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Food Is Just One Serving Of What Meals On Wheels Gives Seniors

One client receives food from Meals on Wheels. Most of the federal money for the program comes through the Older Americans Act. That's part of the Department of Health and Human Services budget, which is slated for a cut of nearly 18 percent.
Courtesy of Meals on Wheels America
One client receives food from Meals on Wheels. Most of the federal money for the program comes through the Older Americans Act. That's part of the Department of Health and Human Services budget, which is slated for a cut of nearly 18 percent.

Meals on Wheels brings food to hundreds of thousands of homebound seniors and people with disabilities. But President Trump's proposed budget has this community-based program, like many others, facing cuts.

On a hazy morning, Alan Zebker and and Vicki Kysella are organizing packages of food in the back of Zebker's SUV. They're volunteers with Meals on Wheels West in Santa Monica.

They've got their routine down.

"Alan packs the bags; I make the deliveries," Kysella says.

"When she's delivering, I pack more bags," Zebker says.

Every client gets a hot meal along with a couple of lighter meals or snacks. Altogether, it provides a day's worth of calories: about 2,000 in total.

Kysella's been volunteering for about six months. She's found that Santa Monica's upscale, beachy image masks a lot of isolation and suffering.

"I just didn't believe that people with these sorts of disabilities or their lack of mobility were living in these apartments virtually next door to me," she says. "It's just very eye-opening."

Kysella works with a farmers market to add some fresh fruits and vegetables to the packages she delivers. Client Betty Hanover is thrilled with the zucchini, the lettuce and the enormous grapefruit.

I was there for one night and two days.

"Oh, there was so much good stuff today," Kysella says.

Hanover thanks her. "You're just so good to me," she says.

Hanover is 93. She can't drive to the market because of her poor eyesight. She can't walk there because she can't be on her feet for very long. Meals on Wheels, she says, makes all the difference.

"It helps me stay in my own home here rather than go to a nursing facility," she says.

Meals on Wheels could bring Hanover food for nearly seven years for the cost of just one month in a nursing home. And that nursing home cost would probably be paid for by Medicaid. But saving the government money isn't why Hanover loves to hear the Meals on Wheels volunteers knock on her door.

"It's my big meal of the day and big excitement of the day," she says. "It's fun."

As we've reported, Meals on Wheels gets a little over a third of its money from the federal government. The rest comes from local governments, foundations and individuals. But each of the 5,000 local Meals on Wheels programs has its own mix of funders.

The federal program slated for elimination, called Community Development Block Grants, supplies very little money for Meals on Wheels overall. But in some locations, it's crucial, says Ellie Hollander, the president of Meals on Wheels America.

"I know we have a couple of programs in Pennsylvania and at least two that I've talked to in Michigan that are very concerned about the elimination of those grants," she says.

Most of the federal money for Meals on Wheels comes through the Older Americans Act. That's part of the Department of Health and Human Services budget, which is slated for a cut of nearly 18 percent. How that would affect Meals on Wheels, Hollander says, is anyone's guess.

"It would be difficult to imagine a scenario that would be free from harm," she says.

Studies show that Meals on Wheels protects its clients from harm. They have better nutrition, fewer hospitalizations and fewer falls.

Vickey Healy, 75, became a Meals on Wheels client after she suffered a serious fall in her bathroom.

"I was there for one night and two days," she says.

Now that she has Meals on Wheels, she's doesn't think she would wait so long to be rescued.

"I realize the value of having somebody come every day and I know they're going to come," she says.

It brings her food, a little company and peace of mind.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Ina Jaffe is a veteran NPR correspondent covering the aging of America. Her stories on Morning Edition and All Things Considered have focused on older adults' involvement in politics and elections, dating and divorce, work and retirement, fashion and sports, as well as issues affecting long term care and end of life choices. In 2015, she was named one of the nation's top "Influencers in Aging" by PBS publication Next Avenue, which wrote "Jaffe has reinvented reporting on aging."