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Ways to give back

Programs offer ways to provide necessities, time, money to GCHA residents

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Karen Bonnar, an AkzoNobel employee, adds an armful of trim to a growing pile of carpet pieces and trim that AkzoNobel employees tore out of the hallways in Saratoga Tower in Morris. (Herald Photo by Lisa Pesavento — lpesavento@morrisdailyherald.com)

During a time when finances are tough for so many, it is easy to forget about the community's senior citizens who are forced to make tough decisions due to limited incomes.

"A lot of residents are having a hard time trying to survive everyday life," said Marcia Zyla, a resident of the Grundy County Housing Authority's Mazon Park Place. "With the changes with prescription programs, they all started panicking and looking for other ways to get them filled, and some are literally doing without."

Many local seniors are having to choose between paying bills or getting their medications. The average income of the housing authority residents is $12,000 a year, and the average rent is $281 a month.

The GCHA provides housing for 160 low-income elderly people and residents with disabilities in three locations in the county. Rent for the housing is decided based on the income of each resident.

In addition to the personal challenges its residents are enduring, the Grundy County Housing Authority's is experiencing its own economic hardships. From 2009 to 2011, 29 percent of all federal funding was cut, said Brent Newman, CEO of the GCHA.

To accommodate in the last year, Newman said the GCHA has cut employee retirement benefits, residential services, employee health insurance, and staff and board education and training.

Because of these challenges, the Grundy County Housing Authority has started multiple programs to provide opportunities for community members and businesses to give back to local seniors.

"We want to help our residents and be able to provide them with safe and affordable housing because our funding has been cut," said Jennifer Olson, vice president of development for the housing authority. "Awareness is a big deal. We wanted the programs to be for someone who doesn't have a lot but wants to help to the corporations who have $5,000 to donate."

"We wanted to reach a lot of people who can help, from kids to whomever," she said,

The programs, which officially started rolling out in August, offer numerous ways to help — from monthly donations to spending an afternoon with housing authority residents.

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