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Senate Aging Panel Highlights the Importance of Financial Literacy – Herb Weiss
By Herb Weiss, contributing writer on aging issues
Chairman Rick Scott (R-FL) and Ranking Member Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) of the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging held a hearing last month called “Empowering Seniors Through Financial Literacy: Tools to Protect Savings, Prevent Fraud, and Promote Independence.” The hearing, held during National Financial Literacy Month, focused on the need for financial education and income security for older Americans.
The April 15 hearing lasted just over an hour and focused on improving financial and retirement security for older Americans. During his opening remarks, Sen. Scott announced the release of a bipartisan 2026 Financial Literacy Booklet to help older Americans spot and avoid scams.
At SH-216, the Senate Aging Committee confirmed its continued work to protect older adults from financial exploitation and built on earlier efforts, such as the 2025 Fraud Report.
New Resource for a Secure Retirement
The new 39-page bipartisan booklet, Guarding Your Nest Egg: A Financial Resource for Older Adults, helps older Americans manage their finances, protect themselves from fraud and scams, and plan for a secure retirement.
As Sen. Scott noted: “For so many Americans, especially our seniors, it’s hard to find the information,” Sen. Scott said in his opening statement. “And when you do find it, it’s often incredibly complicated. As a country, we have done a poor job of ensuring people know their options and what route will work best for their needs.”
Sen. Scott says financial literacy is one of the most powerful and most underused tools to protect older Americans. “When they understand how their benefits work, they make better decisions,” he says.
“When they know how to read a financial statement and recognize bad actors, they’re harder to deceive. When they understand the difference between a legitimate investment and a pitch that’s too good to be true, they protect themselves. And when they know where to turn for trusted help, they realize they are not navigating this alone,” said the Florida Senator.
Finally, Sen. Scott added, “The best part is that this doesn’t require a new government program or more federal bureaucracy.” He stressed that the solution is not more federal spending, but “clear information, trusted messengers, and a commitment to getting that information into people’s hands.”
The Senate Aging Committee’s new booklet helps readers make smart retirement and financial decisions. It covers an array of topics, including Social Security, Medicare, housing, charitable giving, disaster preparedness, and even planning for unexpected events. Throughout its pages, practical advice is given to help older adults protect their savings and avoid fraud and scams.
Sen. Gillibrand, in her opening remarks, noted that over 11,000 Americans turn 65 every day. Longer lifespans mean more years in retirement, so careful retirement planning is needed, she says, stressing that aging populations put pressure on budgets and healthcare programs at all levels.
The New York Senator mentioned a recent statement by President Donald J. Trump, who suggested that Medicare and Medicaid should be managed by states rather than the federal government. She countered that comment, noting that since Medicare and Medicaid were enacted in 1965, older Americans have come to rely on these federal programs and expect them to be in place when needed.
Sen. Gillibrand pointed out that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show about 44% of adults over 65 have a disability. Many people don’t see themselves in these statistics, and some find it difficult to plan to take care of a child or adult with special needs. Even when people set financial goals and save, unexpected events can still occur, she says.
Expert Witnesses disclose Insights on Financial Literacy
The Senate Aging Panel brought four expert witnesses from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), the American Bankers Association Foundation, AARP, and the financial planning community to testify at the hearing. These witnesses stressed the value of financial literacy and highlighted the growing complexity of fraud schemes. They also called for a coordinated approach that leverages education, training, partnerships, and legislation to protect older Americans’ finances.
“For older Americans, financial literacy is not a luxury; it is key for building wealth, protecting savings and preserving autonomy,” says Christine Kiefer, Interim President of the FINRA Investor Education Foundation. Kiefer explained that financial literacy helps manage financial difficulties, but it is not enough to prevent scams. It should be combined with awareness of scams, an understanding of persuasion tactics, and a coordinated approach to ensure real protection.
Sam Kunjukunju, Vice President of Consumer Education at the American Bankers Association Foundation, suggested banks protect and educate older consumers, train bankers, work with law enforcement and adult protective services, and use technology. He also called for a nationwide education campaign and federal laws allowing banks to delay suspicious transactions.
From large banks to small community banks, these financial institutions offer fraud prevention workshops, online banking training, and financial wellness seminars, and coordinate outreach efforts with community organizations, says Kunjukunju, citing several examples.
Carly Rosiowski, AARP’s Vice President of Financial Resilience Programming, shared that 64% of adults worry about having enough money to retire, and nearly one in five non-retirees have no retirement savings. She discussed the real financial challenges older adults face.
AARP provides practical, easy-to-use digital tools (calculators, guides, and other resources) that enable older adults to make informed decisions about their financial future, thereby strengthening their long-term retirement security, says Rosiowski.
“The retirement system now shifts risk to the individuals, but education and support never caught up,” said Rosiowski in her testimony, explaining that the U.S. retirement system now places primary responsibility on individuals to manage savings, investing, and turning those savings into lifelong income.
“Financial literacy works – but only when it’s practical, sustained, timely, and paired with decision support,” adds Rosiowski.
Furthermore, Rosiowski argued that since individuals now bear more risk, financial literacy should be taught throughout one’s life. This approach should cover complex decisions that must be made in later years, as well as fraud risks, drawing on trusted, accessible sources.
In his testimony, Scott Kahan, a certified financial planner, also shared his experience navigating Medicare at age 65, even after 40 years in finance, to illustrate how complex it can be.
“Many people don’t use a financial planner for retirement planning. They might think they don’t have enough money or believe free help online is enough,” says Kahan, warning that this belief is often wrong and misleading.
Getting help from skilled, ethical financial planners like CFPs is essential and should not be considered a luxury, Kahan states, describing this assistance as a lifeline for managing financial complexity and avoiding fraud.
At this hearing, the expert witnesses said that today’s scams are sophisticated schemes that use Artificial Intelligence, voice cloning, and psychological manipulation. They also pointed out how hard it is to make wise choices about when to take Social Security, enroll in Medicare, and manage savings, especially when information is complex, hidden, and difficult to find on government websites, or even biased.
A Final Note…
Hopefully, the testimony at the Senate Aging Committee hearing will push Congress to move quickly to establish a “uniform national framework” that eliminates inconsistencies among state laws and better protects older Americans from today’s increasingly sophisticated fraud and scams. Possible steps include a federal “safe harbor” law allowing banks to delay disbursements or temporarily hold transactions when fraud is suspected, the creation of new task forces focused on combating elder fraud, and increased funding for national financial literacy campaigns.
The witnesses’ testimony about scams and complex systems may prompt federal agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Social Security Administration, and the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, to make their communications and processes easier for older adults to access.
To watch the April 15 Senate Aging Committee Hearing, go to Empowering Seniors through Financial Literacy: Tools to Protect Savings, Prevent Fraud, and Promote Independence | United States Senate Special Committee on Aging
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(Publisher’s Note: We are finalists in the “Most Unexpected Story” category of the RI Press Association’s 2026 Awards for our story – “From Detroit to Pawtucket, and Back Again: The Journey of a WWII Footlocker” by Herb Weiss – Congrats, Herb! He as written over 300 articles for us since 2019)
To read more articles by Herb Weiss, go to: https://2×8.ea2.myftpupload.com/herb-weiss/

Herb Weiss, LRI, 12, is a Pawtucket-based writer who has covered aging, healthcare, and medical issues for more than 45 years. To purchase his books, Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly and its two sequels, visit herbweiss.com.
