Administration on Aging, 71531-71534 [05-23434]
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71531
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 29, 2005 / Notices
TABLE 2.—GROUPS WHICH ARE ADDRESSING/HAVE ADDRESSED ATSDR’S SUBSTANCE-SPECIFIC PRIORITY DATA NEEDS
(PDNS)—Continued
Firm, institution, agency, or consortium
Substance
Metals Testing Task Force (TASARC)
Arsenic .................................................
Beryllium ..............................................
Chromium ............................................
Manganese ..........................................
Mercury ................................................
Nickel ...................................................
Selenium ..............................................
Carbon tetrachloride ............................
2A, 2B, 2C
6A, 6B, 6C, 6E
13A, 13B, 13C, 13D
30A, 30B, 30E
31C
34B, 34C, 34D, 34E
38A, 38B
8B
1,1-dichloroethene ...............................
Di-n-butyl phthalate .............................
Disulfoton .............................................
Heptachlor ...........................................
18A, 18B
21A
22A
26B
Program
National Toxicology Program ..............
* Not
National Institute of Carbon Environmental Health Sciences.
PDN ID
priority data needs.
[FR Doc. 05–23361 Filed 11–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4163–70–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Administration on Aging
2005 White House Conference on
Aging
Administration on Aging, HHS.
Notice of meeting and final
Annotated Agenda.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 10(a) of
the Federal Advisory Committee Act as
amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix 2), notice
is hereby given of the 2005 White House
Conference on Aging (WHCoA) meeting
in December 2005 and the final
Annotated Agenda for the 2005
WHCoA. The Policy Committee
approved this final Annotated Agenda
during a meeting held by conference
call on November 3, 2005. The
Annotated Agenda covers six broad
areas that reflect major issues facing
older individuals now and for the next
10 years.
The 2005 WHCoA will be open to the
public. Individuals who wish to attend
should call or email the contact person
listed below in advance of the meeting
and inform her of the day they wish to
attend; since space for the public is
limited, attendance will be on a first
come first-served basis. Individuals who
need special assistance, such as sign
language interpretation or other
reasonable accommodations, should
inform the contact person of the type of
assistance that is desired.
DATES: The 2005 White House
Conference on Aging will take place
from Sunday, December 11, 2005 to
Wednesday, December 14, 2005.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:13 Nov 28, 2005
Jkt 208001
The 2005 White House
Conference on Aging will be held at the
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, 2660
Woodley Road, NW., Washington, DC
20008.
ADDRESSES:
Rada Spencer at (301) 443–2496, or email at Rada.Spencer@whcoa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Older Americans Act
Amendments of 2000 (Pub. L. 106–501,
November 2000), the President will
convene the White House Conference on
Aging (WHCoA) not later than
December 31, 2005. Specifically, the
statute requires that the WHCoA shall
gather individuals representing the
spectrum of thought and experience in
the field of aging to develop not more
than 50 recommendations to guide the
President, Congress, and Federal
agencies in serving older individuals.
The 2005 WHCoA will be held at the
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in
Washington, DC from Sunday,
December 11, 2005 to Wednesday,
December 14, 2005. During its open
meeting on October 1, 2004, the Policy
Committee approved a proposed broad
agenda, with the knowledge that work
would continue on the Annotated
Agenda. The broad agenda focused on
six areas: Planning for the Future,
Employment, Our Community, Health
and Long-Term Living, Social
Engagement, and Marketplace, and it
was placed on the WHCoA Web site at
https://www.whcoa.gov for public
comment. The Policy Committee
received comments from testimony and
reports submitted from over 400
Listening Sessions, Solutions Forums,
Mini-Conferences, and Independent
Aging Agenda Events held and attended
by approximately 130,000 individuals,
as well as from unsolicited public
comments to refine the proposed
PO 00000
Frm 00073
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Annotated Agenda. Section 202 (b)(1) of
the statute requires that the agenda for
the WHCoA shall be published in the
Federal Register not later than 30 days
after the agenda is approved by the
Policy Committee. The Policy
Committee approved the final
Annotated Agenda, dated November 3,
2005, during a meeting held by
conference call on November 3, 2005.
The six broad areas have been refined to
read: (1) Planning Along the Lifespan,
(2) The Workplace of the Future, (3) Our
Community, (4) Health and Long-Term
Living, (5) Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement and (6) Technology and
Innovation in an Emerging Senior/
Boomer Marketplace. The entire text of
the final Annotated Agenda is published
as an Appendix to this notice.
Dated: November 23, 2005.
Edwin L. Walker,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and
Programs.
Appendix 1—2005 White House
Conference on Aging Annotated
Agenda** Final—November 3, 2005
I. Planning Along the Lifespan
Social Security, pensions, savings,
and wages each serve an important role
in ensuring financial security in
retirement. A cornerstone of achieving
financial security in retirement is
planning throughout a lifetime. Effective
savings incentives and financial
education are essential planning tools.
Starting to save for retirement as early
as possible ensures the miracle of
compound interest, and provides
optimum leverage. However,
accumulating savings by itself does not
guarantee a secure retirement. Managing
those assets through longer and longer
lifespans is also a key component.
Americans must plan and prepare for
the risk of having assets depleted
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 29, 2005 / Notices
because of a long term care episode or
other financial crisis. Moreover, retirees
must guard against becoming victims of
financial fraud and exploitation.
Enhanced financial literacy will help
enable Americans to guard against risks
and plan appropriately to achieve
financial security in retirement.
A. Economic Incentives To Increase
Retirement Savings
1. Individual savings; employer-based
pension programs
B. Social Security Programs Now and
for the Future
1. Principles to protect and strengthen
Social Security
C. Protection from Catastrophic Loss
1. Long term care expenses, and ways to
assist Baby Boomers and families in
understanding the need to finance
long-term care, through insurance and
other options
2. Preventing financial fraud, abuse and
exploitation: an integral part of elder
and Boomer financial security
D. Financial Literacy Throughout the
Life Cycle
1. Financial literacy to assist Americans
in learning to start saving early and to
manage assets to last through longer
and longer retirements
II. The Workplace of the Future
For many decades, there has been a
younger workforce on the heels of those
planning to retire. With declining
birthrates those demographics will
change dramatically and will have a
tremendous impact on the workplace of
the future. In addition, Americans are
living longer which means they will
need more assets for longer retirements
or will need to work longer so that
retirement assets last a lifetime. These
two factors mean the workforce of the
future will have to be thought about
differently. Because the workforce is
shrinking, older workers will be
valuable members of the job bank of the
future and, older workers will need the
income that working longer will provide
in order to fund their retirements. To
ensure that employers have the
workforce they need and to provide
workers with opportunities to stay in
the workforce, incentives will be needed
to encourage employers to retain older
workers and to encourage workers to
stay in the workforce. Phased retirement
offered ad hoc to a few employees today
must be encouraged for the benefit of
the employer and employee. Strategies
for overcoming current unintended
barriers to reaching these goals will be
an important aspect of this Agenda item.
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Jkt 208001
Assistive technologies are another
important component of helping
workers remain in the workforce.
A. Opportunities for Older Workers
1. Employer incentives for retaining
older workers and current
disincentives that prevent employers
from retaining older workers
2. Worker incentives to remain in the
workforce and current disincentives
to working longer
3. Phased retirement as an opportunity
for the employee who wants to retire
gradually and for the employer who
wants to retain older workers
4. Assistive technology to help workers
remain in the workforce
5. Strategies to prevent ageism/age
discrimination from affecting
opportunities for older workers
III. Our Community
Safety, independence, access to a
social network, and support by family
and informal caregivers, as needed, are
important components of a livable
community and ‘‘aging in place’’ for
older Americans. Aging in place means
being able to grow older in the
community of one’s choosing with
continued access to needed social and
health support services. Many Baby
Boomer parents left urban residences
after World War II for suburban homes
and now face living in an area where
services are less accessible, especially to
those who no longer drive. Some
possible solutions include better
coordination between public health,
transportation, and aging networks,
better information management systems,
and helping older Americans drive
safely longer, and providing additional
transportation options for those who no
longer can or wish to drive. Longer term
solutions include building higher
density neighborhoods which allow safe
and convenient pedestrian access to
services, better public transportation,
and other transportation options.
Additionally, resources and information
must be readily obtainable especially
during and after emergencies or
disasters. Emergency preparedness and
response must be given greater
emphasis especially as it relates to those
older individuals who face mobility
challenges. Improved information
management systems and coordination
between health, social service, law
enforcement, and other networks are
especially critical in times of
emergencies or disasters.
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A. Coordinated Social and Health
Services That Give the Elderly the
Maximum Opportunity To Age in Place
1. Availability of community referral
resources
2. Configuration of Senior Centers to
appeal to the next generation of senior
citizens
3. Coordination between health and
aging networks
4. Accommodation of the differences
between the Baby Boomer aging
population and previous generations
of the elderly
5. Emergency/disaster preparedness and
response as it relates to older persons
B. Promote Support for Both Family and
Informal Caregivers That Enables
Adequate Quality and Supply of
Services
1. Caregiver support: training, respite,
information, referral, and needs
assessment for family caregivers.
Training and financial support for
paid caregivers
C. Livable Communities That Enable the
Elderly To Age in Place
1. Senior-friendly community and
residential design
2. Protection from neglect and physical
abuse
3. Senior-friendly roads designed to
keep older drivers on the road, safely
4. Housing affordability and availability
5. Alternative modes of transportation
6. Expanded use of public
transportation
IV. Health and Long Term Living
Americans are living longer. That ever
increasing life span, combined with the
significant increase in the population
reaching age 65, as the Baby Boomers
age, will be major factors in shaping
health care policy for the next ten years
and beyond. The entire spectrum of
health care, physical and mental health,
will be impacted by these two factors.
Personal responsibility for life style
choices and adherence to preventive
care protocols are more important than
ever in decreasing or eliminating the
negative impact of preventable illnesses.
When acute or chronic illnesses do
occur, the issue of access to appropriate
medical and mental health services will
also need to address issues of
coordination of care across multiple
settings and continuity of care over
time. Living longer while afflicted with
chronic illnesses will also require
attention to choices that maximize
function, quality of life, and
independence in the living environment
of choice for the individual.
Research, particularly more focused
on issues associated with aging, and the
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 29, 2005 / Notices
widespread dissemination and adoption
of the information that the research
reveals, will be a major contributor to
the quality of health care. Quality in
health care includes addressing issues
of health disparities, cultural
competencies, language barriers, health
literacy, and patient safety. The concept
of health is not the sole responsibility of
the individual and the formal health
care system, but it also includes the
support provided by the aging network,
multiple community organizations,
improved information management
systems, and the opportunity for
meaningful social engagement. Issues of
health care education of the population,
in order to be integrally involved in
heath care decisions and a health care
workforce, sufficient in numbers and
appropriately trained to address the
special needs of the population are
necessary ingredients for the success of
any policy that is adopted.
A. Access to Affordable, High Quality
Services
1. Development of a comprehensive,
coordinated long term care strategy
across the continuum of care,
including benefits, living wills, endof-life care, and health measures (in
conjunction with Planning Along the
Lifespan long term care issues)
2. Connecting evidence-based and
comparative-based research with
delivery of care
3. Aligning payment policies with the
continuum of care
B. Healthy Lifestyles, Prevention, and
Disease Management
1. Prevention: Education and lifestyle
modifications
2. Disease management programs
3. Appropriate treatment for and
education on alcohol and substance
abuse and mental health
4. Provider and consumer education
about disease prevention and mental
health
C. Delivery of Quality Care and
Promotion of Maximum Independence
for Individuals With Chronic Conditions
1. Ensuring existence of a reliable,
adequately trained, and culturally
competent workforce
2. Providing maximum independence
and non-institutional care
3. Ensuring appropriate care for seniors
with disabilities
4. Addressing the shortage of paid
workers for elder care and services
D. Use of Information To Improve All
Health Care Services
1. Resources to make informed health
care decisions
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Jkt 208001
2. Medical research on aging issues
3. Appropriate use of health information
technology
4. Sharing client information across
multiple management systems
E. Affordable, Defined Health Benefits,
Including Mental Health Benefits,
Through Medicare, Medicaid, and Other
Federal and State Health Care Programs
1. Ensuring adequate access to State and
Federal health care programs
V. Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement
Social engagement is crucial to the
physical and psychological well-being
of elderly citizens. Being engaged in
such activity is important for older
persons in maintaining physical vigor
and for getting the type of social
interaction and mental stimulation
necessary to continue living a full,
robust life. It is an equally important
way in which senior citizens can
contribute to their communities. There
are a wide range of available activities
that may be helpful individually, to
other citizens and more generally, to
sustain the quality of civic life. There
are opportunities for volunteers in
hospitals, schools, and museums, and
with religious and service organizations,
as well as in many other noninstitutional settings. Key questions to
be addressed regarding Baby Boomers as
they age are what will be their level of
participation in volunteerism, what
types of activities will attract them, and
how to remove barriers that prevent
older Americans from volunteering in
their communities.
A. Integration of the Elderly With the
Non-Elderly Community
1. Strategies for changing attitudes
toward aging/intergenerational
dynamics
2. Creation of Baby Boomer volunteer
opportunities
3. Promoting expanded opportunities
for companionship and leisure to
reduce isolation and loneliness
B. Effective Individual Adaptation to the
Conditions of Aging
1. Increasing physical activity among
the elderly
2. Continuing higher education for the
older learner, including computer
literacy training
71533
include personal mobility and
communication devices, housing and
vehicle design, and pharmaceutical
advances. Some of these are beginning
to be marketed and others are in
development. But some with potentially
dramatic impacts on older persons, and
the rest of the population, are
completely unknown. For example, at
the 1981 White House Conference,
would it have been predicted that by
2005, cell phones, the Internet, or CDs
and DVDs would be in such common
use? Over the next 20 years as Baby
Boomers comprise the large majority of
the elderly population, the marketplace
affecting them will change in ways that
will make their lives easier but may in
other ways, make their lives more
complicated.
A. Promoting New Products, Technology
and New Ways of Marketing That Will
Be Helpful/Useful to the Older
Consumer
1. Developing creative products to
support independence
2. Creating awareness of available
technologies
3. Designing technology products that
assist the broadest range of consumers
4. Assure the innovative and
competitive leadership of American
technology to meet rapidly-increasing
global demand for aging-related
products and services
5. Establishing a public, private and
intergovernmental partnership to
harmonize the patchwork of different
Federal, State, and local policies,
rules, regulations, standards, and
codes that complicate and sometimes
impede demand for and distribution
of technology products and services
6. Assuring rational technology policies
that stimulate innovation and
investment
**Cross cutting issues: Issue development
should include consideration of differences
among the following variables: socioeconomic, disability/non-disability, rural/
urban, minority, cultural, linguistic
competencies/literacy, age cohort (e.g., 55–
65, 65–75, 75–85, 85+), and global aging. It
should also include consideration of
strategies for changing attitudes toward
aging. Research intending to increase the
ability to cope with the conditions of aging
and best practices should be identified.
Appendix 2—White House Conference
on Aging Program Agenda
VI. Technology and Innovation in an
Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
Saturday, December 10, 2005
There are an increasing number of
new products and operational practices
that intend to help the elderly cope with
challenges that affect their mobility,
independence, and quality of life. They
Sunday, December 11, 2005
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6 p.m.–9 p.m. Conference Registration
Location: Just off hotel lobby
10 a.m.–10 p.m. Conference
Registration
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 29, 2005 / Notices
10 a.m.–12:30 p.m.
11 a.m.–1 p.m. Top 50 Resolution
Voting
Noon–1 p.m. Box Lunch
1 p.m.–5 p.m.
Get Involved: A White House
Conference on Aging Service Project
Presentation & Discussion of Policy
Tracks
Organized by the Corporation for
National and Community Service and
the Washington, DC Jewish Community
Center.
A service project to help repair and
weatherize a Washington, DC building
that serves Latino seniors.
All delegates are invited to
participate, but space is limited. To
register as a volunteer for the event, call
Lavinia Balaci at 202.777.3246 or e-mail
lavinia@dcjj.org. 1:30 p.m.–4 p.m.
I Health and Long Term Living: The
Honorable Mark McClellan, M.D.,
Ph.D., Administrator, Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services
I Planning Along the Lifespan: The
Honorable Hal Daub, J.D.
I Workplace of the Future: Ken
Dychtwald, Ph.D., President, Age
Wave
I Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement, David Eisner, CEO,
Corporation for National and
Community Service
I Our Community (confirmation
pending)
I Technology and Innovation in an
Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
(confirmation pending)
5 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Final Opportunity to
Vote for Top 50 Resolutions
7 p.m.–9 p.m. Networking Receptions
Location: Just off hotel lobby
Pre-Conference Events
Healthy Living Celebration!!
Coordinator: President’s Council on
Physical Fitness
Presenters:
I Melissa Johnson, Executive Director,
President’s Council on Physical
Fitness and Sports
I Mollie Katzen, renowned healthy
cookbook author, ‘‘Moosewood
Cookbook’’
I Mark Zeug, Chairman, National
Senior Games Association
I Dot Richardson, Olympian and Board
Member, President’s Council on
Physical Fitness and Sports
Simultaneous Fitness Sessions:
I
I
I
I
6:30 a.m.–8 a.m. Continental Breakfast
Buffet
8:30 a.m.–11 a.m.
Morning Resolution Implementation
Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
I
I
I
I
I
Ya-La Dancing
Theraband
Tai Chi
Line Dancing
Fitness Recognition Ceremony
3:30 p.m.–5:30 p.m.
ONLY
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
BY INVITATION
Roundtable on Global Aging
Planning Along the Lifespan
Workplace of the Future
Our Community
Health and Long Term Living
Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement
I Technology and Innovation in an
Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
11 a.m.–Noon Box Lunch
Noon–2:30 p.m.
Moderator: Richard Jackson, Ph.D.
Director, Global Aging Initiative
Center for Strategic and International
Studies, Washington, DC
The 21st Century burgeons in a new
era of global aging in industrialized and
industrializing nations.
4 p.m.–6 p.m. Top 50 Resolution
Voting
5:30 p.m.–6 p.m. Exhibition Hall
Ribbon Cutting
Afternoon Resolution Implementation
Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
Evening Welcoming Reception
Afternoon Resolution Implementation
Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
Organized by the Corporation for
National and Community Service
Monday, December 12, 2005
5:30 a.m.–7:30 a.m. Continental
Breakfast Buffet
6 a.m.–Noon Conference Registration
Location: Just off Hotel Lobby
9 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Opening Plenary
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I
I
I
I
I
Planning Along the Lifespan
Workplace of the Future
Our Community
Health and Long Term Living
Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement
I Technology and Innovation in an
Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
3 p.m.–5:30 p.m.
I
I
I
I
I
Planning Along the Lifespan
Workplace of the Future
Our Community
Health and Long Term Living
Civic Engagement and Social
Engagement
I Technology and Innovation in an
Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
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Dinner Plans Being Finalized
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
6:30 a.m.–8 a.m. Continental Breakfast
Buffet
8:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Closing Plenary
Session and Luncheon
[FR Doc. 05–23434 Filed 11–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4154–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
[30Day–06–0530]
Proposed Data Collections Submitted
for Public Comment and
Recommendations
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) publishes a list of
information collection requests under
review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) in compliance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35). To request a copy of these
requests, call the CDC Reports Clearance
Officer at (404) 639–4766 or send an email to omb@cdc.gov. Send written
comments to CDC Desk Officer, Office of
Management and Budget, Washington,
DC or by fax to (202) 395–6974. Written
comments should be received within 30
days of this notice.
Proposed Project
Dose Reconstruction Telephone
Interviews under the Energy Employees
Occupational Illness Compensation
Program Act of 2000 (EEOICPA)—
Revision—The National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC).
Background and Brief Description
On October 30, 2000, the Energy
Employees Occupational Illness
Compensation Program Act of 2000
(Pub. L. 106–398) was enacted. This Act
established a federal compensation
program for employees of the
Department of Energy (DOE) or certain
of its contractors, subcontractors and
vendors, who have suffered cancers and
other designated illnesses as a result of
exposures sustained in the production
and testing of nuclear weapons.
Executive Order 13179 was issued on
December 7, 2000; it delegated
authorities assigned to ‘‘the President’’
under the Act to the Departments of
Labor, Health and Human Services,
Energy and Justice. The Department of
Health and Human Services (DHHS)
was delegated the responsibility of
E:\FR\FM\29NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 228 (Tuesday, November 29, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71531-71534]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23434]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Administration on Aging; 2005 White House Conference on Aging
AGENCY: Administration on Aging, HHS.
ACTION: Notice of meeting and final Annotated Agenda.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 10(a) of the Federal Advisory Committee
Act as amended (5 U.S.C. Appendix 2), notice is hereby given of the
2005 White House Conference on Aging (WHCoA) meeting in December 2005
and the final Annotated Agenda for the 2005 WHCoA. The Policy Committee
approved this final Annotated Agenda during a meeting held by
conference call on November 3, 2005. The Annotated Agenda covers six
broad areas that reflect major issues facing older individuals now and
for the next 10 years.
The 2005 WHCoA will be open to the public. Individuals who wish to
attend should call or email the contact person listed below in advance
of the meeting and inform her of the day they wish to attend; since
space for the public is limited, attendance will be on a first come
first-served basis. Individuals who need special assistance, such as
sign language interpretation or other reasonable accommodations, should
inform the contact person of the type of assistance that is desired.
DATES: The 2005 White House Conference on Aging will take place from
Sunday, December 11, 2005 to Wednesday, December 14, 2005.
ADDRESSES: The 2005 White House Conference on Aging will be held at the
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel, 2660 Woodley Road, NW., Washington, DC
20008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rada Spencer at (301) 443-2496, or e-
mail at Rada.Spencer@whcoa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to the Older Americans Act
Amendments of 2000 (Pub. L. 106-501, November 2000), the President will
convene the White House Conference on Aging (WHCoA) not later than
December 31, 2005. Specifically, the statute requires that the WHCoA
shall gather individuals representing the spectrum of thought and
experience in the field of aging to develop not more than 50
recommendations to guide the President, Congress, and Federal agencies
in serving older individuals. The 2005 WHCoA will be held at the
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in Washington, DC from Sunday, December 11,
2005 to Wednesday, December 14, 2005. During its open meeting on
October 1, 2004, the Policy Committee approved a proposed broad agenda,
with the knowledge that work would continue on the Annotated Agenda.
The broad agenda focused on six areas: Planning for the Future,
Employment, Our Community, Health and Long-Term Living, Social
Engagement, and Marketplace, and it was placed on the WHCoA Web site at
https://www.whcoa.gov for public comment. The Policy Committee received
comments from testimony and reports submitted from over 400 Listening
Sessions, Solutions Forums, Mini-Conferences, and Independent Aging
Agenda Events held and attended by approximately 130,000 individuals,
as well as from unsolicited public comments to refine the proposed
Annotated Agenda. Section 202 (b)(1) of the statute requires that the
agenda for the WHCoA shall be published in the Federal Register not
later than 30 days after the agenda is approved by the Policy
Committee. The Policy Committee approved the final Annotated Agenda,
dated November 3, 2005, during a meeting held by conference call on
November 3, 2005. The six broad areas have been refined to read: (1)
Planning Along the Lifespan, (2) The Workplace of the Future, (3) Our
Community, (4) Health and Long-Term Living, (5) Civic Engagement and
Social Engagement and (6) Technology and Innovation in an Emerging
Senior/Boomer Marketplace. The entire text of the final Annotated
Agenda is published as an Appendix to this notice.
Dated: November 23, 2005.
Edwin L. Walker,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Policy and Programs.
Appendix 1--2005 White House Conference on Aging Annotated Agenda**
Final--November 3, 2005
I. Planning Along the Lifespan
Social Security, pensions, savings, and wages each serve an
important role in ensuring financial security in retirement. A
cornerstone of achieving financial security in retirement is planning
throughout a lifetime. Effective savings incentives and financial
education are essential planning tools. Starting to save for retirement
as early as possible ensures the miracle of compound interest, and
provides optimum leverage. However, accumulating savings by itself does
not guarantee a secure retirement. Managing those assets through longer
and longer lifespans is also a key component. Americans must plan and
prepare for the risk of having assets depleted
[[Page 71532]]
because of a long term care episode or other financial crisis.
Moreover, retirees must guard against becoming victims of financial
fraud and exploitation. Enhanced financial literacy will help enable
Americans to guard against risks and plan appropriately to achieve
financial security in retirement.
A. Economic Incentives To Increase Retirement Savings
1. Individual savings; employer-based pension programs
B. Social Security Programs Now and for the Future
1. Principles to protect and strengthen Social Security
C. Protection from Catastrophic Loss
1. Long term care expenses, and ways to assist Baby Boomers and
families in understanding the need to finance long-term care, through
insurance and other options
2. Preventing financial fraud, abuse and exploitation: an integral part
of elder and Boomer financial security
D. Financial Literacy Throughout the Life Cycle
1. Financial literacy to assist Americans in learning to start saving
early and to manage assets to last through longer and longer
retirements
II. The Workplace of the Future
For many decades, there has been a younger workforce on the heels
of those planning to retire. With declining birthrates those
demographics will change dramatically and will have a tremendous impact
on the workplace of the future. In addition, Americans are living
longer which means they will need more assets for longer retirements or
will need to work longer so that retirement assets last a lifetime.
These two factors mean the workforce of the future will have to be
thought about differently. Because the workforce is shrinking, older
workers will be valuable members of the job bank of the future and,
older workers will need the income that working longer will provide in
order to fund their retirements. To ensure that employers have the
workforce they need and to provide workers with opportunities to stay
in the workforce, incentives will be needed to encourage employers to
retain older workers and to encourage workers to stay in the workforce.
Phased retirement offered ad hoc to a few employees today must be
encouraged for the benefit of the employer and employee. Strategies for
overcoming current unintended barriers to reaching these goals will be
an important aspect of this Agenda item. Assistive technologies are
another important component of helping workers remain in the workforce.
A. Opportunities for Older Workers
1. Employer incentives for retaining older workers and current
disincentives that prevent employers from retaining older workers
2. Worker incentives to remain in the workforce and current
disincentives to working longer
3. Phased retirement as an opportunity for the employee who wants to
retire gradually and for the employer who wants to retain older workers
4. Assistive technology to help workers remain in the workforce
5. Strategies to prevent ageism/age discrimination from affecting
opportunities for older workers
III. Our Community
Safety, independence, access to a social network, and support by
family and informal caregivers, as needed, are important components of
a livable community and ``aging in place'' for older Americans. Aging
in place means being able to grow older in the community of one's
choosing with continued access to needed social and health support
services. Many Baby Boomer parents left urban residences after World
War II for suburban homes and now face living in an area where services
are less accessible, especially to those who no longer drive. Some
possible solutions include better coordination between public health,
transportation, and aging networks, better information management
systems, and helping older Americans drive safely longer, and providing
additional transportation options for those who no longer can or wish
to drive. Longer term solutions include building higher density
neighborhoods which allow safe and convenient pedestrian access to
services, better public transportation, and other transportation
options. Additionally, resources and information must be readily
obtainable especially during and after emergencies or disasters.
Emergency preparedness and response must be given greater emphasis
especially as it relates to those older individuals who face mobility
challenges. Improved information management systems and coordination
between health, social service, law enforcement, and other networks are
especially critical in times of emergencies or disasters.
A. Coordinated Social and Health Services That Give the Elderly the
Maximum Opportunity To Age in Place
1. Availability of community referral resources
2. Configuration of Senior Centers to appeal to the next generation of
senior citizens
3. Coordination between health and aging networks
4. Accommodation of the differences between the Baby Boomer aging
population and previous generations of the elderly
5. Emergency/disaster preparedness and response as it relates to older
persons
B. Promote Support for Both Family and Informal Caregivers That Enables
Adequate Quality and Supply of Services
1. Caregiver support: training, respite, information, referral, and
needs assessment for family caregivers. Training and financial support
for paid caregivers
C. Livable Communities That Enable the Elderly To Age in Place
1. Senior-friendly community and residential design
2. Protection from neglect and physical abuse
3. Senior-friendly roads designed to keep older drivers on the road,
safely
4. Housing affordability and availability
5. Alternative modes of transportation
6. Expanded use of public transportation
IV. Health and Long Term Living
Americans are living longer. That ever increasing life span,
combined with the significant increase in the population reaching age
65, as the Baby Boomers age, will be major factors in shaping health
care policy for the next ten years and beyond. The entire spectrum of
health care, physical and mental health, will be impacted by these two
factors. Personal responsibility for life style choices and adherence
to preventive care protocols are more important than ever in decreasing
or eliminating the negative impact of preventable illnesses. When acute
or chronic illnesses do occur, the issue of access to appropriate
medical and mental health services will also need to address issues of
coordination of care across multiple settings and continuity of care
over time. Living longer while afflicted with chronic illnesses will
also require attention to choices that maximize function, quality of
life, and independence in the living environment of choice for the
individual.
Research, particularly more focused on issues associated with
aging, and the
[[Page 71533]]
widespread dissemination and adoption of the information that the
research reveals, will be a major contributor to the quality of health
care. Quality in health care includes addressing issues of health
disparities, cultural competencies, language barriers, health literacy,
and patient safety. The concept of health is not the sole
responsibility of the individual and the formal health care system, but
it also includes the support provided by the aging network, multiple
community organizations, improved information management systems, and
the opportunity for meaningful social engagement. Issues of health care
education of the population, in order to be integrally involved in
heath care decisions and a health care workforce, sufficient in numbers
and appropriately trained to address the special needs of the
population are necessary ingredients for the success of any policy that
is adopted.
A. Access to Affordable, High Quality Services
1. Development of a comprehensive, coordinated long term care strategy
across the continuum of care, including benefits, living wills, end-of-
life care, and health measures (in conjunction with Planning Along the
Lifespan long term care issues)
2. Connecting evidence-based and comparative-based research with
delivery of care
3. Aligning payment policies with the continuum of care
B. Healthy Lifestyles, Prevention, and Disease Management
1. Prevention: Education and lifestyle modifications
2. Disease management programs
3. Appropriate treatment for and education on alcohol and substance
abuse and mental health
4. Provider and consumer education about disease prevention and mental
health
C. Delivery of Quality Care and Promotion of Maximum Independence for
Individuals With Chronic Conditions
1. Ensuring existence of a reliable, adequately trained, and culturally
competent workforce
2. Providing maximum independence and non-institutional care
3. Ensuring appropriate care for seniors with disabilities
4. Addressing the shortage of paid workers for elder care and services
D. Use of Information To Improve All Health Care Services
1. Resources to make informed health care decisions
2. Medical research on aging issues
3. Appropriate use of health information technology
4. Sharing client information across multiple management systems
E. Affordable, Defined Health Benefits, Including Mental Health
Benefits, Through Medicare, Medicaid, and Other Federal and State
Health Care Programs
1. Ensuring adequate access to State and Federal health care programs
V. Civic Engagement and Social Engagement
Social engagement is crucial to the physical and psychological
well-being of elderly citizens. Being engaged in such activity is
important for older persons in maintaining physical vigor and for
getting the type of social interaction and mental stimulation necessary
to continue living a full, robust life. It is an equally important way
in which senior citizens can contribute to their communities. There are
a wide range of available activities that may be helpful individually,
to other citizens and more generally, to sustain the quality of civic
life. There are opportunities for volunteers in hospitals, schools, and
museums, and with religious and service organizations, as well as in
many other non-institutional settings. Key questions to be addressed
regarding Baby Boomers as they age are what will be their level of
participation in volunteerism, what types of activities will attract
them, and how to remove barriers that prevent older Americans from
volunteering in their communities.
A. Integration of the Elderly With the Non-Elderly Community
1. Strategies for changing attitudes toward aging/intergenerational
dynamics
2. Creation of Baby Boomer volunteer opportunities
3. Promoting expanded opportunities for companionship and leisure to
reduce isolation and loneliness
B. Effective Individual Adaptation to the Conditions of Aging
1. Increasing physical activity among the elderly
2. Continuing higher education for the older learner, including
computer literacy training
VI. Technology and Innovation in an Emerging Senior/Boomer Marketplace
There are an increasing number of new products and operational
practices that intend to help the elderly cope with challenges that
affect their mobility, independence, and quality of life. They include
personal mobility and communication devices, housing and vehicle
design, and pharmaceutical advances. Some of these are beginning to be
marketed and others are in development. But some with potentially
dramatic impacts on older persons, and the rest of the population, are
completely unknown. For example, at the 1981 White House Conference,
would it have been predicted that by 2005, cell phones, the Internet,
or CDs and DVDs would be in such common use? Over the next 20 years as
Baby Boomers comprise the large majority of the elderly population, the
marketplace affecting them will change in ways that will make their
lives easier but may in other ways, make their lives more complicated.
A. Promoting New Products, Technology and New Ways of Marketing That
Will Be Helpful/Useful to the Older Consumer
1. Developing creative products to support independence
2. Creating awareness of available technologies
3. Designing technology products that assist the broadest range of
consumers
4. Assure the innovative and competitive leadership of American
technology to meet rapidly-increasing global demand for aging-related
products and services
5. Establishing a public, private and intergovernmental partnership to
harmonize the patchwork of different Federal, State, and local
policies, rules, regulations, standards, and codes that complicate and
sometimes impede demand for and distribution of technology products and
services
6. Assuring rational technology policies that stimulate innovation and
investment
**Cross cutting issues: Issue development should include
consideration of differences among the following variables: socio-
economic, disability/non-disability, rural/urban, minority,
cultural, linguistic competencies/literacy, age cohort (e.g., 55-65,
65-75, 75-85, 85+), and global aging. It should also include
consideration of strategies for changing attitudes toward aging.
Research intending to increase the ability to cope with the
conditions of aging and best practices should be identified.
Appendix 2--White House Conference on Aging Program Agenda
Saturday, December 10, 2005
6 p.m.-9 p.m. Conference Registration
Location: Just off hotel lobby
Sunday, December 11, 2005
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Conference Registration
[[Page 71534]]
Location: Just off hotel lobby
Pre-Conference Events
10 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Get Involved: A White House Conference on Aging Service Project
Organized by the Corporation for National and Community Service and
the Washington, DC Jewish Community Center.
A service project to help repair and weatherize a Washington, DC
building that serves Latino seniors.
All delegates are invited to participate, but space is limited. To
register as a volunteer for the event, call Lavinia Balaci at
202.777.3246 or e-mail lavinia@dcjj.org. 1:30 p.m.-4 p.m.
Healthy Living Celebration!!
Coordinator: President's Council on Physical Fitness
Presenters:
[squf] Melissa Johnson, Executive Director, President's Council on
Physical Fitness and Sports
[squf] Mollie Katzen, renowned healthy cookbook author, ``Moosewood
Cookbook''
[squf] Mark Zeug, Chairman, National Senior Games Association
[squf] Dot Richardson, Olympian and Board Member, President's Council
on Physical Fitness and Sports
Simultaneous Fitness Sessions:
[squf] Ya-La Dancing
[squf] Theraband
[squf] Tai Chi
[squf] Line Dancing
Fitness Recognition Ceremony
3:30 p.m.-5:30 p.m. BY INVITATION ONLY
Roundtable on Global Aging
Moderator: Richard Jackson, Ph.D.
Director, Global Aging Initiative
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC
The 21st Century burgeons in a new era of global aging in
industrialized and industrializing nations.
4 p.m.-6 p.m. Top 50 Resolution Voting
5:30 p.m.-6 p.m. Exhibition Hall Ribbon Cutting
Evening Welcoming Reception
Organized by the Corporation for National and Community Service
Monday, December 12, 2005
5:30 a.m.-7:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast Buffet
6 a.m.-Noon Conference Registration
Location: Just off Hotel Lobby
9 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Opening Plenary
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Top 50 Resolution Voting
Noon-1 p.m. Box Lunch
1 p.m.-5 p.m.
Presentation & Discussion of Policy Tracks
[squf] Health and Long Term Living: The Honorable Mark McClellan, M.D.,
Ph.D., Administrator, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
[squf] Planning Along the Lifespan: The Honorable Hal Daub, J.D.
[squf] Workplace of the Future: Ken Dychtwald, Ph.D., President, Age
Wave
[squf] Civic Engagement and Social Engagement, David Eisner, CEO,
Corporation for National and Community Service
[squf] Our Community (confirmation pending)
[squf] Technology and Innovation in an Emerging Senior/Boomer
Marketplace (confirmation pending)
5 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Final Opportunity to Vote for Top 50 Resolutions
7 p.m.-9 p.m. Networking Receptions
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
6:30 a.m.-8 a.m. Continental Breakfast Buffet
8:30 a.m.-11 a.m.
Morning Resolution Implementation Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
[squf] Planning Along the Lifespan
[squf] Workplace of the Future
[squf] Our Community
[squf] Health and Long Term Living
[squf] Civic Engagement and Social Engagement
[squf] Technology and Innovation in an Emerging Senior/Boomer
Marketplace
11 a.m.-Noon Box Lunch
Noon-2:30 p.m.
Afternoon Resolution Implementation Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
[squf] Planning Along the Lifespan
[squf] Workplace of the Future
[squf] Our Community
[squf] Health and Long Term Living
[squf] Civic Engagement and Social Engagement
[squf] Technology and Innovation in an Emerging Senior/Boomer
Marketplace
3 p.m.-5:30 p.m.
Afternoon Resolution Implementation Strategy Sessions (Facilitated)
[squf] Planning Along the Lifespan
[squf] Workplace of the Future
[squf] Our Community
[squf] Health and Long Term Living
[squf] Civic Engagement and Social Engagement
[squf] Technology and Innovation in an Emerging Senior/Boomer
Marketplace
Dinner Plans Being Finalized
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
6:30 a.m.-8 a.m. Continental Breakfast Buffet
8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Closing Plenary Session and Luncheon
[FR Doc. 05-23434 Filed 11-28-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4154-01-P