Home Care Workers Deserve Higher Pay
By Jeneva Stone
Photo of Jeneva and Rob Stone by Rah Foard
It was nightmarish for me to try to work while dealing with the constant upheaval in Rob’s care. I changed the days I came into the office or worked from home, but there was no easy solution. Eventually, my job was cut, and my boss said it was because it was clear I couldn’t transition to full-time work. And he was right. I couldn’t be reliable because the workforce that supported me was so unreliable.
This is the domino effect I’ve heard from other women, both family caregivers and home care workers, who have testified on home care issues during this legislative session in Annapolis. We women are expected to do it all and not complain that we can’t make ends meet, let alone worry about our own health. When home care workers struggle to cobble together a living, worry about our own health. When home care workers struggle to cobble together a living, family members like me who rely on them also struggle to cobble together a living. My family has lost nearly a million dollars in income over the 25 years of Rob’s life.
The General Assembly is currently considering several bills to raise wages for home care and nursing home workers by investing in our long-term care system through higher Medicaid reimbursement rates and ensuring that a fair portion goes directly to direct care worker wages.
Raising caregiver wages is absolutely necessary to fix the staffing crisis. Low wages trap home care workers, who are mostly women of color, in poverty.
Retaining home care workers will enable our disabled and elderly loved ones to be cared for in their homes. Raising wages will also reduce the turnover in nursing homes that impacts quality of care and threatens the lives of our seniors.
When I hear legislators and state regulators dismiss these bills, I hear only talk about costs and reluctance to collect much needed data on home care agencies. If we improve home care services, our entire economy benefits.
I’ve been living with a broken home care system in Maryland for over two decades. In my experience, home care has always been an afterthought in our state. It’s time that changed.
Will the legislature ever consider the fact that my life, the lives of the home care workers who care for Rob, and Rob’s own life have value? Or will the legislature wait until they or their loved one experiences their health deteriorating enough to have to rely on a care team to finally make a change? And by then, will it be too late? Care simply cannot wait.