Alaska Pioneer Home resident Phyllis Woodman, right, receives a cone of ice cream from employee Myra Kalbaugh during the home’s weekly ice cream social on Friday, March 8, 2019. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

Alaska Pioneer Home resident Phyllis Woodman, right, receives a cone of ice cream from employee Myra Kalbaugh during the home’s weekly ice cream social on Friday, March 8, 2019. (Michael Penn | Juneau Empire)

Opinion: Don’t turn our heads away from our elders

There is an apparent contempt for the oldest members of our community.

  • By Ken Helander
  • Sunday, July 14, 2019 3:16pm
  • Opinion

On his 100th birthday, Tlingit pastor Dr. Walter Soboleff advised youth at the Alaska Federation of Natives convention. In a 2011 KTOO story, he recalled his message: “I was in the fifth grade and the teacher said … ‘Take care of the old person you’re going to become.’ And I thought what a funny talk to give us. But I never forgot it. It was one of the best messages I’ve ever heard. Take care of the old person you’re going to become. Here I am.”

This is the current notice on the state’s DHSS website: “July 1, 2019 – Under the FY 2020 budget signed by Governor Dunleavy, the Alaska Senior Benefits Payment Program will end July 1 and payments for FY2020 will not occur. With the state facing the challenge of aligning current state revenues with state expenditures, this program is being eliminated to contain costs and reduce dependence of individuals on state funds. Repealing the Senior Benefits Payment program will reduce the administrative and financial burden on state resources.”

This shows blatant disregard of proper notice — some poor elders will immediately and permanently lose up to 25% of their monthly income. And it will not “reduce dependence of individuals on state funds.” The individuals in question are dependent, not because of state funds, but because age has a tendency to do this to all who live long enough. Low income seniors will not suddenly become less dependent by abruptly losing a crucial source of financial security …. without notice.

The governor says it shouldn’t be a problem for these low-income, vulnerable older Alaskans because they will get a larger PFD. However:

• These seniors must go through July, August, September, perhaps part of October, before they see a PFD. They live month to month, count every penny, and we expect them to sustain the impact of losing up to $1,000 over that time?

• The loss of this crucial support acts as a tax specifically on the poorest and oldest of Alaskans. No other Alaskans are penalized like this – no one else must give up a chunk of their income to receive a PFD.

• Many forgo a PFD altogether so they’re not ineligible for income-based assistance like food and heating programs.

• Dunleavey says this will “reduce the administrative and financial burden on state resources.” The most any SBP beneficiary receives is $250/month. If that person can no longer afford to live independently and must move out of their home and into assisted living, the cost would be somewhere between $4,000-$9,000/month. Skilled nursing care (nursing home) costs close to $25,000/month in Alaska. Most often this cost is assumed by the state Medicaid program. No reduction of administrative and financial burden here.

In all of this, there is an apparent contempt for the oldest members of our community. Some call them “the aging.” But Dunleavy is aging; the OMB director is aging; commissioners are aging; all the legislators are aging; Republicans and Democrats and unaffiliated are all aging; liberals and conservatives are all aging; people of every color and gender are aging; children are aging; the wealthy and the needy are aging; workers and business owners are aging; neighbors and friends are aging; petroleum workers and farmers are aging; doctors and mechanics are aging. In fact, nobody is not aging. All of us, every Alaskan, is aging just as fast as the other. And someday that senior who could have sustained themselves independently with the Senior Benefit income help, that person will be you or me.

We should not turn our heads away from our elders. We should not treat them as burdensome. We should look beyond the dependencies and pay very close attention to them. We should learn everything we possibly can from them. We should take care of the old person we’re going to become.


• Ken Helander is the Advocacy Director of AARP Alaska. My Turns and Letters to the Editor represent the view of the author, not the view of the Juneau Empire.


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