Kupuna caregivers program deserves full funding

Will Caron, Social Justice Action Committee Chair (2017-2018)
From Honolulu Civil Beat

In Hawaiʻi, approximately 247,000 people serve as family caregivers. Across the United States, there are some 4 million home-care workers and caregivers providing professional elder care, and some 52 million family care-givers: people who are providing up to 20 hours a week of care for their family members on top of full-time jobs and other commitments.

This is a huge number of people dealing with the pressures of working and holding down a job to support their family while also taking care of aging loved ones. Managing that pressure is one of the primary pain-points that working families in this country are dealing with today.

In Hawaiʻi, approximately 247,000 people serve as family caregivers.

At the same time, millennials are entering their 30s and having children. There are 4 million babies being born every year with virtually no childcare infrastructure either to support these new families. The result is a sandwiching effect on the millennial generation, whereby working age adults are being pressured from both sides by the demands of childcare and elder care with no infrastructure or support.

This is a national problem we must address, and Hawaii has an opportunity—and an imperative need—to take the lead on finding compassionate, effective solutions. Because Hawaii is a state that is aging quickly. By 2020, there will be 300,000 people over the age of 65 here in Hawaiʻi.

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