Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, June 21, 1990 TAG: 9006210205 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: By PAUL DELLINGER SOUTHWEST BUREAU DATELINE: WYTHEVILLE LENGTH: Medium
Six agencies - including the District 3 Governmental Cooperative, which celebrated its 15th birthday Wednesday - originally sued the Virginia Department for the Aging in 1988 over its formula for dividing federal funds for the elderly among the state's 25 agencies.
The six rural regional agencies claimed the formula was not in line with federal guidelines because it was based more on population than need. U.S. District Judge Glen Williams ruled otherwise, and an appeal to the 4th Circuit resulted in the suit being returned to the district level.
Now the plaintiffs have amended it and filed it again in U.S. Western District Court at Big Stone Gap. It names Thelma Bland, who became commissioner of the Department for the Aging this year, as the defendant.
The plaintiffs include Mountain Empire Older Citizens, Appalachian Agency for Senior Citizens and the New River Valley Agency on Aging which, with District 3, cover practically all counties west of Roanoke. The suit was filed by Gerald Gray, who is commonwealth's attorney in Dickinson County.
None of that pending litigation was apparent Wednesday when Bland and District 3 representatives held the 11th of 25 meetings she is convening with senior citizens across the state. About 250 senior citizens came to hear her and take part in the regional agency's birthday celebration.
"I know that each area has different concerns, and different ways of addressing those concerns," Bland said. One reason for the meetings she is attending is to see the areas and concerns firsthand, she said.
"We realize we will be facing some tight budget years ahead," she said. Federal funding has increased by 10 percent in the last five years, and Virginia has been increasing its share but is unlikely to do so again in the next two years, she said.
"There's never enough money to go around," said Bill Peterson, a department representative.
Bland said she would like to see more assistance for support services to care-givers to the elderly, a theme echoed by those addressing the meeting.
Pat Hite, a social worker for the Grayson County Social Services Department, said companion services for the elderly - people who do housecleaning, shopping, laundry and even feeding, bathing and dressing - are the most-needed senior-citizen services in her county. "It enables a person to stay in their home safely, to stay in their community," she said.
The program served 24 elderly residents seven years ago and now serves 92, with 34 more on a waiting list, she said. Its budget was $150,000 last year, she said, and that is being cut to $22,000 in the coming year, which will mean services for only eight or nine people.
"I don't have any immediate answer, of course. I don't think anyone does," Bland said. But she promised to bring the matter before Health and Human Services Commissioner Howard Cullum at a meeting scheduled July 3.
by CNB