
Mary Alice Rountree guided agency for 20 years
Mary
Alice Rountree is getting ready to retire, and there’s probably not a
soul anywhere who could be more prepared for the issues that will bring.
Rountree has spent the past 20 years helping seniors navigate their
twilight years as executive director of The Caddo Council on Aging.
Rountree
has been the guiding light behind the Caddo Council on Aging (CCOA), a
nonprofit organization that empowers elderly citizens so they may
continue aging in the places they choose. CCOA provides support services
and serves as a focal point on issues affecting the health, welfare,
safety and security of the aging population.
“At
the Caddo Council on Aging, our main responsibility is to be an
information and referral source for people,” Rountree said. “People can
come in and sit across from a real person and ask questions.”
The
agency also provides transportation, meals, homemaker services and
personal care. It even provides caregiver respite for families and
nursing home ombudsmen.
“It
has been a fabulous 20 years, but I’m a big believer in turning over
the leadership,” Rountree said. “I’m doing this for the good of the
agency. An executive director needs to be young and able and ready to
go.”
Rountree
couldn’t be happier about her successor, Monica Wright. “Monica has
been my fiscal officer for the last 17 years,” she said. “She’s a money
lady. She also knows everything about the agency. We have a fabulous
reputation of being good stewards with money, and it’s all because of
Monica. It’s going to be very easy to turn over the baton to her.”
“People
keep asking me what I will do,” Rountree said. “That’s a big fear for a
lot of people. They are afraid to retire because they don’t know what
they are going to do. Many seniors retire and go into a different field
doing something they have always wanted to do. And people are retiring
fairly early. There is a very strong movement of recognizing the
expertise and knowledge that seniors can bring in the volunteer
segment.”
“Now,
though, I’m going to concentrate on my husband, Doug, and my family,”
Rountree said. “I have six grandkids, all in Baton Rouge. We’re very
involved. If they have a swim meet, we jump in the car and go cheer them
on. We feel like we own I-49.”
Rountree
had to think carefully about a proudest accomplishment over the years,
due to the many programs and services provided by CCOA. “I think it
would be the year of Hurricane Katrina,” she said. “The CCOA had stopped
using volunteers for Meals on Wheels, and I was really wondering about
that decision. We were able to get a small grant from the Community
Foundation (of North LA), and we tried to recruit business owners one by
one who would let their employees deliver meals for 30 minutes once a
week.”
It
was a tedious process in which Rountree found few takers. She was
getting discouraged and almost gave up. “So I went to see my dear, dear
friend, Virginia Shehee,” Rountree said.
“I
asked her if her office would deliver eight meals. After discussing it
with her staff, they agreed. If Virginia hadn’t said yes, I’d have
just taken it to the house.”
“Now
we have over 30 volunteer routes, Monday through Thursday,” Rountree
said. “Delivering a meal also means a knock on the door with a safety
check to make sure seniors living alone are okay.”
Even though CCOA provides many worthy services, Rountreeinsisted that seniors have to become their own advocates, too.
“Even
with health care,” she said, “if they go to a hospital, they need to
have an advocate with them that is taking notes on everything that is
happening.”
“Middle income Social Security seniors are the ones who are in the most trouble,” Rountree said.
“Medicaid
doesn’t pay for assisted living. Some states have already turned it
around, subbing their Medicaid dollars to home care. People can qualify
for a community waiver. In states like Wisconsin and New Jersey, where
they are opening more of those waivers, more people are being able to
stay in their own homes. A person who stays home and gets two hours in
the morning and two or three hours in the afternoon for care and a meal –
that’s enough to keep so many of our seniors living at home as opposed
to in a nursing home.”
“Navigating
long-term care – and I’m not talking about nursing care – we know how
complicated it is,” Rountree said. “Medicaid is so complicated, and
with baby boomers hitting retirement, you’re going to see things you’ve
never seen before. Technology like medical equipment, phone apps and
machines for climbing stairs are going to enable more seniors to stay in
their own homes.”
“I’m
really pushing technology,” Rountree said. “Tech Talk on Fridays at
the Randle T. Moore Center are opening up the world for seniors. They
want to get on technology with smart phones and apps. People in their
70s and 80s that come in every Friday bring their brand new iPhones and
ask, ‘How do I turn it on?’ Many of them turn into pros. They become
connected. If we can get seniors connected, they can carry that all the
way to the nursing home. They are no longer isolated. It’s empowering.”
It
is important for people facing 65 to talk to someone for guidance.
People who have worked, planned and saved for financial security after
retirement can see their situation change on a dime. “We see many women
who lose their husbands and have only one income now,” Rountree said.
“People come into our office from all socio-economic conditions, from
Medicaid all the way up to very high incomes. I recently talked to a
doctor who said, ‘I thought I was smart, but I can’t even figure out
Medicare Part D and which plan to get in!’ Turning 65, you have many
important decisions to make.”
“Call
the Council on Aging,” Rountree encouraged. “We are not just for
low-income seniors. We are not entitlement because our funding is so
fragile. We are funded by the Older Americans Act (1965). We deliver
1,200 meals per day in every single neighborhood in Shreveport from
Pierremont/South Highlands to Allendale and Cedar Grove.”
“Trust me,” Rountree said, laughing, “at my age, all my friends are calling for information.”
MORE INFORMATION:
The
Caddo Council on Aging is located at 1700 Buckner Square, Suite 240.
For more information visit www.caddocoa. org or call (318) 676-7900 or 1
(800) 256-3003.