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NewsNovember 2, 2007

SIKESTON, Mo. -- An interim committee looking to find ways to improve the health of the state's senior citizens will make a stop in Sikeston next week to obtain testimony from area residents. The hearing will begin at 10:15 a.m. Tuesday at the Sikeston Senior OAKS Center, 305 Cresap St...

By Leonna Heuring ~ Standard Democrat
Rep. Ellen Brandom
Rep. Ellen Brandom

SIKESTON, Mo. -- An interim committee looking to find ways to improve the health of the state's senior citizens will make a stop in Sikeston next week to obtain testimony from area residents.

The hearing will begin at 10:15 a.m. Tuesday at the Sikeston Senior OAKS Center, 305 Cresap St.

The committee was created by the House Speaker Rod Jetton, R-Marble Hill, to look into health and wellness issues related to senior citizens in Missouri and the funding mechanism for regional Area Agencies on Aging and the Meals on Wheels program.

The hearings are an opportunity for people express their ideas about how Missouri can better serve senior citizens, said state Rep. Ellen Brandom, R-Sikeston, who serves as vice chair of the Missouri House of Representatives Interim Committee on Senior Nutrition.

Brandom said the committee has met in several locations and many of the concerns are the same: a lack of funding and a lack of volunteers.

"One of the things this committee is going to look at is the funding formula," Brandom said. "The way the formula is done, St. Louis gets more money than we do" even though Southeast Missouri serves more meals.

The state funds federal money to the state's 10 Area Agencies on Aging based on a formula. Some of the state formula's components include population, low income and minorities. It's also calculated by a point system.

Over the past several years a lack of funding at all levels has put senior nutrition centers in a tight crunch. For instance, in 2005, homemade food for Sikeston Senior OAKS Center was replaced by prepackaged goods and contributed to a decline in daily attendance.

Sikeston Senior OAKS administrator YuVone Craig was forced to cut people from the homebound meals program. Today, 80 people receive homebound meals compared to the average of 200 a few years ago, she said.

"I'm hoping this will be a good turnaround for our senior nutrition program," Craig said about the hearing. "Hopefully, more people will become involved and see the need and help meet that need."

Craig said she expects senior citizens and nutrition center administrators from East Prairie, Charleston, Chaffee, Kennett and other areas to attend the hearing.

Sari Kersey, administrator of the East Prairie nutrition center, said she hopes committee members will get a perspective of the importance of senior citizens.

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"They're the biggest part of our community. Over 50 percent of the population will be senior citizens in the very near future, and there will be a big demand on the communities," Kersey said.

Dorothy Smith, 71, of East Prairie said she plans to attend the hearing Tuesday. After suffering a brain aneurysm 16 years ago, Smith was left disabled -- but she has been volunteering at the East Prairie center twice a week for the past 11 years.

"This center is a blessing to me," Smith said.

Center activities offered include crafts, quilting and dominoes, Smith said, calling it a good well-rounded program.

"The program has more than one benefit, and it benefits so many different people in different ways. The Missouri Legislature should look at helping provide more financial assistance," Smith said.

In addition to providing a nutritious meal for senior citizens, the center also provides a chance for seniors to socialize, Smith said.

"When you eat a meal alone, you don't really enjoy it," Smith said.

Those who receive homebound meals receive at least one nutritious meal a day and they get to see someone, Smith said.

"They have this one contact, but they always look forward to the meal variety and just to say hello and talk to somebody," Smith said.

Also with in-home care and Meals on Wheels, these seniors can stay in their home longer before going into a nursing home, Smith said.

"If the government would look at it, it's cheaper to pay for a meal and home keeper than it is to pay for you when you're put in a nursing home," Smith said. "You would have better satisfied seniors, and they would still be within the community."

Brandom said the committee will have a final meeting Nov. 30 and then make their recommendations to Jetton.

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