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The Strength Of Our Seniors Will Equal Their Days

homeless seniorIn San Francisco, nearly one in three people over 75 years old lives in poverty. This is more any other county in California. Not L.A. with its massive urban poverty, not Tulare with its thousands of low-income farm workers, not Humboldt with its devastating unemployment. San Francisco, one of the wealthiest cities in the wealthy U.S.

In the Tenderloin, over 15,000 people live below the federal poverty line. One in six of these are seniors.

More than 76% of seniors survive on smaller monthly incomes as a result of the Social Security cost of living adjustment being denied. In 2009, 92% of seniors’ monthly expenses increased by $40 to $120 while their income did not increase at all.

Nearly half said they were having trouble paying their electrical and utility bills. They made up the difference in hospital and doctors visits.

As my colleague Jen puts it, seniors are no longer living on a fixed income. They’re living on a shrinking income.

That’s why so many programs at St. Anthony’s take special care when it comes to seniors. The Dining Room, the Free Clothing Program, the Social Work Center all provide special services for senior guests. In the Dining Room, Guest Services staff keep on eye on the elderly and flag a social worker when a senior begins not to look well. Social workers check in with seniors to make sure that their safety, health, and well being are being tended to.

The Dining Room also hosts a monthly Senior Brown Bag Program which provides meat, fresh produce, and non-perishable food items, as well as a monthly Emergency Food Assistance Program disbursement, using food supplied by the Federal government. St. Anthony’s has opened an Emergency Clothing Closet upstairs from the Dining Room, crucial for elderly people who have trouble walking the four city blocks to the regular Free Clothing Program.

The Social Work Center helps seniors secure a consistent source of nutritious food, safe housing, benefits, medical care, and money management. It’s a delicate balance of a person’s self-sufficiency, St. Anthony’s support to maintain it, and an intervention available if needed.

We’re all seniors in training, as Fitz, another St. Anthony’s colleague, used to say. One day we’ll be grateful to receive respect from those who also give us help.

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