On October 26, 2022

Funding for area seniors hasn’t kept pace with costs, needs

By Mark Boutwell

Editor’s note: Mark Boutwell is executive director of Senior Solutions, the Council on Aging in Southeastern Vermont, headquartered in Springfield, Vermont.

The upcoming state and national elections offer voters a chance to reset priorities and focus on true pockets of need, one of which is providing for older adults.

Federal funding for the Older Americans Act—which gets passed to the state of Vermont and then to the five area agencies on aging, including senior solutions—pays for everything from Meals on Wheels to our busy information and assistance helpline.

Federal money and state general funds for Seniors Solutions have increased by less than 2% in the last five years.

At the same time, the growing senior population throughout the 46 towns in the Senior Solutions service area and the skyrocketing cost of food have created a funding crisis for area Meals on Wheels programs which are run through the region’s meal sites and senior centers.

According to the most recent federal census data, 23% of Windsor County residents are age 65 and older, up from 15.5% in the 2010 census. And 6% of that senior population lives at or below the federal poverty level, which for a two-person household is $17,240. Many of these older Vermonters receive nutritious dinners delivered by Meals on Wheels volunteers.

With the widening gap in funding and the growing senior population, the meal sites and senior centers which Senior Solutions helps fund in our service area are being financially squeezed and end up having to do a lot more with much less funding.

As we come out of the pandemic, we are experiencing an increased need for senior meals. Over the past couple years, the number of meal deliveries across this area have jumped by more than 30%. At the same time, inflation has pushed food, materials and labor costs up dramatically. Let me repeat that: during the same time period, the dollars that Senior Solutions has available to allocate to nutrition programs has increased by less than 2%.

Some savings may be achieved by screening recipients who no longer meet eligibility guidelines out of the Meals on Wheels program, but these savings won’t fill the funding shortfall for meal sites such as the Thompson Senior Center in Woodstock which is courageously maintaining its Meals on Wheels clients. This shortfall forces the meal sites to have to step up their local fundraising to close the gap and meet that need.

Here’s where you come in.

Press the candidates for the Vermont Legislature and U.S. Congress to be clear about what they will do to increase state and Older Americans Act funding. In Windsor County, with one of the highest percentages of older Vermonters in a state ranked third in the nation for its aging population, we can’t continue to get by on the existing funding levels.

We must provide more assistance to our aging parents, neighbors, and friends. For some Meals on Wheels recipients, the person who delivers what could be their only nourishing meal of the day might also be their only contact with the outside world.

Help us find solutions for our seniors so that we can keep these crucial connections in place.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Sen. Williams—we will not ‘get over it’

January 15, 2025
Dear Editor, The new vice-chair of Senate Natural Resources, Terry Williams, kicked off the legislative session with a rude and dismissive response to a constituent’s concerns about trapping. A constituent wrote Williams a polite, lengthy email outlining various concerns with trapping—Williams’ response: “Get over it...” Sure, Williams lists trapping as one of his recreational pastimes on the Legislature’s…

Vermont’s housing crisis: A call for decisive action

January 15, 2025
By Miro Weinberger Editor’s note: Miro Weinberger is a former mayor of Burlington (2012-2024) and a former affordable housing developer. He is currently a Visiting Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School’s Taubman Center. Abundant housing is the cornerstone of an affordable, vibrant, and inclusive Vermont. Yet today, that vision of our beloved state is at risk…

Vaccines are our lifeboats

January 15, 2025
Dear Editor, Dreaded diseases that we have forgotten about because vaccines have eliminated them are threatening to return. Along with public health and sanitation efforts, vaccines are the single most lifesaving interventions in the history of medicine. Before vaccines, 10% of infants were dying of what are now preventable diseases; 30%-40% of children did not…

Overcomplicated or simple, the message must still deliver

January 15, 2025
Dear Editor, Since the November election, many Vermont Democrats have been reflecting on the results and lessons learned. To some, a significant problem was messaging. A funny thing about Democrats is that we often can’t stop explaining everything. “If only we could explain [insert idea/program/policy here] in a way that people could really understand, they…