Community Corner

The Search is on for State's Outstanding Senior Volunteers

Home Instead Senior Care, which has an office in Oakmont, is seeking nominations.

Home Instead Senior Care, which has an office in Oakmont, is seeking nominations for the Salute to Senior Service program to honor senior volunteers for the tireless contributions they make to their local communities.

The program will include a search for the most outstanding senior volunteer in each state and culminate with the selection of a national Salute to Senior Service winner during Older Americans Month in May.

Nominees must be 65 years of age or older and volunteer at least 15 hours a month. Nominations will be accepted at www.SalutetoSeniorService.com through March 15. Nomination forms also can be requested at ckoehler@homeinsteadinc.com.

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State Senior Hero winners will receive plaques, and their stories will be posted on the Salute to Senior Service website. In addition, $5,000 will be donated to the national winner’s nonprofit charity of choice.

According to research conducted by the Home Instead Senior Care network, 52 percent of seniors volunteer their time through unpaid community service. Nearly 20 percent (one in five) of seniors surveyed started volunteering when they reached the traditional age of retirement—65 or older. Furthermore, 20 percent of seniors who volunteer say that their community service is the most important thing they do.

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“Helping others defines life for many local retired seniors,” said Cheryl Stawovy, co-owner of the Home Instead Senior Care office in Oakmont serving Monroeville, Penn Hills, Plum, Fox Chapel and surrounding areas in the northeast Pittsburgh area.

“And what a difference we have observed in seniors’ health, attitude and outlook among those who choose to stay active as they age,” added Kathi Lenart, co-owner with Stawovy.

Dr. Erwin Tan, director of the Senior Corps, a national organization that links more than 400,000 Americans 55 and older to service opportunities, agrees.

“The one thing that I hear constantly from the seniors in our programs is that volunteering gives them a purpose in life – they say that it’s the reason they get up in the morning," Tan said. “In addition, it’s a great way for them to learn new things – whether a skill or just something about an issue in which they have an interest.

"Volunteering is just a great way to expand their horizons and feel like they’re still a valuable part of their community.”

For more information about the Salute to Senior Service program or Home Instead Senior Care, call 412-517-8337 or visit www.homeinstead.com/310.


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