Vision:
Michael Blake believes that how a city treats its seniors defines its soul. New York City’s nearly 1.8 million older adults deserve to live in dignity, safety, and community, not in isolation or fear. As the son of Jamaican immigrants and a leader shaped by service, Blake knows firsthand that our elders are the foundation of our families, neighborhoods, and history. This plan ensures that the city our seniors built will be a city that protects them. It’s time to invest in aging with dignity, expand care, and guarantee that every senior regardless of borough, background, or income has access to the housing, healthcare, food, and support they deserve. This plan centers equity, wellness, and participation, not charity, but justice. It charts a course toward an age-friendly New York rooted in community, independence, and respect.
GROUNDING THE CRISIS IN DATA
By 2040, the senior population of NYC is projected to reach 1 in 5 residents, yet services and funding have not kept pace. More than 40% of NYC seniors live near or below the poverty line, while thousands wait for home care, affordable housing, and safe transportation. The cost of living continues to rise, but key lifelines like SCRIE, Meals on Wheels, and NORC programs remain underfunded. This includes increased funding and expanded programming for Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities (NORCs), which provide vital on-site support services that help seniors age in place safely and with dignity. The oldest New Yorkers, often women of color, are the most likely to live alone, experience eviction risk, or suffer from untreated chronic conditions. This crisis of aging is also a crisis of policy neglect. Our plan recognizes that aging is not a burden but a life stage to be supported with care, investment, and dignity.
Key Policy Actions:
1) Housing Justice and Aging in Place
Blake’s plan affirms that safe, affordable housing is a human right and the foundation for senior health. Seniors must never be displaced, mistreated, or priced out of the neighborhoods they’ve called home for decades.
Key Policy Actions:
2) Build a Community-Based Aging and Wellness Workforce
Aging New Yorkers deserve support from people who know and respect them. That means culturally competent caregivers, home health aides, caseworkers, and program staff who reflect NYC’s diversity and are trained to provide not just services, but dignity.
Key Policy Actions:
3) End Hunger, Expand Nutrition, and Promote Health Equity
No senior should be hungry in New York City. But nearly 1 in 5 are food insecure. Addressing hunger is not just a nutritional issue, it’s about justice, wellness, and independence.
Key Policy Actions:
4) Protect Healthcare Access and Expand Medicaid/Medicare Navigation
Many older adults lose healthcare coverage due to confusing redetermination processes, paperwork burdens, and language barriers. Seniors need clear, accessible, and responsive support, not bureaucratic chaos.
Key Policy Actions:
5) Make NYC Tech-Accessible and Digitally Connected for Seniors
Digital access is now essential for everything from appointments to transportation to family connection. But thousands of seniors remain disconnected, left out of telehealth, online benefits, and digital life.
Key Policy Actions:
6) Safety, Scams, and Senior Justice
Elder abuse, financial scams, and unsafe environments harm thousands of seniors each year. Blake’s plan ensures prevention, protection, and justice.
Key Policy Actions:
7) Accountability and Senior Leadership
Policy for seniors must include seniors. We will build systems that are transparent, responsive, and led by older New Yorkers.
Key Policy Actions:
How We Move Forward
Michael Blake will appoint a Deputy Mayor for Senior Services, Equity, and Aging to lead this work across all agencies, from housing to health, from transit to tech. We will no longer silo senior care or treat it as an afterthought. It will be a central function of a just, inclusive New York City. With targeted investment, structural reform, and deep community partnership, we will guarantee that aging in NYC means aging with dignity, safety, and power.
SOURCES:
NYC Department for the Aging: https://www.nyc.gov/site/dfta/index.page
NYC Independent Budget Office Reports: https://ibo.nyc.ny.us
PHI National Workforce Data: https://phinational.org
NYC Rent Guidelines Board: https://rentguidelinesboard.cityofnewyork.us
Kaiser Family Foundation Medicare Data: https://www.kff.org
Hunger Free America NYC Hunger Report: https://www.hungerfreeamerica.org
NYC Food Policy Center: https://www.nycfoodpolicy.org
AARP NY Fraud and Safety Reports: https://states.aarp.org/new-york
Pew Research Center on Older Adults and Tech: https://www.pewresearch.org
Center for an Urban Future: https://nycfuture.org