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ICYMI: AMAC-Independent Women Joint Initiative on “Aging With Dignity” Featured in National Publication

Posted on Monday, February 9, 2026
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by The Association of Mature American Citizens
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In a powerful joint op-ed, AMAC CEO Rebecca Weber and Independent Women’s Forum (IWF) President Carrie Lukas recently put a spotlight the skyrocketing cost of in-home elder care and the growing burden it places on American families. Drawing from personal experience, Weber and Lukas explain how outdated federal labor rules have made it more difficult – and far more expensive – for seniors to age with dignity in their own homes.

The op-ed, which originally appeared in The Washington Examiner, is part of a broader joint effort between AMAC and IWF to raise awareness about the affordability crisis in home-based care and push for practical reforms that restore flexibility and put families first. As millions of older Americans struggle to remain independent, AMAC is urging members and their loved ones to share their own stories of hardship to help drive meaningful change.

You can share your story HERE.

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Read the full op-ed:

Aging With Dignity Should Not Be a Luxury

By Rebecca Weber and Carrie Lukas

In early 2019, my (Rebecca’s) father suffered a devastating stroke. For months, our family lived in the space between hope and heartbreak, watching a proud, accomplished, independent man lose pieces of himself.

Our family agonized over the possibility of placing him in a facility. We wanted him surrounded by the walls of his own home – walls that held his memories, the photographs that told his story, the familiar sights and sounds of a life he had built. With great sacrifice, we were able to hire in-home help. It was a blessing. It was also extraordinarily expensive.

That experience is hardly unique. Survey data shows that 77 percent of adults over 50 hope to remain in their own homes as they grow older. Home represents independence, continuity, and dignity. It is where people feel most like themselves.

But the cost of in-home care has surged nearly 10 percent in the past year alone, far outpacing overall inflation. Full-time assistance now averages close to $80,000 annually. Assisted living and nursing facilities often cost far more, frequently exceeding $100,000 a year.

As a result, millions of families do not have that option. The final years of a loved one’s life, that should be marked by compassion and warm reflection on a life well-lived, are instead marred by financial stress and immense burden on family members.

The tragedy is that this outcome is not inevitable. It is, in large part, a policy choice.

Many seniors do not need round-the-clock medical supervision. They need companionship. Help with meals. Someone to drive them to the grocery store. A steady presence in the home. Human connection. But overzealous regulation has put these types of arrangements increasingly out of reach.

One major inflection point came in 2013, when the Department of Labor reinterpreted the Fair Labor Standards Act and eliminated the long-standing “companionship exemption.” Overnight, private household caregiving was treated like corporate employment. Families hiring through agencies suddenly faced rigid overtime rules, complex wage structures, and legal uncertainty that may make sense for institutions, but do not work inside private homes.

The result has been predictable. Costs rose sharply. Flexibility vanished. Families were boxed into a narrow choice between expensive formal care or no care at all.

We believe it is time for a new approach.

That approach should begin with restoring flexibility to in-home care. Policymakers should revisit federal labor rules that treat private households like corporations and prevent families from crafting arrangements that work for them. Reasonable safeguards for workers matter, as does recognizing the unique nature of care inside someone’s home.

Congress and federal agencies should also reduce barriers and streamline how the value of room and board can count toward pay for live-in companions, where appropriate. Millions of seniors have unused bedrooms and struggle with isolation. Many younger workers struggle with housing costs. Thoughtfully structured shared-living arrangements could address both problems at once, lowering costs while increasing safety and social connection.

We already have a successful model. For decades, the au pair program has matched families with live-in child-care providers who receive housing, income, and cultural exchange in return for their work. A similar framework for elder companionship, designed with proper vetting and protections, could expand the supply of affordable support dramatically without creating another massive federal entitlement.

Such arrangements would not replace professional medical care. But they would restore practical, human-scale assistance for seniors who are still largely independent but should not be alone.

Alongside policy reform, we also need better data grounded in real experience. That is why the Association of Mature American Citizens and Independent Women are launching a joint national initiative to collect and elevate the stories of seniors, family caregivers, and in-home workers.

This is not a partisan issue. Democrats and Republicans alike have aging parents. Lawmakers of every ideology hear from constituents struggling to care for loved ones while balancing work, children, and rising living costs. 

We want to highlight how the system is failing, what barriers families face, and how rules written in Washington affect daily life in kitchens and living rooms across the country. These stories will inform concrete legislative proposals aimed at lowering costs, expanding options, and protecting seniors’ ability to remain at home.

The goal is not to build a larger bureaucracy, but to remove obstacles that prevent families from caring for one another as they know best.

Aging at home is not about convenience. It is about preserving the dignity a person is entitled to, and about empowering families to care for loved ones in ways that are personal, flexible, and compassionate.

Dignity should not be reserved only for those who can pay a hefty price for it. It should be a promise we keep to every American who spent a lifetime building this country.

Rebecca Weber is CEO of the Association of Mature American Citizens. Carrie Lukas is President of Independent Women’s Forum.

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LOVER OF GOD AND AMERICA
LOVER OF GOD AND AMERICA
5 months ago

I thank GOD for sending me a younger man (who actually loved me from a much younger age!) to take care of me. We even married – some thought we were crazy! But now that I have become 80, almost 81, he truly takes care of me! I really can’t drive anymore – we tried a test drive around our small town – SCARED UP BOTH! SAID, NEVER AGAIN!!!! He is a wonderful, creative cook – I stay out of the kitchen as my walker takes up too much room… because of arthritis in most of my joints, exp hips and right knee, I can no longer climb stairs, so the 3 bedrooms and full bath upstairs are no longer available to me. He moved our bed downstairs, right next to the full downstairs bathroom, converted the old tub I could no longer get in to a beautiful shower with seat and handicapped bars *all for well under !k! Even fixed the bathroom window to be part of the shower, and built a beautiful shelf at the bottom where I can keep my glass collection of fish and various sea shells I have collected many years ago.. He does stay near when I shower in case I fall, also washes my back as I can’t! (This house was bought so I could take care of my elderly parents – this room was perfect for them, with the bathroom so accessible! Now we practically live in this room, with our computer desks, bed, armoirs, extra closet, etc., etc. I have side rail to help me out of bed, my walker handy to get me to the bathroom, my computer, and the living room where we eat our dinner and watch some tv. I usually go to bed at 9pm get up at 9am! (sleep on and off…) Just recently he has also had to do my laundry…, altho I can fold and put things on hangers, but he puts away for me…BUT!! we live only on my SS, and because of me, he can’t work – it’s tough! There needs to be a way that he can have some of his own $!!! We get a small amount of SNAP, and I get a SR BOX and food once a month from the ETX FOOD BANK.

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