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Group plans ‘A Quantum Leap for Fairfield’ townhall on April 26
Courtesy of Billy Hunter
Apr. 22, 2025 5:17 pm
Southeast Iowa Union offers audio versions of articles using Instaread. Some words may be mispronounced.
The group Fairfield Cares is organizing a townhall meeting about helping elders stay in their homes.
The meeting will be called “A Quantum Leap for Fairfield: A new solution for Fairfield’s aging population,” to be held from 1-3:30 p.m. Saturday, April 26 at the Fairfield Arts & Convention Center. Admission is free.
AGENDA
• Results of survey on home healthcare in Jefferson County
• Fairfield Cares Helpful Village, a revolutionary new approach to home healthcare
• Question-and-answer Session
• Opportunity to become a member and request help, without any fee
• Opportunity for volunteers to sign up to help
Home Caregivers and Care Receivers Survey
In 2024, Fairfield Cares surveyed Jefferson County residents who have either received or assisted in home healthcare in the last five years. The response was over 300 surveys, which starkly revealed the increasing need for a better system of home healthcare services in our community. We need a more robust solution, to connect those who need help with those who wish to help.
Fairfield Cares Helpful Village
Helpful Village is an online platform. It’s designed to expand the connections we can create in our community. Towns and cities across the US are successfully using this platform. Members can log in or call to ask for specific help, such as: a ride to a doctor appointment; help with shopping; bring a meal; or other needs.
Fairfield Cares connects you to a volunteer who can fulfill that need. It also helps connect people to resources such as: government programs; paid providers of home healthcare; and local paid services such as plumbers, electricians, or general home maintenance.
This kind of help has enabled many people in Fairfield to continue living longer in their own homes instead of moving to an assisted living facility or a nursing home. This is something that people are very grateful for.
UC Berkeley Professor Andrew Scharlach, a prestigious scholar in the field of social welfare, analyzed the Village model and concluded that “Villages represent a promising new model, with the potential for positively affecting seniors in ways that may reduce social isolation, expand access to services, increase well-being, and increase seniors’ confidence in their ability to age in their homes.”
Volunteering — Universal Love Molecules
The Helpful Village model allows volunteers complete flexibility in how much and what kind of help they choose to offer. You can volunteer just to help a specific friend. And most people prefer to accept help from those they already know. Some special angels also volunteer to help those who have no other support system and are most in need.
Human beings are social animals, and helping one another is a powerful urge. Our brains produce a tremendous reward of good feeling and happiness when we help another. People who have been involved with Fairfield Cares in helping others report that nothing gives them greater fulfillment. Volunteers have always found that they get more than they give.
How Fairfield Cares Got Started
Fairfield Cares started at a Fairfield townhall meeting in the fall of 2017, led by Jennifer Hamilton. The meeting was about the issue of our aging population. When Jennifer asked for a show of hands for who would wish to remain at home as they aged, 400 hands went up. After that meeting, an action group was formed to explore how to make that possible. We decided to focus not just on elders, but also on anybody who needed help.
We researched many solutions to try to find the ones that were most effective. We decided on Meal Train. Meal Train is an on-line software service that allows a local Meal Train organizer to connect someone in need to volunteers who can help. A group of friends organize times to bring meals, give rides, help with small tasks, and so on. Usually the help is short term, such as while someone is recovering from an operation or accident. For someone who needs ongoing help, we found that the best solution was a team of volunteers.
In 2018, we formed a nonprofit organization, “Fairfield Cares Inc.,” which has now provided help to many people in Jefferson County. But the need keeps growing. And this is why we are adopting the Helpful Village platform.
Thanks
Our profound thanks to the Greater Jefferson County Foundation and the Fairfield City Council for grants that made the home healthcare survey possible; to the Fairfield Public Library for their wonderful support; to the many volunteers that helped distribute and collect the paper surveys; to all the people who took their time to fill out the survey. And especially to Elaine Hughes, who created the grant applications and masterminded the entire survey process.
The Home Caregivers and Care Receivers Survey project was a powerful example of local people working together as a community. Fairfield is indeed a Helpful Village.
For more information on Fairfield Cares, visit FairfieldCares.net, or send an email to FairfieldCares@lisco.com.