SPECIAL FROM Next Avenue
At a Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing last month on ways to attack the scourge of elder financial abuse, Page Ulrey of the King County Prosecutor’s Office in Seattle, Wash., urged more prosecutors, detectives and victim advocates specializing in elder abuse to work together. “Only a small fraction of [elder financial exploitation] crimes are properly investigated and prosecuted,” she said.
Today, I heard about a novel, new program doing what Ulrey recommended.
A Unique Elder Abuse Partnership
The Elder Financial Safety Center, based in Dallas, Texas, opened in May 2014. And based on what I heard from the six women whose employers partner on it, speaking at a panel at the Aging in America Conference of the American Society on Aging in Chicago, I’m hoping other elder abuse victim advocates around the country create local replicas.
One reason it’s been so hard to curb elder financial abuse — what Kathleen Quinn, Executive Director of the National Adult Protective Services Association, described at the Senate hearing as “rampant, largely invisible, expensive and lethal” — is the silo factor. The police, Adult Protective Services departments, DAs, courts and consumer advocates tend to deal with the problem independent of each other.
The 13-person Elder Financial Safety Center, funded by a $4 million, five-year grant from the W.W. Caruth Jr. Foundation at Communities Foundation of Texas, has three key Dallas County players with shared goals working together: The Senior Source, a Dallas nonprofit for aging services; the Dallas County Probate Courts and the District Attorney’s Office.
Dealing With The 3 Ps of Elder Abuse
By partnering and using a shared database, they team up on the three Ps of elder financial abuse: Prevention, Protection and Prosecution.
The Center offers victims financial, benefits and insurance counseling; money-management services; employment services and debt management through the Consumer Credit Counseling Services; it helps find appropriate guardians; gets cases investigated by the DA through a new elder abuse unit there and trains law enforcement.
- Clients using the center’s prevention services are now seeing a275 monthly increase in their income, on average. And those who secured employment from using the Center’s services increased their income by12,493 a year, on average.
- 99 percent of incapacitated individuals over 50 in Dallas County now have guardians.
- There has been an 18 percent increase in the number of local indictments involving elder financial abuse and a 250 percent increase in the number of first- and second-degree felonies referred to the DA that have been investigated by enforcement.
- There’s been a 66 percent increase in the number of elder financial abuse complaints investigated by the DA’s office. (Thanks to the Center’s grant, the DA now has one staffer working full-time on elder financial abuse cases.)
- And 100 percent of seniors involved in prosecution services have been referred to the Center for assessment and intervention, when that was appropriate.
As you might have heard, the 2015 White House Conference on Aging has made “elder justice” one of its four tracks. I’m hoping it’ll shine a spotlight on the Elder Financial Safety Center and spearhead a movement to produce similar centers across the country.
It’s time.
Read more from Next Avenue:
4 tips for finding the right financial adviser
10 hilariously funny jokes on aging
How to help mom and dad move to a new home