Assisted Living Not Always Safe

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Taking Care of Mom and Dad

Advertising for assisted living paints a glorious picture for seniors: “Enjoy your golden years in bright, polished, independent communities while licensed medical professionals monitor your every need.”

Reality can be a different story. As the baby boomer generation ages, assisted living has become a big business – and for too many residents and their families, a big problem. Uneven regulation has created a dangerous situation where some facilities are not properly equipped or staffed to care for an increasingly ill population. Before you check in your loved one, you should know how to find quality assisted living.

Start Your Search Here. >>>

BY THE NUMBERS /
750,000
Residents
There are 750,000 Americans living in assisted-living facilities. And as baby boomers age, that number is expected to grow.

Source: A Starter Guide for Assisted Living, Next Avenue

$3,450
Per Month
The average cost for a private, one-bedroom apartment in an assisted-living residence averaged $3,450 per month in 2013 – nearly 5 percent more than in 2012.

Source: 2013 Cost of Care Survey, Genworth

16
Years Old
The minimum age for assisted-living caregivers in some states is just 16. Facility administrators aren’t required to have a high school diploma in 14 states.

Source: Elderly, At Risk and Haphazardly Protected, ProPublica

BOOKMARK FAVORITES /

Resources for Residents, Families, Caregivers

Search for quality assisted living in your community with links and resources from the Administration for Community Living.

ProPublica and PBS Frontline Fight for Rights of Seniors

ProPublica and PBS “Frontline” have teamed up to investigate and highlight the loose regulations and increased risks to seniors in assisted living.

Service Rates Assisted-Living Facilities in All 50 States

Personalized help finding the right assisted-living facility is available through Caring.com. Compare costs, learn about ratings and read reviews of different facilities in your state.

MCAP’s parent info night

The Medfield Press reports on the Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) (www.MedfieldCares.org) parent information evening at Medfield High Schoola week ago.  Be a Parent Not a Pal

For me the major take away facts I have learned at MCAP are

  • how much more likely our kids are to have later in life substance abuse problems, the younger they are when they start to use alcohol or marijuana, and
  • that human brain development is not completed until the mid-twenties, and both alcohol and marijuana use can have disproportionately detrimental effects on those not fully formed brains.

GCA forum 4/3

This from Fred Bunger of the Medfield Energy Committee –

Green Community Public Forum Thursday, April 3, 2014, 7PM
Town House – Chenery Room

Here’s an opportunity to learn about the Green Communities Act and the two articles on the Warrant in advance of the April 28 Annual Town Meeting. Voters will consider Article 34: Adopt Large-Scale Solar Photovoltaic Facilities Overlay District (POVD) Bylaw and Article 35: Adopt Stretch Energy Code. The Medfield Energy Committee and Town representatives will make brief presentations followed by a question and answer session. The agenda and related information is included below.

Adopting Articles 34 and 35 at Town Meeting are two of the requirements to become a Green Community through the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources (DOER). The Board of Selectmen voted in March to support the Medfield Energy Committee recommendation to pursue a Green Community designation to qualify for a base grant of approximately $148,000, with additional opportunities available for competitive grants.
Agenda

7:00 – 7:05 Introductions
7:05 – 7:15 Overview of Green Communities Program
7:15 – 7:45 Overview Solar Photovoltaic By-Law
7:45 – 8:00 Overview of Stretch Energy Code
8:00 – 9:00 Facilitated Questions and Answers Session
8:55 – 9:00 Meeting Conclusion

Should Medfield own its streetlights?

This detailed report is from Medfield’s own Fred Davis on his company’s recent work for the Town of Dartmouth to install LED streetlights, and is taken from Fred’s company’s e-newsletter (see it here on-line if you prefer), documenting a 22% annual return on Dartmouth’s investment in LED streetlights.

Dartmouth is also the town using a system that I have been suggesting that Medfield copy, of making money ($2 m. in Dartmouth) by issuing RFP’s to buy solar power.  This year, until two weeks ago, I thought that I had an annual town meeting (ATM) warrant article coming up to give the selectmen the authority to contract for the 20-30 years required to take the next step to make that happen, but my article slipped through the cracks in the warrant preparation process without my noticing, so it will have to await the next town meeting. –

Time for Technology Upgrade:
 
Replacing Streetlights with High-Efficiency LEDs Saves Dartmouth Almost 70% 

The south coast town of Dartmouth may date to the 1600s, but in the 2000s it has been pursuing the most modern, smart, energy-saving technology. Town Administrator David Cressman adopted photovoltaics for Dartmouth’s municipal electricity. And in 2013, he converted all of Dartmouth’s streetlights to energy-saving LED fixtures.

Cressman had heard favorable reports about LEDs from neighboring Fairhaven as it began phasing them in along their roadways. So when Dartmouth’s maintenance contractor faced changing out many of the bulbs in the old high-pressure-sodium (HPS) fixtures, Cressman knew the time was right to make the change. He was able to complete all the steps to convert to LED technology in less than a year with the aid of recent regulatory and technological developments.

To make any changes to the old fixtures, the town had to first own them. Dartmouth had taken theirs over around 2000. (Since 1997, under MGL C. 164 s.34A, Massachusetts cities and towns may purchase their streetlights from their utility companies.)*

To purchase new LED fixtures, Dartmouth utilized State Contract FAC76 Category 6, which was put into place in 2012 by Massachusetts Operational Services Division in consultation with the Metropolitan Area Planning Council. The contract provides a procurement path for an eligible municipal entity to purchase LED streetlight fixtures without having to go through a separate bid process.

Cressman worked with state contractor Fred Davis Corporation (FDC), a lighting products distributor with thirty years of experience in energy-efficient lighting. FDC proposed state-of-the-art Cree XSP LED roadway fixtures in five versions to replace the various fixtures that had been illuminating the streets of Dartmouth.

These fixtures bring the best in high-tech engineering to street lighting. High-quality LED streetlights offer extraordinary efficiency by using many small, latest-generation light-emitting diodes, each of which projects precisely the right amount of light in the right direction. Cree XSP fixtures exceed 100 lumens of directed light  per watt of electricity. Fixture efficiency of a representative HPS fixture is only 56 lumens per watt, and even much of that light is wasted.

FDC’s analysis projected overall electricity savings of 68% for Dartmouth’s new streetlights. The striking energy savings are even more remarkable considering that so many of the town’s old fixtures were already low-wattage types.

The proposal to adopt LED streetlights proceeded as would any project of its scale in the town, gaining requisite committee approvals from Capital Improvement, FinCom, and Selectmen. Final adoption came at Dartmouth Town Meeting in June 2013. Purchase, construction, delivery, and installation of the customized fixtures followed over the summer and fall.

The new fixtures come with a 10-year warranty and are rated to last much longer than that, whereas the old HPS fixtures had a life cycle of about six years, with even more frequent lamp and ballast replacements. Cressman was thus able to dramatically lower the cost of the town’s fixture maintenance contract.

The new LED streetlights promise major financial savings in electricity and maintenance. Add to that a substantial energy-efficiency incentive from NStar Electric, and the switchover is projected to pay for itself in under five years.

Residents are very pleased with the way the roads are illuminated. And town officials are thrilled with the cost-effectiveness of the project.

In just the last two years, the best-quality LED streetlight fixtures have dramatically increased in efficiency, and their price has come down at the same time. The Dartmouth project came in costing 30% less, and saving about 30% more energy, than the town originally anticipated.

Upgrading streetlights to LED technology has proven itself a smart opportunity for any city or town.

Number of LED streetlights
1,658
KWH annual reduction projected
418,569
Total cost
$463,483
NSTAR incentive
$104,827
Net municipal cost
$358,656
Total annual Savings projected **
$79,600
Simple payback period (years)
4.5
Annual return on initial investment
22%

** Electricity at $.14 KWH plus maintenance
© 2014 Fred Davis

On being a selectman

I attended one of the new mini-town hall meetings last night on Elm Street.  This was my second such session.  It is a nice way to have a discussion on a more personal level.  Thanks to Tom and Kathy Powers for hosting me.

BoS agneda for this evening

Just got the agenda for the Board of Selectmen meeting this evening –

Board of Selectmen
March 25, 2014 Agenda
The Medfield Board of Selectmen needs to meet in Executive Session (closed session) at close of meeting for the purpose of discussing Kenny land litigation

We want to take a moment of appreciation for our brave servicemen and women serving in Afghanistan

This meeting is being recorded
7:00 PM David Lawson, Director Norfolk County Mosquito Control District
Discussion regarding Trustees of Reservations policy on mosquito control

ACTION
Vote to award contract in the amount of $19,500.00 for building assessment at the state hospital site

Review FY 2015 town budgets

Review and assignment of 2014 Annual Town Meeting Warrant Articles

MFi’s volunteer awards

Yesterday afternoon at The Center the Medfield Foundation volunteer awards reception was held to fete and celebrate the ten extraordinary Medfield volunteers suggested for recognition this year by fourteen different residents.  DCAMM Commissioner Carole Cornelison deadpanned about John Thompson, that at first she was not aware that he actually had a job, because she saw him so much at so many meeting related to the Medfield State Hospital environmental clean up.  For the past couple of years John has spent 10-20 hours per week dealing with that MSH clean up for the Town of Medfield.

Kathy Brennan, one of the event organizers commented that “this uplifting event celebrated the inspirational volunteers who represent just a small sample of the good work done by so many good people in Medfield. As Anne Frank once said: ‘How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.’  You can make a difference.”

See Colleen Sullivan’s blog post and photos on Patch for more detail.

This observer found the stories by the volunteers to be both moving and inspirational, and highly recommends looking for the replay of the reception on Medfield.TV, so you too can learn just what remarkable things your neighbors are effecting.

MFi’s volunteer recognition Sunday at 3 PM

Logo_Small_RGB

Medfield Foundation 2014 Volunteer Recognition Reception

3:00 PM, Sunday, March 23 at The Center at Medfield

The Medfield Foundation is pleased to announce that the following people  will be celebrated at the recognition reception next Sunday at 3:00 PM, Sunday, March 23 at The Center at Medfield, One Ice House Road.  All were nominated for special recognition by fellow residents for doing extraordinary volunteer work.

Youth Volunteer of the Year

  • Andrea Nevins for initiating the Miss Amazing Massachusetts event, and for volunteering with the Medfield High School Student Council, Project 351 Alumni Leadership Council, Boston Cares Teen Advisory Council, Best Buddies, Special Olympics, and as a Adaptive skiing volunteer instructor.
  • Dina Roche for running food drives to benefit the Medfield Food Cupboard at the Montrose School for the past five years.
  • Siddharth Arun for starting and running the Chess Club at the Library, and also for volunteering at Norwood Hospital, and teaching chess in other places.
  • Wesley, Corey, & Aaron Dron  for being great and caring neighbors to a couple needing assistance.

Volunteer of the Year

  • John Thompson for his work with the  Medfield State Hospital Mediation Committee, and also for the State Hospital Environmental Review Committee, Medfield Archeology Advisory Committee, Medfield Conservation Commission, Friends of the Dwight Derby House, Vine Lake Preservation Trust, and Port of Galilee Advisory Committee Narragansett RI Town Council.
  • Sonja Johanson for her work with the Victory Garden at the Wheelock School, and also the Wheelock School Site Council, the  Massachusetts Horticultural Society, and the  Massachusetts Master Gardener Association.
  • Kim Price for her work with the Medfield Coalition for Public Education, and also for the Medfield Kids PMC, and Dale St. School CSA.

Lifetime Achievement

  • Andy Thompson for his work with Little League, Soccer, Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Boy Scouts, Medfield Park & Recreation Commission, operating the football scoreboard for 47 years, Medfield Physical Fitness Association for 48 years, The Center, the American Legion, and MPRC activities at Medfield Day.

Click to see the announcement for:

Now all Medfield gets to hear their interesting stories, about why they were nominated, what they do, and why they do it.  The MFi’s 2014 volunteer recognition reception provides an afternoon of storytelling by and about these exceptional volunteers – anyone is welcome to attend, and all are guaranteed to be entertained.

The seventh annual MFi volunteer awards are again sponsored by the generosity of the Rockland Trust Charitable Foundation (for the third year).

We’re number 21

DOR’s e-newsletter today provided information on the taxes paid by all cities  and towns, 2011 versus 2014.

Municipality 2011              Average Value 2014            Average Value Pct. Change Value 2011        Single Family Tax Bill 2014        Single Family Tax Bill Pct. Change Bill 2011    Hi-Lo Rank 2011        Tax Rate 2014    Hi-Lo Rank 2014        Tax Rate Three Year Avg % Chg Bill
MEDFIELD 564,396 569,616 0.92% 8,477 9,182 8.32% 22 15.02 21 16.12 2.77%

Town election 3/31

The town election on 3/31 (6AM to 8PM) at The Center has no contested races for town offices, however, importantly, residents do need to vote whether to fund the purchase of the Medfield State Hospital that passed unanimously at the recent special town meeting (STM).

This email from Bill Massaro on the Medfield State Hospital purchase –

Hi Everyone,

 

Very Important Election 3/31 –  The Next  Step in Deciding  Medfield’s Future 

 

Although Purchase of the Hospital property was unanimously approved at the Special Town Meeting,  fund-raising for the purchase must now be approved under the following question at Town election on Monday March 31: 

 

 

 Proposition 21/2  Debt Exclusion Question:

 Shall the Town of Medfield be allowed to exempt from the provisions of proposition two and one-half, so called, the amounts required to pay for the bond issued in order to purchase from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts all or a portion of the former Medfield State Hospital site and buildings thereon, identified on the Board of Assessors’ Maps as Lot 001, Map 71 and Lot 004, Map 63, further shown as Parcels A and B on  a Plan entitled Location of Land Parcels Medfield State Hospital Medfield, Massachusetts provided by the Massachusetts Division of Capital Asset Management (DCAM) consisting of approximately 134 acres.

March 28 @ noon is the last day to pick up an absentee ballot at Town Clerk’s office.

 

 

On March 31–Please Vote

 

A “Yes” vote allows the purchase process to go forward. 

A “No” vote  will stop it….

 

A simple majority vote will decide…

 

Please forward this important reminder to other concerned Medfield residents…

 

 

 

 Bill