budget.

AAHSA and its members call on Congress to reject these damaging proposals and help us create the integrated, healthy and affordable system of aging services that will meet the needs of the Greatest Generation and those who follow after them.


About AAHSA
The members of the American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (www.aahsa.org) help millions of individuals and their families every day through mission-driven, not-for-profit organizations dedicated to providing the services that people need, when they need them, in the place they call home. Our 5,800 member organizations, many of which have served their communities for generations, offer the continuum of aging services: adult day services, home health, community services, senior housing, assisted living residences, continuing care retirement communities and nursing homes. AAHSA’s commitment is to create the future of aging services through quality people can trust.

Last Updated : 2/5/2008 11:32:16 AM

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American Association of Homes and Services for the Aging
2519 Connecticut Ave., NW, Washington, D.C. 20008
phone 202.783.2242, fax 202.783.2255