Our older people deserve better

Letter to the Editor.

I wrote a letter to a legislator recently. It was very important to me

and to others in the same predicament. I liked her actions before but I

received no answer. I can hear the excuses, short 60-day session; busy, busy

(what have they done?); staff didn’t give her the letter (it was marked “Personal”).

It concerns long-term care. The state pays workers to assist

low-income clients to stay in their homes like they want to do, and saves the cost

of putting them in boarding homes.

I have not had a chore worker for months. I am eligible, 84 years

old, live alone, low- to poverty-level income, have emphysema, arthritis,

gallstones, and acid reflux. My last two trips to the drug store cost $111

and $126. I cannot afford health insurance. They cannot keep chore workers

because they pay $6.68 an hour, no health insurance, no perks. The

only ones who pay less are the sweatshops and farm laborers.

I received a raise in Social Security check in January, $16 a

month. That won’t buy a sack of groceries, or make a down payment on a

prescription.

Legislators and Congress get raises in the thousands. The President’s

(salary) was doubled. They get great health insurance and pension

plans plus other perks, for life. The Pentagon orders planes the Air

Force doesn’t want or need. NASA sends missiles to Mars, the last cost

$165 million, all flops. Another is planned and a manned expedition.

In this Washington one sport stadium was destroyed to be replaced

by two obscenely expensive ones. One the people voted no, too.

In my life I have worked, paid taxes, voted and done volunteer

work to give something back to the community. I was den mother for Cub

Scouts for three and a half years, representative for Red Cross collection for

two years, chairman of a drive to send our hometown doctor to the World

Series (huge success). I have taken up collection for people in distress,

illness, hospital, and death. I have been on the planning commission, on the

election board, now I volunteer at the Sno-Valley Senior Center. I served two

terms on the board of directors, as a receptionist, made R.S.V.P. calls,

birthday calls.

Poor health has narrowed that down to two raffles a month to

benefit the seniors. I could never do enough to repay the center for what it has

done for me. It is such a big part of my life.

It is difficult to ask for assistance, give out personal information over

and over. Occasionally you get a worker who is mean, bossy and hard to

take. To those who think it couldn’t happen to you, that’s what I thought. It

can happen to anybody.

Who would want to go to a boarding home? Remodeled old homes,

no overhead sprinklers, no batteries in smoke detectors, poorly trained

employees who allow patients to die from lack of treatment for bed sores, kill

a patient by putting her in scalding water, allow an 80-year-old man to

be sexually abused for a long period of time. These boarding homes are

overseen by DSHS, whose excuse is not enough inspectors. Our older

people deserve better. We have paid our dues and shouldn’t be considered

throw-aways.

When I read and hear about the waste in all levels of government,

I wonder why can’t I have four hours chore service a week and stay in

my own place like I want to. And it would be great if I didn’t have to give

out personal information over and over. Then I could manage to keep

what little pride and dignity I have left.

MARGUERITE ENSLEY

Carnation