KIRO NEWSRADIO OPINION

Ross: The hidden benefit of Social Security, funding our volunteers

Nov 8, 2023, 8:04 AM | Updated: 8:54 am

A food bank volunteer prepares a free food basket of two young women in New York. (Photo by © Vivi...

A food bank volunteer prepares a free food basket of two young women in New York. (Photo by © Viviane Moos/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

(Photo by © Viviane Moos/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)

Last week, I talked about my generous social security check and questioned whether those of us who would get along fine without that money should be getting it.

That prompted a note from a listener in Everett named Meg, who wanted to point out that retirees earned that money not just because they paid into the system but because of how hard many of them work in retirement.

More from Dave Ross: The sun is setting on Seattle and it’s got me all mopey and restless

“Just want you to know that I am retired, receiving Social Security, and volunteering. Every nonprofit I volunteer with would not function without retired people with the time, interest, and energy to help it function,” Meg wrote.

And so, she looks at Social Security as a kind of compensation for the volunteer work that becomes a second career for so many retirees.

So, I wrote back to ask her how she was volunteering.

It turns out Meg retired at age 66 after 30 years in the Everett School District, and now, at age 70, here’s what’s on her calendar.

First, she volunteers at the Everett Clubhouse for mental health rehabilitation, where she also serves on the advisory board. She has a personal interest because her son is living with mental illness, and she and her husband have taken on the responsibility of making sure he has stable housing and good counseling.

But it doesn’t stop there, she is also a deacon at her church, providing rides to get senior citizens to their medical appointments, as well as preparing meals. She is also a member of “PEO International,” which supports women’s education through scholarships and loans.

And finally – since her daughter is an elementary school librarian – she volunteers at the school library. Not just to support her daughter but because the kids are so adorable.

So that’s a pretty busy retirement.

In her note, Meg asked whether there was any research on the economic value of retired volunteers.

It turns out there is! A study by Americorps estimates that each year, about one and a half million Washingtonians participate in volunteer service, with their work estimated to contribute $4.1 billion worth of services. And in this state, people over the age of 65 provided about 28% of all the volunteer hours worked.

So that’s another way to look at Social Security: It gives retired people the freedom to participate in the causes they really care about, the schools, the churches, the meal programs, all of which make life a little easier and help keep communities together.

The point being you can’t just focus on what Social Security costs without also acknowledging what it gives back.

Thanks, Meg.

Listen to Seattle’s Morning News with Dave Ross and Colleen O’Brien weekday mornings from 5 – 9 a.m. on KIRO Newsradio, 97.3 FM. Subscribe to the podcast here.

Dave's Commentary

Dave Ross on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM
  • listen to dave rossTune in to KIRO Newsradio weekdays at 5am for Dave Ross on Seattle's Morning News.

KIRO Newsradio Opinion

public restrooms...

Angela Poe Russell

Angela Poe Russell: It’s time to reimagine public restrooms

It’s the Great Restroom Debate. How do we create public restrooms everyone can feel comfortable using?

6 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Could WA Turn Red? Trump and the Governor Race

Spike O’Neill sees right through Trump’s ’50 State Strategy’ and Jack Stine weighs the odds of Dave Reichert beating Bob Ferguson’s name recognition – especially now that there aren’t three Bob Fergusons – in the race for Washington governor. Polling suggests voters are much more undecided than we expected. Tune in live to The Jack […]

20 hours ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Are Gas Prices Dropping? Not Really

Jack Stine investigates (aka, actually reads) a clickbait headline about gas prices. And Spike O’Neill is ready to buy an EV. Where’s Newt Gingrich when you need him? Tune in live to The Jack and Spike Show weekdays from noon to 3pm on KIRO Newsradio 97.3 FM. And if that timing, or our location in […]

21 hours ago

Photo: Bend of a running track....

Julia Dallas

John and Jake: Where’s the line when it comes to transgender children competing in sports?

Elizabeth Wilson's middle-school daughter took second place in the invitation-only Junior Olympic race for the 1600, but Wilson believes the first-place winner had an unfair advantage.

2 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Why Are White Woman Paying Thousands To Scream Therapy!

There’s a new therapeutic method in town: “primal scream therapy.” Video footage of one of the sessions is going viral, showing white women in the woods beating sticks onto the ground while they scream, a privilege which they have allegedly paid thousands of dollars to experience. But Jack Stine knows this ‘new craze’ is actually […]

5 days ago

...

MyNorthwest Video

Video: Trump’s Weird Excuse For Why He Didn’t Testify

Another radio station talk show, WABC, interviewed Donald Trump and asked him directly why he did not testify during his hush money criminal trial in New York (even though he said that he would). And the answer Trump gave them was completely nonsensical. Jack Stine and Spike O’Neill take a listen. Tune in live to […]

5 days ago

Ross: The hidden benefit of Social Security, funding our volunteers