Senior lunches return to the Millerton Friendship Center
Keeping cool against the day’s heat wave, local seniors sat down for a satisfying lunch among friends and neighbors in the Senior Friendship Center located in the NorthEast-Millerton Library Annex for its first day back in service, on Monday afternoon, June 7.
Photo by Kaitlin Lyle

Senior lunches return to the Millerton Friendship Center

MILLERTON — The Senior Friendship Center located at the NorthEast-Millerton Library Annex at 28 Century Blvd. rolled out the welcome mat again on Monday, June 7,  much to the delight of its many participants who have been isolated throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Since March 2020, the sessions, which many seniors see as the best way to stay both active and social, had been suspended, although the all important nutrition program continued. Meals were delivered to eligible seniors who requested them, but personal contact fell by the COVID-19 wayside.

According to Todd Tancredi, director of the Dutchess County Office for the Aging (OFA), with numbers of COVID cases diminishing and vaccines being delivered to a good portion of the county’s senior population, the decision was made to re-open the senior centers, which follow the newly relaxed protocols.

On re-opening day, as she hustled about preparing coffee and organizing the room, Site Manager Marion McGhee could barely contain her excitement. She appreciated the return to normal.

“It’s as though the past year and a half never happened,” she said. “I want to have everything just the way it was when people left.” 

As local seniors arrived McGhee said, “We’ve just been waiting and waiting, and now things can open up again. There is conversation and laughter everywhere. Everyone is just so happy to be back.”  

She was able to deliver the good news of the re-opening to seniors who had been receiving home delivery of meals throughout the center’s closure and called others at home to pass on the good word.

Amenia resident Ynes Killmer had been a faithful attendee at the Millerton Friendship Center until its closing. She said she had missed the interaction and was thrilled to receive the news of its opening up again. 

“As soon as Marion called, I heard the excitement in her voice, and I knew it was good news,” said Killmer. 

Often one of the first to arrive and do what she can to help set up the site, the Amenia senior said she makes a point of being there “bright and early, first thing in the morning.” And it is early, as the center opens with its regular hours of operation between 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., every Monday through Thursday.

“We’re all glad to be back,” Killmer said of the first day reunion.

She noted that while a number of the participants had kept in contact, mainly through phone calls, it was “really good to have a chance to sit down with old friends again.”

During that first day, she said the group was too busy filling out paperwork and catching up to bring out the puzzles and games that are staples of the center. But by the second day, they were back in action, with many of the regulars hooking needles, knitting and crocheting, another constant activity.

Although the original Millerton Nutrition Center at Village Hall on Dutchess Avenue has been closed for a while, as the Village Hall is closed while the Village Board considers what to do with the aging and decaying building, The Annex is being used in its stead. It was also used throughout the pandemic to ensure seniors in the area still received nutritional meals, prepared at the county’s central location and then delivered to The Annex, from where volunteer drivers took them to homebound seniors.

Tancredi noted that the requirements for home delivery had been eased by the state during the pandemic, with the change nearly doubling those eligible and raising the number served to approximately 1,000 countywide. He noted that the increase was managed thanks to the help of numerous volunteers, including teachers and others who were out of work at the time. 

The OFA director added that although the meals are a significant part of maintaining the health of seniors, social interaction is equally important. 

“The relationship part is really key,” he said. “We still provided food and we tried to be in touch on a weekly basis, but there’s nothing like face to face contact. And now the seniors can come in and be with their friends again and maybe make some new friends. That’s really a big part of what they need in their lives, and we can help with that.”

The program, including hot lunches and supplemental meals for evenings and weekends, is free, although seniors are invited to make donations. 

In addition to the Millerton Center, the South Amenia Center at the Presbyterian Church at 229 South Amenia Road, Wassaic, has also re-opened.

For more information or to register for one of the OFA’s Senior Friendship Centers, call 845-486-2555.

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