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Public Policy &
Aging E-Newsletter
Volume 1, Number 1, January 2007
This new bimonthly e-newsletter highlights key developments
and viewpoints in the field of aging policy from a wide variety
of sources, including articles and reports circulating in the media,
academy, think tanks, private sector, government and nonprofit organizations.
The goal of this email publication is to reach teachers, students,
and citizens interested in aging-related issues, especially those
who may not have access to policy information disseminated both
in Washington and around the country.
As editor, I will select the content, originally organized in the
format that follows, and list websites and links where readers can
obtain more information. Greg ONeill, director of the National
Academy on an Aging Society, and Rob Hudson, editor of Public
Policy & Aging Report, will feed me newsworthy items for
the e-newsletter. As part of the collaborative arrangement, Rob
will contribute a brief opinion piece to each issue of the e-newsletter,
designed to stimulate critical and actionable thinking about aging
policy issues. I will be responsible for all other editorial content.
Each of us engaged in this effort hope that Public Policy &
Aging E-Newsletter fills a gap and finds a niche. I invite your
suggestions to make it more useful.
Andy Achenbaum
I. WHATS HAPPENING IN WASHINGTON?
A. The 110th Congress: The new Democratically-controlled Congress
will convene on January 4, 2007. Click here
to view a list of the new Senate and House committee chairs, and
the key aging issues that fall under their jurisdiction.
B. Older Americans Act Reauthorization (OAA): In late 2006, President
Bush signed into law the five-year reauthorization of the OAA. Click
here
to view a summary of changes in the reauthorized OAA or click here
to view the full text of the bill.
C. The White House Conference on Aging: To view the Conference's
final report, The Booming Dynamics of Aging," click here.
II. WHATS HAPPENING AROUND THE COUNTRY?
A. The Maturing of America Getting Communities on Track
for an Aging Population: This comprehensive report from The National
Association of Area Agencies on Aging (n4a) offers Ten Best
Practices for Communities to Consider as Their Populations
Age and "10 Communities with Great Ideas." Click
here
for more.
B. Cash & Counseling: Click here
to view an in-depth report on this innovative model of self-directed
personal assistance services for elderly and young people with disabilities,
from the original three-state demonstration project to its current
expansion into 12 more states.
C. Across the States 2006: Click here
to view this biennial report from AARP's Public Policy Institute
that compiles data on long-term care and independent living and
provides a comparative analysis across the 50 U.S. states.
III. THIS ISSUE'S POLICY STORY: OLDER WORKERS
1. Working after Retirement: The Gap between Expectations
and Reality":
Click here
to view this Pew Research Center Report.
2. Do Older Workers Face Greater Risk of Displacement":
Click here
to view this Boston College Center for Retirement Research Issue
Brief.
3. Older Worker Training: What We Know and Dont Know":
Click here
to view this AARP Public Policy Institute Research Report.
4. Discouraged Workers? Job Search Outcomes of Older Workers":
Click here
to view this University of Michigan Retirement Research Center Working
Paper.
5. The Implicit Tax on Work at Older Ages":
Click here
to view this Urban Institute publication.
IV. WORTH NOTING
A. Redesigning Health Care for an Older America: Click here
to view this new policy report from the International Longevity
Center-USA.
B. Is Social Security Progressive?: Click here
to view this new Economic and Budget Issue Brief from the Congressional
Budget Office.
C. Medicare Part D: For resources on the Medicare Prescription
Drug Benefit, visit the Families
USA and Kaiser
Family Foundation websites.
V. WHAT'S HAPPENING ABROAD?
A. U.S. Social Security Administration Office of Policy International
Update: This monthly publication covers recent developments in foreign
public and private pensions. Click here
to view.
B. Global Aging and the Sustainability of Public Pension SystemsAn
Assessment of Reform Efforts in Twelve Developed Countries: This
new (2007) report from the Center for Strategic and International
Studies chronicles the efforts of the major developed countries
to prepare for their coming age wavesand in particular, to
reform their public pension systems. Click here
to view.
VI. PERSPECTIVES ON POLICY: ROB HUDSON, EDITOR, PP&AR
As editor of the quarterly Public Policy & Aging Report,
I am very pleased to be participating in this new venture wherein
we will bring key trends covered by the hard copy Report to a new
and expanding e-network.
PP&AR has just celebrated its 10th anniversary as a
publication of the National Academy on an Aging Society. Greg ONeill,
the Academy's director, and I believe that joining forces with e-newsletter
editor Andy Achenbaum and the Office of Academic Affairs at AARP
will prove to be an innovative next step in aging policy dissemination
and analysis.
This new e-newsletter is being inaugurated at a critical time for
policies directed at the nations seniors. For our part, we
will be paying particular attention to moves centered on Medicare
Part D (likely to be initiated by the Democrats) and on Social Security
financing (likely to be initiated by Henry Paulson, the Presidents
recently installed Secretary of the Treasury). We will also be tracking
state-level developments in long-term care and other areas where
the states have clearly taken the policy lead in recent years.
Our collective aim is to be both timely and substantive, and we
trust that a loyal readership will both apprise and appraise our
efforts in that regard.
Public Policy & Aging Report, published quarterly, explores
policy issues in an aging society. To subscribe, click here.
The Public
Policy & Aging E-Newsletter is a free bimonthly email publication.
If you have been forwarded this by a colleague and would like to
subscribe, please click here
and type Subscribe in the subject line. If you would
like to unsubscribe to this newsletter, please click here
and type Unsubscribe in the subject line.
Newsletter Editors: Ellyn Emsley and Greg O'Neill, National Academy
on an Aging Society; Andy Achenbaum, University of Houston.
The Public Policy and Aging E-Newsletter is supported in part
by a grant from the AARP Office of Academic Affairs.
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