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North
Carolina Area Agencies on Aging (NC4A)
An
Area Agency on Aging is a public or private non-profit agency designated by
the state to administer the Older Americans
Act at the regional level per the 1973 amendment to the Older
Americans Act. Having regional oversight of the programs and funding allows
the state to be more responsive and to be better able to assess local needs
and concerns.
North
Carolina has seventeen Area Agencies on Aging (AAA). Each is located
within a multi-county Planning and Service Area served by a public, non-profit
organization typically known as a Council of Governments or Planning Commission.
All 100 counties in North Carolina are covered by an Area Agency on Aging.
In a west-to-east lettering system from A through R, our region is designated
as "J" and covers seven counties.
AAAs
are charged with developing comprehensive and coordinated service and resource
systems for older adults which address their needs and are appropriate for
the local communities. They create multi-year plans which are implemented
with Older Americans Act and other applicable funds that the AAA administers.
Their "bottomline" purpose, in North Carolina, is to help
older adults live in their communities in the least restrictive environment
with maximum dignity and independence. They perform this service
through a variety of means such as:
- entering
into grant agreements with each county to provide aging services
- serving
in an advisory capacity
-
providing feedback to the state on aging issues and service delivery
-
strategic planning that addresses issues and needs of the older population
- technical
assistance to local aging services providers
- technical
assistance to counties
- education
- training
-
performance assessment (management, fiscal, service)
-
quality assurance
- advocacy
(federal, state, local)
- program
administration (federal, state, and local dollars)
-
facilitation of cooperative relationships
-
information gathering and dissemination
- referrals
- problem
resolution
-
creative solutions
Click
on a Region for a direct link to that Region's Area Agency on Aging. If an
AAA doesn't have a website, the link will take you to the N.C. Division of
Aging's website, AAA Contact Section.
If you need additional statewide AAA contact information, the N.C. Division
of Aging and Adult Services has an AAA
Contact Section on their website.
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