
In other business, representatives of the Southwest Washington Agency on Aging reported on their work in Wahkiakum County.
Spokesman David Kelly said the agency channels funding from two basic sources into the county for programs for senior citizens.
Federal Medicaid funds go to case workers who coordinate services for the elderly with a goal of allowing them to remain in their homes as long as possible.
Funds from the federal Older Americans Act goes into nutrition and transportation programs.
Much of the services are provided in partnership with the Community Action Program (CAP), which is headquartered in Longview, he said.
Kelly added that Wahkiakum has one of the fastest growing, if not the fastest, portion of elderly population in the state. It is a challenge for counties, he said, to plan for the elderly, and the agency will undertake some major planning efforts next spring.
Puget Island resident Nikki Thomas, who is on the Agency on Aging advisory council, said county residents who are interested in issues involving the aging could attend an agency meeting September 16, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., in the River Street Meeting Room, Cathlamet.