HUD LAUNCHES ASSISTED-LIVING INFORMATION CENTER
Website and Call-Center Aims to Help Seniors Age-in-Place
TAMPA - U.S. Housing and Urban Development Assistant Secretary Michael Liu
joined Mayor Pam Iorio to launch a national website and toll-free call center
at Palm Terrace, a public housing assisted-living facility owned by the Tampa
Housing Authority.
The Senior Housing Information
Center website and toll-free call-center (888-245-8938) will give more than
3,700 public housing authorities (PHAs), including Indian housing authorities,
the tools needed to modernize and create more senior public housing options.
To meet elderly needs, federally assisted housing can be enriched with services
- such as meals, healthcare providers and transportation.
"Our senior citizens should not be prematurely institutionalized because of
a lack of services in their current residences," said Liu. "The website and
call-center will show housing authorities how they can create facilities to
allow their elderly residents to age-in-place.
Also attending the national launching was President/CEO of the Tampa Housing
Authority Jerome Ryans and Susan Tucker, Deputy Secretary for the Florida Department
of Elder Affairs.
The innovative website houses information for using existing financial tools
to create or modernize housing for seniors. For example the Resident Opportunity
and Self Sufficiency (ROSS) Program includes the Resident Service Delivery Models
for the Elderly. This funding is used to hire staff to provide elderly supportive
services such as: personal assistance with daily activities; transportation
residents to medical appointments and shopping; preparation of nutritional meals;
creating wellness programs; and referrals to community resources. ROSS funds
are also used to make physical improvements to existing facilities to accommodate
senior supportive services.
Also included on the website is information on how other HUD programs - Housing
Choice Vouchers, HOPE VI and Capital/Operating Funds - can be utilized to add
supportive services to make existing developments suitable for seniors.
The website also provides links to other on-line resources. For example there
are links to Medicaid and other federal agencies, as well as research materials,
senior housing data and publications. There is also a list of innovative elderly
public housing facilities in different regions that PHAs can use to get ideas
for creating their own facilities.
The call-center will be available Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Representatives will refer callers to experts in the field. The general public
can also get information about service-enriched public housing.
For the past two years, HUD has worked with elderly housing experts to ensure
the website has the most up-to-date information on this topic. Through its research,
HUD and the elderly public housing industry discovered the cost savings of subsidizing
senior housing residents in-place ranges from 20 to 65 percent less than moving
them to institutional facilities. This is a tremendous savings to state Medicaid
budgets across the nation.
HUD is the nation's housing agency committed to increasing homeownership, particularly
among minorities; creating affordable housing opportunities for low-income Americans;
and supporting the homeless, elderly, people with disabilities and people living
with AIDS. The Department also promotes economic and community development as
well as enforces the nation's fair housing laws. More information about HUD
and its programs is available on the Internet at www.hud.gov and espanol.hud.gov.
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