Seniors Digest
Seattle-King County Edition
  December 1, 2006 

The Heat is on for Seniors Thanks to BenefitsCheckUp

FurnaceNo one should have to choose between staying warm in winter (or safely cool in summer) and paying for food, rent, medicine or other essentials. Every year, hypothermia kills about 600 Americans, half over 65, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The good news is that the federal government has just released $80 million to 14 states that will help people with limited incomes pay their energy bills this winter.

Finding out whether you qualify for programs such as the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) is easy, thanks to the National Council on Aging’s (NCOA) free and confidential online service BenefitsCheckUp (
www.benefitscheckup.org). “Winter and summer can be dangerous times of the year for anyone who can’t afford to pay energy bills, but even more so for older Americans,” said Stuart Spector, NCOA’s senior vice president of Benefits Access. “BenefitsCheckUp can be a life saver for many of these people and their caregivers.”

Adult children of seniors who have access to the Internet can help their parents fill out the simple survey on the Web. You or someone you know can find out if you qualify for LIHEAP or other state and federal benefits programs in a few minutes by using BenefitsCheckUp, the first of its kind Web-based service designed to help seniors determine quickly and easily what benefits they qualify for and how to claim them. Last year alone, more than 360,000 people used BenefitsCheckUp and, among those users, about 43,708 found out they were eligible for energy-related benefits they were not yet receiving. NCOA says that BenefitsCheckUp includes more than 1300 different programs from all 50 states and the District of Columbia.  An average of more than 50 programs can be available to qualified seniors in each state.

LIHEAP,
which just received an additional $150 million this season, is administered by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and its Clearinghouse also provides free telephone and e-mail referrals to people who want to know where to apply for lower-income energy assistance. Those seeking help can call the National Energy Assistance Referral at 1-866-674-6327 from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information, visit www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/liheap.
 
The National Council on Aging
, founded in 1950, is a charitable organization dedicated to improving the health and independence of older persons and to increasing their continuing contributions to communities, society and future generations.

 


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 This Issue
Welcome to the December 2006 Seniors Digest
Foodborne Illness and Older Adults: 10 Myths and Facts
Medicare Part D Open Enrollment Began November 15
Participants Sought for Dementia Care Study
Mind Your Mind: Free Brain-Health Workshop for Seniors
The Heat is on for Seniors Thanks to BenefitsCheckUp
"Bundle Up!" Word Scramble
Links You Can Use
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