One minute, you’re young and fun. And the next, you’re turning down the stereo in your car to see better.
Harry Kiesler
Whoops … Shelly Schwartz
Seeing a homeless guy begging on the street, a woman took pity on him and gave him a handful of change.
“Thank you,” said the homeless man. “Your generosity is much appreciated. You know, my life used to be great, but just look at the state of me now.”
“How do you mean?” asked the woman.
“Well,” he explained. “I was a multi-millionaire. I had bank accounts all over the world with hundreds of thousands of dollars deposited in each.”
“So where did it all go wrong?” she asked.
The homeless man sighed, “I forgot my mother’s maiden name.”
AARP January Meeting … Margaret Schieck and Paul Levine
The speaker for our January 19, 2021, meeting will be Jan Masters. She was born in Alameda and raised as an Air Force brat in various states and countries. That probably accounts for her interests in languages, travel and cultural history. She has a BA in art history from UC Santa Barbara and a MA in art history from San Jose State.
She has had 3 professional careers. Her first was teaching art history at West Valley College. Her second (some 30 years) was in marketing communications and technical writing for several semiconductor firms in Silicon Valley. Her current career (11 years) is teaching non-credit art history, music history and other cultural history classes for the Older Adults Program of West Valley College.
Topic for the meeting:
—Introduction of the Older Adults Program: purpose and benefits to participants.
—Summary of Spring Program via Zoom.
—Plans for the future.
Say Happy New Year Around the World … Angie Jaggars
French: Bonne Annee
German: Prosit Neujahr
Italian: Buon Capodanno
Portuguese: Felix Ano Novo
Vietnamese: Cung-Chuc Tan-Xuan
Dutch: Gullukkig Niuw Jaar
Thoughts on Aging … Shelly Schwartz
– The aging process could be slowed down if it had to work its way through Congress.
– You’re getting old when you’re sitting in a rocker and you can’t get it started.
– You’re getting old when you wake up with that morning-after feeling, and you didn’t do anything the night before.
Opportunity Drawing … Sharon Levine
The Opportunity Prize winner for December was Thelma Bridges: $10 Target gift card.
The Prize for January is a $15 Amazon gift card courtesy of Sharon & Paul Levine.
Community Service … Leona Fails
Please mail your volunteer hours to: 1443 Antonio Lane, San Jose, CA 95117, or email to leonafails@sbcglobal.net.
Membership … Shelly Schwartz
Don’t forget to send in your Membership dues for 2021. They’re due now. Membership application is in this issue of the Dispatch. Wishing you all a safe, healthy, and happy new year. See you on Zoom in January.
Legislative News … Daniel Nnorth and Claudia Schott
It looks as if we will all get our covid stimulus checks, albeit smaller than anticipated. Thank the extra addendums, riders that were added to the original bill. The president tried to get bigger checks, but here is what is in the bill:
- Stimulus payments: Americans will receive up to $600 per child and adult.
- Unemployment benefits: Two expiring CARES Act programs were extended for another 11 weeks: Unemployment Assistance and Emergency Compensation.
- PPP: The Payment Protection Program is given another $284 billion.
- Housing evictions: The moratorium for evictions was extended through the end of January.
- Schools: The bill gives $82 billion to schools and colleges.
- Testing: The agreement includes $20 billion for the purchase of vaccines, $8 billion for vaccine distribution, $20 billion for states to conduct testing and $20 billion for health care providers.
- Transportation: $45 billion for transportation, including $16 billion for support of airlines, employees, and contractors, $14 billion for transit systems, $10 billion for highways, $2 billion for intercity buses, $2 billion for airports and $1 billion for Amtrak.
- Tax provisions: There are a host of tax provisions, targeted both at individuals and businesses.
So, we have a lot to look forward to, including president-elect Biden being sworn in on January 20th.
In practical terms, individuals, families, and communities should see relief in 2021 – from COVID with vaccines, from economic downturn with reenergized commerce, opportunities, and activities.
At AARP, we have many more battles and challenges to look forward to. AARP has and is continuing to address critical Nursing Home issues at the State and Federal Level. We are continuing to raise this issue at the state and national level as immediate action is needed to protect the vulnerable in nursing homes and long-term care facilities.
California’s Impact: From October 2020 data, at least 6,159 nursing home and other long-term care facility residents and staff have died due to COVID-19, or 34% of California’s COVID-19 related deaths are from long-term care facilities (https://covidtracking.com/data/longertermcare). More than 76% of California’s nursing homes had at least one confirmed resident COVID-19 case and at least 37.6% had at least one confirmed staff case.
AARP’s COVID–19 Nursing Home Dashboard has demonstrated that deaths and cases are no longer declining as they did during the summer and in fact resident and staff cases are beginning to increase, presenting a considerable risk to nursing home residents, staff and to their families.
AARP Asks Members to:
- Act NOW to ensure care facilities have adequate staffing, testing, and PPE they need to identify and prevent the spread of COVID-19.
- Act NOW to include guardrails to ensure that taxpayer dollars provided to long-term care facilities are used towards items and services that directly relate to the health and safety of residents and staff.
- Act NOW to take action to ensure facilities are required to report publicly on a daily basis demographic information if they have confirmed COVID-19 cases and deaths.
- Act NOW to take action to make virtual visitation available and facilitated as a safety measure between residents and their families.
- Act NOW to reject blanket immunity for long-term care facilities related to COVID-19.
Please call or write your state and local legislators to keep fighting for Nursing Homes!