Seniors aren’t numbers in the budget
Published 12:01 am Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Hundreds of AARP members are in Washington, D.C,, today to send a clear message to the “supercommittee” and all members of Congress: “Seniors aren’t numbers. We aren’t line items in a budget. And we’re definitely not pushovers.”
The supercommittee is considering proposals behind closed doors that would shift health care costs onto seniors and cut their Social Security checks.
Instead of focusing on cutting waste and tax loopholes, they’re treating seniors like we’re just another budget line-item.
In Mississippi, 492,298 people receive Medicare. About 583,515 Mississippians depend on the Social Security that they’ve paid into for years.
We’ve talked to our members and it doesn’t matter if they’re Republicans, Democrats or Independents, they think it’s wrong for the supercommittee to cut the benefits they’ve worked for and depend on.
That’s why AARP members are hitting Capitol Hill to tell the supercommittee and all members of Congress first-hand that we’re not pushovers. We’ve spent our lives working for our Medicare and Social Security benefits.
Right now, too few people outside of Washington know that behind closed doors, this supercommittee is considering proposals that would shift health care costs onto seniors, threaten seniors’ access to their doctors, or reduce the Social Security benefits they rely on.
For example, cutting Social Security by $112 billion could cost seniors thousands of dollars over their lifetime. Raising the Medicare eligibility age would:
4Cut benefits for younger retirees
4Increase out-of-pocket spending for 65 and 66-year-olds by an average of $2,000 per year — at a time when many people are already struggling to make ends meet.
4Increase premiums for people already in Medicare because it would leave older, more costly people in the system.
4Increase health care costs for businesses because workers would stay on employer plans longer.
So the supercommittee members have a choice, they can start focusing on cutting waste and tax loopholes, or harm more than one million combined Mississippians who have worked their entire lives to earn the Medicare and Social Security benefits and will hold them accountable for making harmful cuts.
Bruce W. Brice Sr. is the AARP Mississippi Senior State president.