(Source: Richmond Times - Dispatch)

Statisticians may think the price of everything is staying low,
but it doesn't look that way to the ladies at the Friendship Cafe at
Good Shepherd Baptist Church in Richmond's Church Hill. Like
millions of Americans who had been counting on a Social Security
cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, increase, they're wondering now
how they're going to stretch tight dollars even further.
Next year will be the first without an automatic Social Security
COLA since 1975, the agency announced Thursday.
"I've learned to live within it, but prices in the stores keep
going up, every time you go shopping for food," said Charlotte
Coleman, 77, one of the volunteers at the Friendship Cafe. "I just
buy what I really need."
Medicine is the big worry. The Social Security COLA is pegged to
the Consumer Price Index for wage earners. Medicines of all kinds
have just a 1.65 percent weighting in the index, though medicine
takes a bigger bite of many seniors' budgets.
"You have to have medicine, and it keeps going up," said Alberta
Stith, 90. "You just have to do without other things."
She cuts back on clothing, on activities - bingo at the
Friendship Cafe is a treat - and sometimes, on food.
Rent is another big worry. While the average monthly benefit for
retired workers is $1,160, the market rent for a one-bedroom
apartment in Richmond is $832, according to the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
"You have to buy what you have to buy.... We don't have a
choice," said Queen Wilson, 85. "My rent just went up. I'll try to
manage."
At Senior Connections, The Capital Area Agency on Aging, the
Social Security benefits freeze is worrying.
"We're hearing from a lot of people already, having trouble with
utility bills and paying for food on the table," said Thelma Bland
Watson, executive director.
More people are asking for help from the nonprofit group's
emergency fund for rent, heating bills and medicine, she said. The
20 Friendship Cafes it has set up in area churches and senior
centers are busier as well.
The agency steers people to help from federal and state programs,
and it also counsels seniors on budgets.
"You're never stuck," said Robert A. Fishbein, vice president and
corporate counsel for Prudential Financial Inc.
"It's never too early and it's never too late to do something
about your situation."
Fishbein suggests starting with your bills, to get a sense of
what you're spending. Next, think about other expenses, or possible
expenses, that might come up.
Then, tally up your income. Think about where the economy is -
low interest rates on savings squeeze many retirees' budgets, and
you'll need to think about how long rates could remain low.
"Too many people think 'I've got 'X' amount in the bank' instead
of 'What does that really mean?'" he said, referring to the flow of
cash an asset generates - the way a CD does, or a health plan that
covers you when you retire.
It's important to plan, review and be ready to change your plans,
Fishbein said.
After all, there still may be more bad news to come: The
Congressional Budget Office already has forecast that there won't be
a COLA increase in 2011, either.
Contact David Ress at (804) 649-6051 or dress@timesdispatch.com.
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTOS
photo on page A1 caption --- Alberta Stith, 90, enjoys a game of
bingo at the Friendship Cafe at Good Shepherd Baptist Church in
Richmond's Church Hill, a treat in a time of personal cutbacks.
photo on page A8 caption --- Mary Meekins did needlework after
lunch yesterday at Good Shepherd Baptist Church's Friendship Cafe.
MEMO: Focus on the Ecnonomy; RT-D FIRST
Originally published by RESS; Times-Dispatch Staff Writer.
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