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Annual Report 2011 - Greater Springfield Senior Services

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<strong>Annual</strong> <strong>Report</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>, Inc.


Executive Director’s Message<br />

Elaine Massery<br />

Executive Director<br />

The year <strong>2011</strong> was one that<br />

highlighted our interdependence<br />

with community stakeholders in<br />

more ways than funding and<br />

client referrals.<br />

After a series of tornadoes<br />

on June 1 struck Western Massachusetts,<br />

cutting a 38-mile<br />

path of destruction, the network<br />

of social service agencies sprang<br />

into action. GSSSI staff met with<br />

the American Red Cross to offer assistance<br />

for elders who had no or little family support.<br />

We joined forces with <strong>Springfield</strong>’s Department<br />

of Elder Affairs and other Councils on<br />

Aging to identify and assist seniors in need.<br />

A process was developed to provide financial<br />

assistance for such items as rent, personal<br />

care, household goods, moving and storage.<br />

First and foremost, GSSSI staff contacted<br />

clients to determine the status of their safety.<br />

Where concerns were the greatest, police<br />

and emergency personnel were contacted.<br />

A client in our Adult Family Care program<br />

went to a shelter, and then to a local skilled<br />

nursing facility until a new suitable home was<br />

found. Potential shelter was also available in<br />

two of our Adult Family Care homes and in<br />

one of our congregate housing facilities.<br />

Concern about the hospital re-admittance<br />

rate of high-risk Medicare patients after<br />

discharge has opened doors for service<br />

organizations such as GSSSI to employ their<br />

expertise in community-based services in the<br />

health care arena. One such opportunity<br />

is Medicare’s Community-Based Care<br />

Transitions program. It offers incentives<br />

to agencies such as ASAPs to work with<br />

hospitals in improving the re-admittance rate<br />

by providing evidenced-based interventions<br />

and other services at the time of discharge.<br />

By the close of this fiscal year, GSSSI had<br />

become part of a joint application with the<br />

University of Mass. Medical Center and<br />

Baystate Health Systems.<br />

Another opportunity for creatively utilizing<br />

our skills has come in the form of a Money<br />

Follows the Person grant obtained by the<br />

Commonwealth’s Executive Office of Elder<br />

Affairs. This program uses very innovative<br />

approaches to assist in discharging Medicaid<br />

enrollees who have lived in Skilled Nursing<br />

Facilities for at least 90 days.<br />

Our new “Healthy Living Wellness Series”<br />

has brought GSSSI together with active adults<br />

in the community. Fourteen group leaders<br />

were trained, and 37 people attended<br />

sessions held at area senior centers. We<br />

look forward to even more community<br />

participation and support in 2012.<br />

As we travel the road ahead, I look<br />

forward to working with our dedicated Board<br />

of Directors, committee members, staff,<br />

volunteers, our legislators, and the various<br />

agencies with whom we collaborate.


Journeys<br />

For those of us who work with older adults,<br />

we often forget that they were young once.<br />

They attended school, had jobs, a first love, and pursued their passions.<br />

Like most of us, they have suffered losses and realized hardships as they<br />

reached for their dreams. They were us…and we will be them. We’re all<br />

part of the continuum of aging, but at different points along the journey.<br />

Greg, Larry, Elizabeth and Arthur are four of the many thousands of older<br />

adults that GSSSI has crossed paths with over the past 39 years. When<br />

they were young, they lived extraordinary lives. While they have aged in<br />

years, their spirits are still viable – they actively participate in their<br />

surroundings and maintain an interest in others.<br />

And as they continue on life’s journey, their many paths have become<br />

rich, colorful threads woven into a tapestry unique to each of their<br />

lives. We, too, will create a tapestry unique to each of us. In time.<br />

1


Greg Hayden<br />

The life of renaissance<br />

man Greg Hayden<br />

reads like a playbill.<br />

In Act One, Greg attends the<br />

Boston Conservatory of Music<br />

and the American Musical and<br />

Dramatic Academy in New York.<br />

He studies voice, drama, makeup,<br />

and set design during the day<br />

and learns modern dance, jazz<br />

and ballet in the evening. He<br />

takes voice lessons from world renowned teacher Rose<br />

Allen, whose students have included the likes of Bernadette<br />

Peters and Katherine Hepburn.<br />

Like other young hopefuls, Greg spends hours standing<br />

in line to audition for Broadway<br />

theatrical productions and lands<br />

roles in Mame, Billy Budd, South Pacific,<br />

and West Side Story. He walks the<br />

runway as a model for Calvin Klein<br />

and Nautica, and models for GQ<br />

magazine. To earn extra money, he<br />

takes photographs of aspiring models<br />

for their portfolios and gets referrals<br />

from top modeling agencies like<br />

William Morris and Ford.<br />

In Act Two, Greg returns home to<br />

Old Saybrook, Connecticut, and joins<br />

the family real estate business. He produces musicals for a<br />

local theater and opens his own theater on the Connecticut<br />

shoreline.<br />

Greg’s passion for painting, drawing and sculpting begins<br />

to take center stage in his life. He studies wax molding,<br />

metal casting, sculpting, fresco technique and oils. His works<br />

are exhibited at numerous New England galleries and he is<br />

commissioned to create a life-size bronze for the Most Holy<br />

Trinity Church in Maine. He eventually opens an art gallery<br />

in Perkins Cove for area artists and his own creations.<br />

“My inspiration and energy are drawn from the ocean,<br />

the Maine pined woods, and the animal inhabitants of both<br />

universes. The American Indian culture plays deeply and<br />

spiritually in my creativity, being one of respect for the earth<br />

and all its inhabitants, including Mankind.”<br />

Act Three opens with Greg living in West <strong>Springfield</strong>, and<br />

commuting to work in northern Connecticut. His mother’s<br />

health begins to<br />

fail and he assumes<br />

the role of her<br />

caregiver. Usually<br />

strong and energetic,<br />

he begins to<br />

2


Previous page: Greg Hayden with one of his beloved beagles. Sculptures<br />

created and cast by Greg – Bronze of Chief Aspinquid of the Sachem<br />

Tribe in Maine and “Sacred Spiral” cast in stone.<br />

This page: Publicity shot of Greg and photos of him from various<br />

Broadway roles.<br />

experience health problems of his own and is eventually<br />

diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome and fibromyalgia.<br />

A bout of shingles leaves him with chronic pain. After a severe<br />

reaction to an antibiotic and further complications, he is<br />

hospitalized and not expected to live. He survives, though<br />

greatly weakened, and moves to a rest home located next to<br />

the nursing home where his mother lives.<br />

Greg enlists the help of GSSSI’s Long-Term Care Ombudsman<br />

program to address residents’ concerns about changes<br />

made by the facility’s new administration. At meetings, he<br />

articulately serves as the residents’ spokesperson. After his<br />

beloved mother passes away, Greg decides it is time to leave<br />

the rest home and begins to look for his own apartment. He<br />

applies to two housing complexes where he will be allowed to<br />

keep his two, much-loved elderly beagles. As the curtain closes,<br />

Greg waits for a call announcing there is an opening for him.<br />

With Greg’s love of life and passion for his art, Act 4 is<br />

greatly anticipated.<br />

3


Larry Humphries<br />

Larry Humphries is a remarkable man<br />

whose life is a testimony to optimism,<br />

kindness – and the resilience of the<br />

human spirit.<br />

Larry, his twin sister, and their biological brother grew<br />

up in a <strong>Springfield</strong> foster home.<br />

What schooling Larry had consisted of ballet classes and<br />

a special class for what was then termed “slow learners.” As<br />

a result, he endured years of teasing and name calling by<br />

other schoolchildren. At 16, he quit to earn money to help<br />

his family and pay for his ballet lessons. A few years later, he<br />

got drafted into the Korean War, and served with the 76th<br />

Engineer Construction Battalion.<br />

After the war, and while working at a <strong>Springfield</strong> art<br />

gallery, Larry met Ted Shawn, founder and director of Jacob’s<br />

Pillow, a dance Mecca in Becket. “I told him I’d be willing to<br />

do any job at the Pillow just to be in the atmosphere of the<br />

dance,” says Larry. Ted offered him a job as publicity assistant<br />

and house manager, and from 1961 to 1969 Larry did<br />

everything from stuffing envelopes to managing tours for<br />

world-class ballet, ethnic and modern dancers.<br />

Larry didn’t neglect<br />

his own joy in music<br />

and dance and<br />

performed in a few<br />

regional ballets. He<br />

eventually became<br />

co-director and owner<br />

of the Ballet Theater<br />

School of <strong>Springfield</strong>,<br />

did several tours of<br />

Europe with the Young at Heart Chorus of Northampton,<br />

and performed with the Singin’Swingin’<strong>Senior</strong>s of Chicopee.<br />

In 2001, Larry was diagnosed with macular degeneration.<br />

Declared legally blind, he had to stop driving, that last vestige<br />

of independence, and began receiving assistance from<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>.<br />

“That hurt, but sorrow wasn’t enough. I decided I had<br />

to find something to do as I always had before.” He now<br />

volunteers and lectures at the senior center, is active in<br />

several veterans groups,<br />

and helps others coping<br />

with vision loss. “I feel so<br />

good to think I’m helping<br />

somebody with an eye<br />

problem. It can be so<br />

difficult to cope with, especially<br />

when it first happens.”<br />

Larry’s pièce de résistance<br />

was being invited<br />

4


ack to Jacob’s Pillow, to dance. He was 74, in the<br />

second year of failing eyesight and hadn’t danced<br />

professionally for years. “I called them and said ‘surely you<br />

have made a mistake.’” He was assured that there was no<br />

mistake. Larry had never performed at The Pillow, and he accepted<br />

graciously.<br />

“We had to dance in a beam of light that came across from stage right<br />

to stage left,” Larry says. “I cherished that moment. That challenge was a great<br />

lift to me, because I thought, ‘I can still do things. I can still dance.’”<br />

Next on Larry’s dance card is a documentary of his life that is being developed<br />

by a Northampton production company.<br />

Previous page: Larry at home, surrounded by his own gallery of art and<br />

memorabilia. Lower left, Larry attends the 50th wedding anniversary of<br />

world famous dancers Ruth St. Denis (right) and Ted Shawn at<br />

Jacob’s Pillow. Larry served as publicist for the dance company.<br />

This page: Larry as the devil in a play at the Trinity Church in<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>. Soldier, machinist, and ballet dancer are among the<br />

many roles Larry Humphries has undertaken with style and<br />

grace (dancer at right).<br />

5


Elizabeth Shaw<br />

At the age of 18, vivacious Elizabeth<br />

Shaw left her job at the cosmetics<br />

counter of Steiger’s, waved goodbye<br />

to family and friends, and headed for<br />

the Big Apple in search of fame and<br />

fortune as a singer and dancer.<br />

Unlike many hopefuls, Elizabeth achieved her dream and<br />

enjoyed a career on Broadway. She modestly says she<br />

only performed in the chorus and never had a major role.<br />

She credits her uncle, a New York producer, for taking<br />

her under his wing<br />

and introducing her<br />

to the world of<br />

theater. “He told<br />

me that you have<br />

to continually get<br />

out there and meet<br />

people,” she says.<br />

For the friendly and<br />

outgoing Elizabeth,<br />

it was easy to<br />

cultivate contacts<br />

and make friends at<br />

parties and other<br />

social venues.<br />

6


With scrapbooks filled with<br />

autographed playbills and candid<br />

photos of herself with actors like Barry<br />

Bostwick and Colleen Dewhurst,<br />

Elizabeth plays down her own career<br />

achievements, which included parts in<br />

No No Nanette, Grease, and Night<br />

Music. Instead, she prefers to talk<br />

about the people she has worked<br />

with. She recalls being introduced to<br />

Elizabeth Taylor. “It was the first time I<br />

was left speechless. Her eyes were<br />

mesmerizing – not blue, not purple,<br />

but somewhere in between. She was<br />

so beautiful and had this aura about<br />

her. “But,” she adds with a giggle,<br />

“she’d get mad if you called her Liz.”<br />

Although Elizabeth never received<br />

a standing ovation for a performance,<br />

she brags that her Yorkshire terrier did.<br />

“Star appeared in Sleuth with actor<br />

Patrick Macnee and sat still on a chair<br />

for an hour!” Elizabeth chirps. “I always<br />

had Yorkshire terriers,” she muses,<br />

patting Jordan, her latest prodigy. As<br />

a teenager, she even showed her<br />

prize-winning terriers at dog shows.<br />

“I always liked being on the stage,”<br />

she says happily.<br />

Elizabeth moved back to Massachusetts twenty years ago<br />

when her sister became ill. In 2008, Elizabeth became a GSSSI<br />

home care client and began receiving home delivered meals<br />

and assistance with housekeeping, grocery shopping, and<br />

transportation to medical appointments. She currently lives in<br />

a mobile home community and entertains a daily stream of<br />

visitors. “I have friends of all different ages. I just act the way I<br />

feel,” she says. “I’m young at heart and in spirit.”<br />

7


Arthur Burger<br />

An Officer and a Gentleman<br />

After 70 years of marriage, Arthur Burger still drops his<br />

wife off at the door and parks the car so she won’t get<br />

wet in the slight drizzle falling outside the Hampden<br />

<strong>Senior</strong> Center. “You just have to help each other,” he<br />

says matter-of-factly, when asked about the secret to a<br />

long and happy marriage.<br />

Arthur met Audrey, his<br />

future bride, at a carnival<br />

in East Longmeadow.<br />

They were married for<br />

less than a year when he<br />

left to serve in the U.S.<br />

Army Air Force during<br />

World War II. He says<br />

that he loved to fly, and<br />

joining the U.S. Army Air<br />

Force had always been<br />

his dream.<br />

In 1941, after eight<br />

months of training, Arthur<br />

was awarded his Pilot’s<br />

Wings. He eventually went on to serve in the 35th fighter<br />

group in the South Pacific Theater. Between 1941 and 1945<br />

he had piloted 100 missions in fighter planes, and received<br />

the Air Medal, the Distinguished Flying Cross, and the Silver<br />

Star for his actions in combat. He also flew as a test pilot at<br />

Eglin Field, Florida, and served as a flight instructor at Craig<br />

Field in Alabama. By the time his service was completed in<br />

December 1945, he held the rank of Captain.<br />

Arthur’s military career, though short, was a source of<br />

pride. His carefully packed away certificates and documents,<br />

some framed, serve as a testament. Although he shares<br />

This page: Above, Arthur and his wife, Audrey. Left, Arthur’s service photo with<br />

a close-up of his service yearbook.<br />

Next page: Graphic taken from “The Flying Cadets of Gunter Field, Alabama,”<br />

a booklet from Arthur’s collection of memorabilia. Some of the badges he<br />

recieved recognizing his many achievements in World War II.<br />

8


stories about flying low over<br />

the water in Australia looking<br />

for Japanese submarines, and<br />

diving into trenches during the<br />

nightly bombings by the<br />

Japanese in New Guinea,<br />

Arthur prefers to talk about<br />

being able to pilot 18 different<br />

types of planes, such as the<br />

B-25D and the P-39.<br />

Although a career in the military may have been briefly<br />

considered, the frequent relocations required of military<br />

personnel can be a hindrance to family life. So, Arthur and<br />

his wife settled in the <strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> area, where<br />

Arthur went to work in his father’s package store. They<br />

had one daughter, who currently lives nearby.<br />

These days, the Burgers enjoy lunch and socialization at<br />

the Hampden <strong>Senior</strong> Center’s community dining program<br />

nearly every day. They had just returned from a day-trip<br />

to the Cape with their daughter. “We don’t know what<br />

we would do without her,” says Arthur. His wife, Audrey,<br />

smiles and nods in agreement.<br />

9


Board of Directors<br />

Dorothy Hooper<br />

President, <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Joan Breitung, Vice President<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Nancy Morales, Vice President<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Frank Yesu, Vice President<br />

Longmeadow<br />

William Sheehan, Treasurer<br />

Wilbraham<br />

Frank Grimaldi, Assistant Treasurer<br />

West <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

John Shay, Secretary<br />

Hampden<br />

William Caplin*<br />

East Longmeadow<br />

Sister Mary Caritas, S.P.<br />

Holyoke<br />

Jan Rodriguez Denney<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Olga Ellis<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Elizabeth Faichney<br />

Monson<br />

Douglas Goodman<br />

West <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Mary Hubert<br />

Palmer<br />

Daniel Keenan<br />

Southwick<br />

Louis Massoia<br />

Feeding Hills<br />

Rose Morace<br />

Longmeadow<br />

Theresa Govoni Moylan<br />

East Longmeadow<br />

Peter Schmidt<br />

Wilbraham<br />

Sally Wittenberg<br />

Longmeadow<br />

*Emeritus<br />

Area Agency on Aging Advisory Council<br />

Jeanne Ahern<br />

(Congressman<br />

Richard Neal’s<br />

Office), <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Paula Dubord<br />

Wilbraham<br />

Nancy Harper<br />

At-Large, Wilbraham<br />

Doreen Harrison<br />

East Longmeadow<br />

Dorothy Hooper<br />

GSSSI Board Liaison<br />

Joan Linnehan<br />

Agawam<br />

C. Louise Long<br />

At-Large, <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Gina Lynch<br />

Brimfield<br />

Moraima Mendoza<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Karen Michelman<br />

Longmeadow<br />

Helen Mojkowski<br />

At-Large, <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Ellen Nepomuceno, R.N.<br />

Provider Representative<br />

Baystate VNA & Hospice<br />

J. Bradford Noble<br />

At-Large<br />

Erin Pincince<br />

Palmer<br />

Susan Sanders<br />

Holland<br />

Deb Shepard<br />

Monson<br />

Deanna Vermette<br />

Hampden<br />

Lauren Werman<br />

West <strong>Springfield</strong><br />

Ted Wysocki<br />

Wales<br />

Statement of Finances July 1, 2010 - June 30, <strong>2011</strong><br />

Executive Office of Elder Affairs . . . . . . 11,721,231 . .64.0%<br />

Administration on Aging . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,512,948 . . 8.3%<br />

Client Contributions & Co-Payments . . . . .618,194 . . . 3.4%<br />

MassHealth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,658,896 .14.5%<br />

Other . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,791,954 . . . 9.8%<br />

Salaries, Fringes & Direct Program Costs . . . .6,374,677 . .36.7%<br />

Subcontracts & Subgrants . . . . . . . . . . . .10,093,634 . .58.1%<br />

Management & General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 913,953 . . . 5.2%<br />

Total Expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$17,382,264 .100.0%<br />

Total Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,303,223 100.0%<br />

10


Agency Statistics July 1, 2010 - June 30, <strong>2011</strong><br />

Unduplicated People Served<br />

Adult Family Care Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .111<br />

Community Choices Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .240<br />

Congregate Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32<br />

Enhanced Community Options Program . . . . . . . . . . . .272<br />

Geriatric Mental Health Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144<br />

Home Care Program (includes Respite Over-Income) . . . . . .1,835<br />

Information & Referral Calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10,144<br />

Long Term Care Options Counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106<br />

MassHealth Screenings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,951<br />

Money Management Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86<br />

Personal Care Attendant Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1,035<br />

Protective <strong>Services</strong> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .702<br />

SHINE Consultations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .188<br />

Family Caregiver Support Program<br />

Elder Care Advisor Consults . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .146<br />

C.A.R.E. Respite Grants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7<br />

A.C.E. Subsidies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125<br />

Companion Program Rides<br />

Medical Transports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2,979<br />

Long Term Care Ombudsman:<br />

Facility Visits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .906<br />

Residents Visited & Observed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40,985<br />

Interventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .245<br />

Volunteer Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .985 (25volunteers)<br />

Nutrition <strong>Services</strong><br />

Nutrition Assessments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18<br />

MEALS SERVED<br />

GSSSI Congregate Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39,780<br />

GSSSI Home Delivered Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .212,256<br />

Latino Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13,198<br />

Homeless Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11,019<br />

Kosher Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11,244<br />

OTHER TITLE IIIC FUNDED MEALS –<br />

COUNCILS ON AGING<br />

Home Delivered Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106,520<br />

Congregate Meals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57,779<br />

Older Americans Act Federal Funding October 1, 2010 - September 30, <strong>2011</strong><br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>, Inc. serves as an Area Agency on Aging under the federal Older Americans Act. We strive<br />

to serve the most socially and economically needy by providing federal grants to organizations that deliver a wide array of<br />

services for people 60 and older.<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Persons Served<br />

Agawam COA* . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . $7,500 . . . . 907<br />

Baystate VNA & Hospice . . . . . . . . . Medication Management. . . $25,000 . . . . . 81<br />

Alzheimer’s Program. . . . . . . . . . . Geriatric Assessments<br />

Brimfield COA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . . $7,020 . . . . 257<br />

East Longmeadow COA . . . . . . . . . Deaf Advocacy . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,000 . . . . 28<br />

Hampden COA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . . $9,456 . . . . 300<br />

Holland COA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . . $7,560 . . . . 160<br />

Monson COA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy. . . . . . . $10,800 . . . . 396<br />

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,804 . . . . 142<br />

Palmer COA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy. . . . . . . $13,428 . . . . 733<br />

Pedi-Care, LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Foot Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,940 . . . . . 70<br />

Spfld. Dept. of Elder Affairs . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy. . . . . . . $88,980 . . 1,141<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> New Life Christian Center<br />

Jewish Family Service<br />

Wales COA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . . $6,500 . . . . 158<br />

West <strong>Springfield</strong> COA. . . . . . . . . . . . Outreach/Advocacy . . . . . . . . $6,000 . . . . 339<br />

Western Mass. Legal <strong>Services</strong>. . . . . . Legal <strong>Services</strong> . . . . . . . . . . . . $48,600 . . . . 187<br />

Wilbraham COA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,650 . . . . 101<br />

Vietnamese-Amer. Civic Assoc. . . . . Translation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,268 . . . . . 51<br />

*Council on Aging<br />

Healthy Living Wellness Series<br />

• A Matter of Balance<br />

• Healthy Eating for Successful Living<br />

• My Life, My Health: Managing Your<br />

Chronic Conditions<br />

Group Leaders: 14 recruited and trained<br />

Groups were held at:<br />

Longmeadow Adult Center<br />

Monson Council on Aging<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>’s Mason Square <strong>Senior</strong> Center<br />

37 Adults completed these 6-8 week groups.<br />

11


Highlights of <strong>2011</strong><br />

Nutrition Program Meets the Challenge<br />

The GSSSI Nutrition Program received the first “Meeting the<br />

Challenge” award from the Massachusetts Meals on Wheels<br />

(MAMOW) association in<br />

recognition of its extraordinary<br />

efforts to deliver meals<br />

and ensure the well-being<br />

of area seniors following the<br />

June 1 tornado that struck<br />

Western Mass. GSSSI<br />

staff called over 750 meal<br />

participants to check on their<br />

well-being and ensure they<br />

had access to food. In spite of<br />

fallen branches on the roads,<br />

downed wires and numerous<br />

GSSSI Nutrition Program staff receive detours, drivers brought meals<br />

award from the Mass. Meals on Wheels<br />

to all but 14 of the 794<br />

Association for their extraordinary<br />

efforts to deliver meals to seniors<br />

seniors scheduled to receive<br />

following the June 1 tornado.<br />

a meal on the following day.<br />

From left to right:<br />

Mary Jenewin-Caplin, GSSSI Area Agency Caring Volunteers Plant<br />

on Aging Director; Darren Matthews, Flowers & Cultivate<br />

Home Delivered Meals Driver;<br />

Smiles<br />

Tracy Landry, Home Delivered Meals<br />

Program Supervisor; Jean Levesque,<br />

Fifty volunteers from Consolidated<br />

Health Plans (CHP) and<br />

Meal Program Clerk; Dave Scott,<br />

Home Delivered Meals Driver;<br />

their families spent a Saturday<br />

Linda Galarneau, Nutrition Program<br />

cutting lawns, trimming bushes,<br />

Coordinator; and Dorothy Hooper,<br />

GSSSI Board President.<br />

bagging debris and planting<br />

flowers for eight elderly<br />

homeowners in <strong>Springfield</strong>.<br />

It was the third Memorial Cleanup Day that was established<br />

to honor the memory of Karen McCracken, a former CHP<br />

employee who took great pride in her home and yard.<br />

Special thanks to Mark Devlin, Director of Special Risk<br />

at Consolidated Health Plans, along with his colleagues and<br />

their family members, for donating their time to enhance the<br />

quality of life for these grateful individuals. We also thank<br />

Home Depot, Lowes, Dunkin Donuts, McDonalds, and Big Y<br />

for supporting CHP’s efforts with supplies.<br />

Enterprise Farm in Whately took their produce on the road in a bus. Shelly Beck,<br />

Project Manager for Enterprise Farm, shows off her fresh fruits and vegetables at<br />

her mobile farmers’ market.<br />

Fruits of Summer<br />

800 low-income seniors received U.S.D.A. coupon books<br />

valued at $25 to use at local farmers’ markets. Coupons<br />

were distributed through Councils on Aging and GSSSI Case<br />

Managers. Five times during the growing season GSSSI Home<br />

Delivered Meal Drivers added fresh fruits to their deliveries<br />

so homebound clients could receive a fresh fruit treat in<br />

addition to their meal.<br />

For the third consecutive year, CHP worked with<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong> to identify elderly<br />

clients living in the vicinity of its <strong>Springfield</strong> office<br />

that lacked the resources to care for the exterior<br />

of their homes and didn't have family to help.<br />

12


Ombudsman<br />

Recognized<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong><br />

<strong>Services</strong>, Inc. recognized<br />

seventeen dedicated Long-<br />

Term Care Ombudsman<br />

volunteers who recently<br />

completed bi-annual<br />

recertification through the<br />

Executive Office of Elder<br />

Affairs. Recertification is an<br />

educational experience based<br />

on a pertinent topic. This<br />

year’s interactive learning<br />

explored ethics and conflict<br />

of interest.<br />

Long-Term Care Ombudsman make monitoring visits to<br />

nursing homes and rest homes to enable residents and family<br />

members to voice their concerns and resolve their own<br />

issues so that they can live their lives with dignity and respect.<br />

Each volunteer makes weekly visits and completes 18 hours<br />

of training prior to beginning their work .<br />

Geriatric Mental Health Program<br />

Mental health issues can seriously impact older people’s ability<br />

to function and live independently. Clients suffering from<br />

mental health or substance abuse<br />

have access to a mental health<br />

clinician thanks to a collaboration<br />

between GSSSI and the Behavioral<br />

Health Network. An on-site<br />

clinician is easily accessible to Case<br />

Managers who can refer clients<br />

for evaluation, in-home<br />

assessment, and where needed,<br />

Long-Term Care Ombudsman volunteers assemble at the recertification meeting. Back Row from left: Dolores M. Wrona,<br />

Hampden; Hayden B. Tibbetts, Jr., Wilbraham; Sr. Geraldine M. Noonan, Southwick; Marianne C. Keefe-Papp, Chicopee;<br />

John B. Russell, Longmeadow; Helen R. Mojkowski, <strong>Springfield</strong>; James E. Hahesy, Longmeadow.<br />

Middle Row: Sheila M. Hess, East Longmeadow; Patricia A. Kozaczka, Longmeadow; Monica Y. Graham, Indian Orchard; Kara L.<br />

Fink, South Hadley; Maria A. Holmes, <strong>Springfield</strong>; Marci L. Malachowski, Southwick, GSSSI Ombudsman Program Coordinator.<br />

Front Row: Shirley G. Levitz, Enfield CT; P. Marie Valentine, Wilbraham; Vickie A. Donovan, East Longmeadow; Winnifred C. Lee,<br />

<strong>Springfield</strong>; Gay M. McDyer, Feeding Hills; Gary W. Fowler, West <strong>Springfield</strong>.<br />

short-term counseling. Over the past year, 144 clients<br />

received assistance through this program.<br />

New Wellness Series<br />

The “Healthy Living” wellness series kicked off this year and<br />

brought GSSSI together with active adults in the community.<br />

“Healthy Living” is a proactive educational interactive opportunity<br />

for adults to learn how to manage their own health<br />

care and stay healthy. It is an evidence-based program that<br />

has been tested and developed by leading health researchers<br />

across the country with remarkable results. Fourteen group<br />

leaders were trained,<br />

and 37 people attended<br />

sessions held at area<br />

senior centers.<br />

C. Louise Long and Dorothy Sander enjoy<br />

each other's company as they assist in the<br />

preparation of a meal in the “Healthy Eating<br />

for Successful Living” course. Two additional<br />

courses were offered; “A Matter of Balance”<br />

(falls prevention), and “My Life, My Health:<br />

Managing Your Chronic Conditions.”<br />

13


About<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>, Inc.<br />

Often, many people don’t know where to turn for information about<br />

aging, disability or caregiving. Since 1972, <strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong><br />

<strong>Services</strong>, Inc. (GSSSI) has been helping older adults remain safe and<br />

independent in their own homes by providing a wide range of<br />

supportive services. In addition, GSSSI offers advice to caregivers,<br />

family members, and members of the community.<br />

<strong>2011</strong> <strong>Annual</strong> <strong>Report</strong><br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>, Inc.<br />

An Aging <strong>Services</strong> Access Point and Area Agency on Aging<br />

Serving the communities of: Agawam, Brimfield, East Longmeadow,<br />

Hampden, Holland, Longmeadow, Monson, Palmer, <strong>Springfield</strong>, Wales,<br />

West <strong>Springfield</strong>, and Wilbraham.<br />

GSSSI is an AA/EOE. Its programs are funded in whole, or in part, by contracts<br />

with the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs and private donations.<br />

1-800-AGE-Info www.800ageinfo.com<br />

Copywriter/Editor: Karen Martin<br />

Graphic Design: Donna Blazey<br />

<strong>Greater</strong> <strong>Springfield</strong> <strong>Senior</strong> <strong>Services</strong>, Inc.<br />

66 Industry Avenue, Suite 9, <strong>Springfield</strong>, Massachusetts 01104<br />

413-781-8800 TDD: 413-272-0399 Website: www.gsssi.org

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