Where do I begin to plan for retirement?

submitted by Rosemary G. Caligiuri, CASL™, President, Harvest Group Financial Services

Although most of us recognize the importance of sound retirement planning, few of us embrace the nitty-gritty work involved. With thousands of investment possibilities, complex rules governing retirement plans, and so on, most people don’t even know where to begin. Here are some suggestions to help you get started.

First, set lifestyle goals for your retirement. At what age do you see yourself retiring, and what would you like to do during retirement? If you hope to retire at age 50 and travel extensively, you’ll require more planning than other people.

You’ll also need to account for basic living expenses, from food to utilities to transportation. Most of these expenses don’t disappear when you retire. And don’t forget that you may still be paying off your mortgage or funding a child’s education well into retirement.

Finally, be realistic about how many years of retirement you’ll have to fund. With people living longer, your retirement could span 30 years or more. The longer your retirement, the more money you’ll need.

Next, project your annual retirement income and see if that income will be enough to meet your expenses. Identify the sources of income you’ll have during retirement, and the yearly amount you can expect to receive from each source. Common sources of retirement income include Social Security benefits, pension payments, distributions from retirement plans (e.g., IRAs and 401(k)s), and dividends and interest from investments.

If you find that your retirement income will probably meet or exceed your retirement expenses, you’re in good shape. If not, you need to take steps to bridge the gap. Consider delaying retirement, saving more money, or taking more investment risk.

This is just a starting point. The further you are from retirement, the harder it is to project your future income and expenses. If you’re ready for more detailed planning, consult a financial professional.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Zero-deficiency nursing home survey at Pine Run Health Center

Pine Run Health Center earned a zero-deficiency survey with the Pennsylvania Department of Health on February 16th. 

The annual survey is unannounced and is very detailed, thorough, and intense. Three full-time inspectors who act as agents for the state as well as the federal government spent three days at Pine Run, combing through charts, quizzing staff on standards of care, and conversing with patients and residents to inquire as to their personal satisfaction with Pine Run.

The team leader, familiar with Pine Run, was happy to say “no deficiencies.” She commented on how happy the residents are and stated that the Pine Run team quickly addresses concerns if they arise, and praised them for that accomplishment. She noted the significant improvement from last year and shared that it was evident how hard everyone has been working.

Owned by Doylestown Hospital, Pine Run employs more than 450 men and women.

The community is a not-for-profit provider of independent living cottages, personal care suites, Alzheimer’s care, skilled nursing and rehabilitation. To find out more about Pine Run, visit www.pinerun.org.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Senior Troubleshooter

submitted by Bucks County Consumer Protection Agency

Q. I was recently at a senior expo that one of our state representatives put together. I saw numerous tables that had some government agencies represented, along with private vendors offering a number of services for seniors. It was also a great way to meet my state representative and let him know my overall concerns. 

My reason for writing is that the Consumer Protection table had a great guide for senior citizens. Your office also introduced me to a free fraud alert that is sent periodically to individuals and to organizations like churches, civic groups and even community associations. I was hoping you could explain in more detail what everything is about and help educate more of our seniors.  I.R., Richland

A. The guide that you are speaking of is called “A Guide for Seniors and Families.” Our hope is to create an awareness of the many ways people are scammed.

The guide covers a good portion of potential problems that everyone including seniors may get involved with. It also may help loved ones to identify the many different forms of abuse. Financial, emotional, physical abuse and neglect are some of the most dangerous and serious.

Our office is partnered with the Bucks County District Attorney, Area Agency on Aging, Coroner’s Office, Recorder of Deeds and Network of Victims Assistance (NOVA).  The partnership is called The Bucks County Crimes Against Older Adults Task Force. The task force is constantly training professional organizations to identify abuse. The task force is also available to speak to community groups at no cost about the issues stated above.

To set up a speaking engagement or to learn more about the mission of the task force, e-mail us at olderadultstaskforce@novabucks.org or contact NOVA at 215-343-6543. The free fraud alerts are a small part of getting particular information out into the hands of individuals and groups who will email them to their individual members. We have churches, community centers, senior centers and various other organizations that have signed up for the alerts and have agreed to forward the alerts to all their members.

Individuals can also receive the alerts. If you or your organization would like to receive the current alerts or any previous alerts, go to the Web site at www.crimesagainstolderadultsbucks.org or to sign up for the free fraud alerts call 215-343-6543. The Web site is a very useful tool and contains valuable information for everyone.

Remember you can help stop elder abuse. Silence is not golden. If you suspect elder abuse, call the 24-Hour Elder Abuse Hotline at 1-800-490-8505.

To receive a free copy of the “Guide for Seniors and Families” booklet, call the Bucks County Office of Consumer Protection at 1-800-942-2669.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Northampton Senior Center Fall Billiard League Champs

Billiard Champs Team Cues (the father and son team of, from left, Tom Davis, Ed Davis and George Bloom, defeated the team Eight Balls in the Fall League Billiards Championship played at the Northampton Senior Center on January 26th.

The Fall League played from September through December with the championship determined by a winner-take-all playoff. There were eight teams eligible for the playoff round.

The Winter League begins this month, and any interested Senior Center member may sign up by contacting the Senior Center at 215-357-8199 or while visiting the Center located 165 Township Road, Richboro.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Bucks Business Professionals to partner with Twilight Wish Foundation

BBP - Twilight

 

Bucks Business Professionals, a local business networking organization, will be partnering with Doylestown-headquartered national non-profit, Twilight Wish Foundation, to grant the wishes of low-income senior citizens in Doylestown and the surrounding areas.  As part of the partnership, Bucks Business Professionals plan to contribute their diverse resources, volunteer their time, and sponsor and host special events to benefit Twilight Wish.

“We are energized and excited to make wishes come true,” said president Ruth Ann Roche. “We plan on taking a hands-on approach to wish granting and look forward to working with Twilight Wish.”

For more information on Twilight Wish Foundation, visit the Web site at www.twilightwish.org or call 215-230-8777.

Bucks Business Professionals, dedicated to holding members to the highest industry standards, shares business-to-business ideas and leads. Meetings are held on a weekly basis and membership opportunities are available. 

For more information visit www.bucksbusinessprofessionals.com.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

2012 Middletown Seniors’ Bus Trips

The Middletown Senior Citizen’s Association offers a travel program for all ages. Buses depart from Middletown Senior Citizen’s Association, 2142 Trenton Road, Levittown.

Make checks payable to M.S.C.A. and mail to above address. Include traveler’s name, phone number, address, and partners. Call for further details at 215-945-5345 or 215-945-2920.

  • Wednesday, March 7th: New York City free time – Your choice, enjoy NYC sightseeing, shopping, museums or matinee on your own. Cost $32. Leave 9:30am, return 7:30pm;
  •  Wednesday, March 21st:  Sight & Sound’s NEW SHOW “Jonah,” Millennium Theatre Lancaster, PA – Orchestra seats & Family-Style lunch at Hershey Farm Restaurant. Cost $105. Leave 8:45am, return 5:45pm;
  • Wednesday, April 4th:  Ehrhardts Waterfront Resort, Lunch & Mount Airy Casino Package – Slot Play, $20. Enjoy games, trivia, shopping and Family-Style lunch. Cost $70.   Leave 7:30am, return 7:00pm;
  • Wednesday, April 18th:  New York City free time – Your choice, enjoy NYC sightseeing, shopping, museums or matinee on your own. Cost $32. Leave 9:30am, return 7:30pm.
FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Seniors have an opportunity to receive monthly food aid

Philabundance, the Delaware Valley’s largest hunger relief organization, is looking for eligible seniors, especially in Bucks County, to inquire about the USDA funded Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP), monthly food boxes that provide seniors with 30 pounds of shelf-stable food.

A CSFP/senior box provides vital nutrition to the vulnerable senior population who are on fixed incomes and often struggling to make ends meet. There are more than 144,000 seniors at risk of hunger in the Delaware Valley that may qualify for the CSFP/senior boxes.

Boxes contain canned and boxed food including vegetables, fruit, juice, pasta, milk, cereal, canned meat and a non-meat protein. Each box is also accompanied by fresh cheese.

Philabundance is able to provide more than 9,100 CSFP/senior food boxes each month to eligible seniors throughout the Delaware Valley. Philabundance is looking for eligible seniors to apply to receive a CSFP/senior box.

“Without food I can’t take my medication and without my medication, I don’t know where my health will stand,” said a senior citizen who receives a CSFP/senior box from Philabundance who wishes to remain anonymous. “How am I supposed to choose between the two? Receiving my monthly box allows me to have both so I don’t have to make these types of decisions.”

“Over the last year, Philabundance has seen a 26% increase in need and 16% of those we serve are senior citizens,” said Bill Clark, president and executive director of Philabundance.

“Seniors on fixed incomes are one of our most vulnerable populations and CSFP/senior boxes are great resources to help them put food on their table and get the nutritious food they often need.”

To qualify for the program, participants must be 60 years or older and have an income that is at or below 130% of the poverty line. Interested seniors should call 1.800.319.Food (3663) to be directed to a CSFP food box location near them. 

For more information about Philabundance, visit www.philabundance.org or call 215-339-0900. Visit them on Facebook, Facebook.com/Philabundance and follow them on Twitter, Twitter.com/Philabundance.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Bucks-Mercer Senior Softball looking to add players

Think of returning to your youth and swinging that bat or throwing that ball? Many men 65 and over do just that two days a week in an over-65 softball league. Some have come out after many years of inactivity and have found that as “the rust starts to come off,” the fun of being active while sharing good play with teammates is rediscovered.

The Bucks-Mercer Senior Softball league plays from late April through October, Tuesday and Thursday mornings, in the Lower Makefield- Fairless Hills area. The talent level spans a wide range of skill but the common element is fun in friendly competition. They also work out in the winter months each Tuesday and Thursday morning at a batting range in Bensalem.

It’s a great way to stay in shape and keep an eye on the ball until you go outside. They welcome anyone to come out and feel great again, despite any physical limitations.

For more information, call Jim Mahoney at 267-566-2919 (email campyhits@aol.com) or Bob Johnson at 215-757-7249 (bobbyjohn66@comcast.net).

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

In-law suites – Not just for mothers any more

submitted by Tom Wells, founder of Thomas G. Wells Construction, www.tgw-construction.com

Assisted living facilities do a fine job in our area. And, for some elderly people with serious physical conditions, there really is no choice. But as numerous surveys have shown, the vast majority of “seniors” prefer to stay in their own homes for as long as they can.

One way to do this is to make thoughtful, senior-friendly modifications like installing strategically placed hand grips, walk-in showers, or stair lifts. We’ve made such modifications to homes many times, and I will have a lot more to say about them in this space in the future.

This month, however, I’d like to discuss what may be the ultimate “aging-in-place” modification: creating or adding an in-law suite. Certainly this is something children of an aging parent might consider. But it’s also something the soon-to-be aging person might think about for his or her own home.

I know of an individual who was in exactly that situation. In a nutshell, the man’s wife had died and, anticipating the future, he decided to transform his home’s garage into an entirely self-sufficient in-law suite. That was to be Step One.

Step Two was to sell his home to his daughter and her husband for some nominal amount, with the implicit assumption that they would offer the necessary “assistance” for in-home assisted living as he aged. In the meantime, he would be free to cook and eat on his own and to come and go as he pleased.

I also know of many situations that have worked in reverse: adult children, seeing that their parents are failing, add an in-law suite to their home. Sometimes they modify a portion of the first floor. Sometimes they have an external concrete pad poured and then build a structure on it with access to the main home, and sometimes they transform an existing garage.

(Note that it doesn’t have to be the entire garage. A single bay may offer all the space that is needed. Everything depends on the specific situation.)

[Read more...]

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare

Spring Village unveils new computer program

Spring Village

 

Spring Village at Floral Vale, a 48-bed secured Memory Care Community in Yardley, is excited to announce they will begin using an innovative computer system called, “It’s Never Too Late” as a tool in their Resident Personal Enrichment. This program will enable staff to enhance the quality of individual and group time they spend with the residents.

They will use a touch-screen, Internet system that will connect them not only to their families and friends via Skype or e-mail but they can become tourists of world-famous cities and museums, even to places they have visited in their travels.

The program will connect to a larger screen so staff will make games like Jeopardy and Wheel of Fortune come to life in Spring Village’s Media Room.

Feel free to contact a member of the Life Enrichment staff (215-497-3003) for a demonstration of this exciting program.

PHOTO CAP: Spring Village’s Life Enrichment Team, from left, Chris Korn, Ruth Scheer, and Aurora Bobila.

FacebookTwitterEmailGoogle+DiggStumbleUponBookmark/FavoritesShare