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Two more elderly men die alone in Sydney
By Mary Beadnell
29 January 2008
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Two more lonely deaths in Sydney have shed further light on
a disturbing social trend. Frail and aged, living alone, suffering
from ill health and with few personal resources, increasing numbers
of elderly working class people are being left to fend for themselves
with little or no support, following years of government cuts
to social welfare programs.
Residents of a public housing estate at Yagoona, in Sydneys
western suburbs, expressed outrage at the discovery of the badly
decomposed body of their neighbour, Jorge Chambe-Coloma, a 64-year-old
retired factory worker, on January 8. Chambe-Coloma, originally
from Ecuador, had no family in Australia. He had worked as a process
worker at the B&D Roller Door factory in nearby Revesby, until
his retirement some years ago.
It is believed Chambe-Coloma died more than 12 months earlier.
Even though his electricity had been cut off for at least six
months, the New South Wales Department of Housing took no action
because his rent had continued to be paid by direct debit from
his bank account.
When neighbours noticed his mailbox was overflowing, they alerted
police, who made the grisly discovery.
The media reported that distraught neighbours lashed out at
authorities for not checking on the man earlier. You shudder
to think how long he would have been there if some kind people
hadnt raised the alarm, one resident observed, referring
to her neighbours, Shirley Kemble and Tom Feeney, who contacted
police on January 7.
Feeney first approached the housing department, but was told
there could be no check as there were no spare keys to Chambe-Colomas
flat. Instead, an official from the department came and put a
note on the door. Feeney then called police, who broke into the
flat.
Another resident, Mary Rayner said the department notified
residents of visits twice a year, so officials should have noticed
that Chambe-Coloma failed to respond. I cant understand
how a man thats been near 12 months dead in bed [was not
found], she said. Where have they been? she
asked. They havent been anywhere near here.
Despite authorities being informed more than a year ago that
his meals were not being collected, no action was taken, except
to cancel his meals-on-wheels service with the local council.
Police actually visited the apartment block and talked to neighbours
on January 25, 2007 but decided he had locked up and gone away.
Other authorities also did nothing. Centrelink, the federal
governments welfare payments agency, knew Chambe-Coloma
had not been in contact with them for 12 months, and his bank
knew his account had not been touched. Electricity authorities
cut off his service without checking on his welfare.
The state Labor governments response to the discovery
of Chambe-Colomas body was to declare that the communityneighbours,
family and friendswas responsible. Director General of Housing
Mike Allen told the media: Neighbours and friends are better
placed to check up on tenants. Allen insisted that his department
was simply a landlord. No landlord can take the place of
family and friends.
Housing Minister Matt Brown was just as unapologetic, saying
there were 50,000 public housing tenants over the age of 60. The
government can only do so much... I do not have dedicated staff
nor will I direct there to be dedicated staff to go and tap on
peoples doors. No landlord does that.
Within days, a further death was reported. Kevin Jones, 73,
was found dead in his Department of Housing one-room bedsitter
at Artarmon, in Sydneys north. Neighbours said they believed
Jones lay dead on the bathroom floor for up to two weeks before
police found his decomposing body.
Once again, it was left to residents, many elderly or infirm
themselves, to raise the alarm.
The tenant representative at Joness housing complex,
76-year-old William Atkinson, condemned the department. Public
housing is in a shambles. We have no one in authority here. I
always say: there is no one to watch over me. There has got to
be an investigation because the government is not worried about
this; the bedsitter is a terrible thing to do to old people. Tomorrow,
if I was given half a chance, Id get out of here.
It has been reported that Jones, a retired long-time council
worker, did not have any children. His wife passed away before
he moved into the unit about 11 years ago. He was diagnosed with
lung cancer about seven years ago and was reliant on an oxygen
mask.
Between mid-February and early March 2006, seven elderly public
housing tenants were found dead in their homes in Sydney (see:
Elderly people
die alone and unnoticed in Australia). Public outrage
forced the former housing minister, Cherie Burton, to announce
in parliament the establishment of a system whereby elderly tenants
living alone would be visited by housing officers every six months.
It has now emerged that department policy simply requires two
contactswhich need not be visitswith those who are
over 60 every year. Officers approach tenants by phone, then letter,
then a visit. This system obviously failed Chambe-Coloma and Jones.
A departmental spokesman declined to say what attempts had been
made to contact Chambe-Coloma.
The Department of Housing previously announced the establishment
of a Care Call service, which would telephone people
living alone and inform family or welfare agencies to follow up
if they could not be reached. However, this service was put out
to tender and is not yet in operation.
Elderly people can easily fall at home, become ill or immobilised
and be unable to call for help. If they live alone, and have no
immediate family or close friends, their plight can go unnoticed,
unless there is a properly organised, adequately-funded, social
and medical support system.
Reliance on volunteers
Lonely deaths are by no means confined to public housing estates.
Coroners statistics show that 582 people died alone in New
South Wales, Australias most populous state, during 2006
and 2007. Each had been dead for at least seven days before their
death was reported. Just 22 of these had died in Housing Department
dwellings.
A Red Cross program, Telecross, exists in some Australian states,
but it relies on volunteers to phone elderly or incapacitated
people who live alone. In 2006-07, more than 5,000 Telecross volunteers
nationally made more than a million calls (one each per day) to
about the same number of elderly people. If two calls go unanswered,
the volunteer phones a nominated family member or friend.
This reliance on volunteers, who cannot possibly provide anything
approaching a universal service, is part of a wider pattern. In
its report, Australias Welfare 2007, the Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) estimates that the $28.8
billion spent by governments, non-government organisations and
individual clients on welfare services in 2005-06 was dwarfed
by the imputed value of informal unpaid care, which totalled $43.7
billion. The unpaid amount included the services provided by people
receiving carers benefits, for which the federal government
paid $2.5 billion.
Far from the community being to blame for a lack
of care, millions of people are being compelled, by the lack of
government services, to look after their relatives and friends,
either unpaid or as volunteers. While 481,000 people were employed
to provide and support welfare services, unpaid carers provided
services equivalent to 1,039,000 full-time employees.
Efforts to establish individual responsibility
as a social norm in the delivery of essential services are well
advanced. At the same time, measures are underway that will only
serve to increase the levels of hardship on the frail aged and
their loved ones.
There are an estimated 2.7 million Australian residents aged
65 years or over, and the 85 years and over population is projected
to more than quadruple to 1.6 million over the next 40 years.
Three major government responses have been outlined in the National
Strategy for an Ageing Australiaextending the retirement
age, cutting the proportion of retired workers receiving full
pensions and harnessing increasing numbers of people into the
provision of voluntary services.
Currently, some two million people receive the aged pension,
with 62 percent being paid the full rate, which is about $250
a week, itself below the poverty line. But compulsory superannuation
programs and higher pension age requirements, combined with incentives
to keep older people working, are expected to fundamentally alter
this situation over the next four decades.
The AIHW report states: It has been estimated that by
2050, two-thirds of pensioners will receive a reduced government
pension, compared with about one-third today, owing to rising
superannuation coverage and, potentially, future higher workforce
participation rates in older age groups.
A systematic effort is also underway to keep elderly people
out of residential care. Over half a million people received government-funded
Home and Community Care Services in 2004-05. These services are
overwhelmingly provided by non-government, not-for-profit organisations,
many of which rely on volunteers. Moreover, the service system
is complex and fractured, with thousands of organisations involved.
Consumers of these services often complain that the system appears
bewildering and hard to access.
For those elderly people who can afford to pay for private
at-home care, a burgeoning market has arisen. For example, in
2006 Home Instead, a US aged-care franchise, announced plans to
establish 60 to 70 offices in Australia during the next 10 years.
Existing residential aged care is expensive and the system also
favours the richa maximum basic daily fee is set at 85 percent
of the basic aged pension, with wealthier residents entitled to
a subsidy to pay higher fees for premium care.
Underpinning this transformation is a combination of the free-market
system of user pays, the slashing of social spending
to reduce corporate taxation and official indifference toward
elderly workers, once their ability to work can no longer be exploited
for profit. The terrible lonely deaths and other tragic consequences
can be prevented only through the complete transformation of society
on the basis of human need, not private profit and the allocation
of billions of dollars to high-quality social facilities and services,
allowing all senior citizens to live in comfort, dignity and security.
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