Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Main Page Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Feedback Page Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Sitemap Page Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Main Homepage  |  Bookmark Us!
 
Search investors site:  
 
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Navigation Global Investors Community
 
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community World Exchanges Global Investors Community Forex
Global Investors Community Futures Global Investors Community Market News
Global Investors Community Community Forum Global Investors Community Investing Books
Global Investors Community Personal Finance Global Investors Community Retirement Planning
Global Investors Community Strategy Central Global Investors Community Help
Global Investors Community Link Exchange Global Investors Community Contact Us
 
Global Investors Community
  Login: Password:  
    Registration   Forgot your password?    
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
HELLO VISITOR!
Welcome to MoneyHowTo.com - Global Investors Community website. Our mission is to provide you guys as much information as possible about worlds markets and growing economies with high return on investment possibilities.READ MORE.. or check out our SITEMAP
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Poll

Perfect
Good
Not bad
Worse than it was
Not good
Terrible

Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
«    April 2008    »
 
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
 
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community May 2012 (13)
April 2012 (20)
March 2012 (76)
February 2012 (62)
January 2012 (31)
December 2011 (125)
November 2011 (242)
October 2011 (66)
September 2011 (24)
August 2011 (7)
July 2011 (13)
June 2011 (3)
May 2011 (1)
April 2011 (6)
March 2011 (3)
February 2011 (15)
December 2009 (3)
November 2009 (4)
October 2009 (9)
September 2009 (26)
August 2009 (15)
July 2009 (22)
June 2009 (31)
May 2009 (5)
March 2009 (1)
February 2009 (3)
January 2009 (6)
December 2008 (2)
November 2008 (8)
October 2008 (32)
September 2008 (38)
August 2008 (40)
July 2008 (43)
June 2008 (46)
May 2008 (50)
April 2008 (54)
March 2008 (52)
February 2008 (59)
January 2008 (88)
December 2007 (52)
November 2007 (71)
October 2007 (62)
September 2007 (45)
August 2007 (101)
July 2007 (119)
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community Currently Online:
Members: 6
CrargeitedauyGeaplequete
JaillKigtipkesAnert
ritsbainnerneunjoaxked

Robots: 2
Baidu SpiderGooglebot

Guests: 24
Total: 32

Last 24 Hours:
Users: 20
ArrateElagoleavbnllkwd
davidcowandawmduemfurry
fkapzehatflnyxalpe
joebarbeledmohammadsayloe2
mortwouraJGNsolevssGlissia
parnirisPsypeCoeddy
rubenpiratesamsungli
temadyepayLetTteinbachy3
tysonmasticuwxpmrgwr
wakefulinjury6walterkelp


MoneyHowTo.com Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community
Top Contributors:
  1    gdz 1074
  2    iamtossya-elli 522
  3    danbdan 98
  4    THETMZ 37
  5    kostikla 36
  6    Loinefok 3
  7    carmen1 3
  8    clavin123456 1
  9    antonpetrikov 1
  10    Seomaniyaq 1


Articles:
  This Hour: 0
  Today: 0
  This Month: 22
  All Time: 1794


Membership:
  Registered Today :1981
  This Hour:78
  This Month:45840
  Total:233155
  Banned:0
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community
Global Investors Community Global Investors Community » Professional bodybuilding
» Investing Directory
Global Investors Community


Global Investors Community
MoneyHowTo.com Global Investors Community. Making Money Instructions » Retirement Planning » Staying Put in Suburbia: Programs Target Retirees

HOT INVESTORS DISCUSSIONS

Forum
Post titleViewsReplies
??????????19447
how to get a priligy no rx cheap05
?????????? ?? ??????? ? ????02
michael kors handbags Type Fantastic00
In my experience to share with you01
?????? ???? ?&102
dating gorgeous 704
??????? ??? ? ?????? ????07
???????? ??????????? ? ????????? ????????2410
pozycjonowanie, pozycjonowanie stron27151

Staying Put in Suburbia: Programs Target Retirees

Retirement Planning
Family-Friendly 'Burbs Turn Senior Friendly
by Leah Dobkin
Friday, April 4, 2008
provided by Kiplinger.com


Programs provide chefs, home repair and other services to help suburban seniors age in place.

The staircase in Adele Youngblood's two-story house in the Minneapolis suburbs is a daily challenge. The 76-year-old, who's had back and knee surgeries and a hip replacement, crawls up and down the stairs using her hands as well as her feet. But Youngblood refuses to move from the home where she has lived since 1963 and raised her three children. "I get a lot of flak from my friends about moving," says Youngblood, who has been divorced since 1979. "I tell them to be quiet. It's my decision, and they know I am happier in my home."

Thanks largely to a program run by the Jewish Family and Children's Service of Minneapolis, Youngblood has been able to continue living in memory-filled surroundings. The program arranged for a walker for each floor, grab bars in the shower and an emergency button if she needs help.

This program is part of a growing movement nationwide to help aging suburbanites like Youngblood stay in their homes safely for as long as possible. About 90% of retirees and 80% of baby-boomers say they want to remain in their longtime neighborhoods indefinitely, according to an AARP survey.

Like many seniors, Youngblood moved to the suburbs when her kids were young. But now those family-friendly communities of the 1960s are graying and becoming what's known as naturally occurring retirement communities, or NORCs. Following this generation are their children. "More baby-boomers have lived in the suburbs than any other generation, and the majority will continue to age in place or move within their same community," says William Frey, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and author of a report, Mapping the Growth of Older America: Seniors and Boomers in the Early 21st Century. Frey says they'll require health care, transportation, social services and other public aid.

Many community planners believe that aging-in-place programs could help many elderly homeowners avoid institutional care. More than 100 programs exist in places as diverse as Boston's Beacon Hill, New Canaan, Conn., Madison, Wis., and the Indianapolis suburbs. Often, it's the small, inexpensive service -- a ride to a doctor's appointment or home-delivered groceries -- that can make all the difference.

The program that helps Youngblood was developed in 2003, when the Jewish Family and Children's Service received nearly $1.2 million in federal and state grants to test strategies for helping seniors in the suburbs of St. Louis Park and Hopkins remain in their homes. The project helps make seniors aware of existing aid. "The community is rich in resources, but people do not know what they are, how to access them or who qualifies for them," says Annette Sandler, the project coordinator.

Local seniors helped produce a directory that includes transportation services, home-care agencies and even hairstylists who make house calls. They also created a cable TV program on topics such as health-care directives and fall prevention. Besides helping to run the program, seniors also volunteer their services to other aging-in-place residents. They teach classes, deliver meals and drive other seniors to appointments.

The Minnesota program has enlisted many nonprofit groups, businesses and government agencies. For example, it started a Community Chore Day to help older people with home-maintenance tasks. Now the Rotary Club is taking the lead, and local schools are offering community-service credits to high school students who volunteer.

The Challenge of the Suburbs

Aging-in-place programs got their start in 1986 in Penn South, a ten-building apartment complex in Manhattan. Residents and local social-service agencies created the program after an 84-year-old woman with dementia wandered onto a roof and died of exposure. "This event spoke personally to residents about their vulnerability," says Fredda Vladeck, who helped develop the program, which operates a center at the complex, and is now director of the Aging in Place Initiative at the United Hospital Fund.

Because Penn South residents live in a compact area, it's relatively easy to deliver services. More difficult are suburban communities, where thousands of seniors live in single-family homes spread out over many streets and neighborhoods.

In 2004, an agency in the Indianapolis suburbs met this challenge by buying a house in one of the neighborhoods and turning it into the program's office. "Our front door looks like their front door," says Lori Moss, coordinator of ElderSource, a program of the Jewish Federation of Greater Indianapolis. "We had to build rapport with residents. So being physically in their neighborhood makes a big difference."

ElderSource created Elder-Friendly Communities, which covers an area of mostly two-story, three-bedroom homes built 40 to 50 years ago. "Our program works in the suburbs because we literally went door-to-door to introduce ourselves," says Claudette Einhorn, chairperson for ElderSource. Elder-Friendly Communities' vendors, such as drivers and gardeners, offer discounts from 5% to 50%. The program charges an annual membership fee of $120.

Beyond the support services, the program provides social and educational activities. George Bond, 70, and his wife, Evagene, 71, both retired writers, have gone on trips to apple orchards and museums with many of their neighbors, who are close in age. George belongs to a men's group that is drawing up a plan to improve accessibility at a nearby park.

The Bonds moved from Peterborough, N.H., to the Indianapolis suburbs for a job ten years ago. "We have formed relationships that appear to be growing deeper," Evagene says. She notes that the program could "create a support system as we age."

In some communities, the residents themselves are creating aging-in-place programs. If you're interested in starting one, look at Staying Put in New Canaan (www.stayingputnc.org), a program modeled on Boston's Beacon Hill Village. Both programs are nonprofit membership organizations created by local residents.

In April 2006, several New Canaan residents met to discuss whether the Beacon Hill Village model could be adapted to their own community. Soon after the meeting, the city government released a survey on the needs of older residents. With the findings in hand, the core group decided to create Staying Put.

After several neighborhood meetings, residents set up a board of directors and filed papers to become a nonprofit organization. The core group sent a survey to those on their mailing list to determine possible service offerings. In early October 2007, 275 people attended a "kickoff" of the program, which started officially in January '08.

Jane Nyce, Staying Put's executive director, recommends that a board of directors should include individuals with business experience and connections to town services and other nonprofits. "We could turn to experts on our board for advice on all the key elements," she says. The experts included a lawyer who helped incorporate, public-relations professionals who promoted the program and individuals with fund-raising experience. For more information on establishing an aging-in-place initiative, you can order a manual at www.beaconhillvillage.org.

Copyrighted, Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc.


Related articles:
  • World's 65 and older population to triple by 2050
  • Getting Paid for Good Deeds
  • Home Upgrades With Appeal for Retirees
  • Reverse Mortgages Get More Attractive
  • 5 Ways Going Gray Can Pay
  •  
    Dear MoneyHowTo.com visitor, you are browsing this website as a guest. We recommend you to register in order to enter MoneyHowTo.com under your name and have all the privilleges that our members have. You may CLICK HERE in order to register.

    Global Investors Community
    Global Investors Community