Senate approves initiative to improve elderly protection

The Senate plenum approved a legislative project to bolster care and protection for older adults amid rising indigence and assaults on this demographic. Promoted by Senator Karina Espinosa, the initiative reforms state fund management and toughens penalties for neglect. It aims to optimize resources such as the elderly welfare stamp.

Senator Karina Espinosa championed the bill, stating: "It pains us to see the situation of the elderly population, the abandonment they often face and the indifference they have endured for years. Our older adults deserve more care, more dignity and real answers. This law is for them, so that resources reach where they are truly needed and they feel more protected and better served".

The proposal refines the collection and spending of the "estampilla para el bienestar del adulto mayor", managed by local governments under stricter guidelines. Funds will support elderly farms in rural and semi-urban areas, providing housing, nutrition, productive activities and recreation.

Penally, it stiffens consequences for neglect, abuse and negligence. Abandonment of older adults will carry prison terms of four to eight years, plus fines, with harsher measures for intrafamily violence cases.

Administratively, governors and mayors gain heightened responsibility for budget execution and must account for funded programs. Coverage expands to those in absolute poverty, neglect, natural disasters or public health crises.

Relaterede artikler

Argentine Senate chamber during vote approving juvenile penal regime and labor reform, with celebrations and opposition reactions.
Billede genereret af AI

Senate approves juvenile penal regime and labor reform

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Argentina's Senate turned the new Juvenile Penal Regime into law, lowering the age of criminal responsibility to 14, with 44 votes in favor and 27 against, after seven hours of debate. It also approved the labor reform with 42 affirmative votes and 28 negative, incorporating changes from the Lower House that removed a controversial article on sick leave. The ruling party celebrated the advances, while the opposition criticized the measures as harmful to workers and human rights.

Senator Gerardo Fernández Noroña, aged 65, shared on social media that he has received his Banco del Bienestar card for the adult seniors' pension. He celebrated with the phrase 'Happy, happy,' though it sparked controversy due to his role as a public official. The program provides a bimonthly support of 6,200 pesos to people aged 65 or older.

Rapporteret af AI

The Chamber of Deputies approved with broad support the bill creating the National System of Supports and Care, a key government initiative. The vote garnered 90 in favor and now returns to the Senate for final review. Minister Javiera Toro highlighted the collaborative legislative work between chambers.

Prosperidad Social is urging elderly beneficiaries of the Colombia Mayor program to claim their 230,000-peso pension bonus before the January 12 deadline. New recipients started receiving the transfer from December 23 as part of the government's social protection strategy.

Rapporteret af AI

Federal support for family caregivers remains stalled, but state-level initiatives are gaining traction to ease the burden on millions of Americans. In a recent Senate speech, New Jersey Democrat Andy Kim highlighted the personal and financial toll of caregiving for his father with Alzheimer's. Advocates point to growing awareness and policy experiments as signs of potential national change.

The National Assembly adopted the suspension of the pension reform until January 2028 on Wednesday, backed by the PS, ecologists, and RN. On Thursday, deputies voted against cutting the 10% tax abatement for retirees, removing other measures targeting seniors from the 2026 budget. These moves signal a government retreat amid political divisions.

Rapporteret af AI

José Antonio Kast's government held its first expanded political committee on Monday at La Moneda, where Segpres Minister José García announced urgencies for 20 bills, mainly on security and migration. Three initiatives received immediate discussion, including classifying irregular entry as a crime. The announcement comes amid internal criticisms over possible pardons and limits to free higher education.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis