Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | EMPL | KASTLER Martin ( PPE) | CREȚU Corina ( S&D), KACIN Jelko ( ALDE), LAMBERT Jean ( Verts/ALE), CABRNOCH Milan ( ECR) |
Committee Opinion | FEMM | ||
Committee Opinion | CULT | TAKKULA Hannu ( ALDE) | Olga SEHNALOVÁ ( S&D) |
Committee Opinion | REGI | VAN NISTELROOIJ Lambert ( PPE) | |
Committee Opinion | LIBE |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
TFEU 153-p2
Legal Basis:
TFEU 153-p2Subjects
Events
The Commission presents a report on the implementation, results and overall assessment of the 2012 European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations.
The European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations has managed to mobilise numerous governmental and non-governmental actors . It has helped convey a more positive image of population ageing by highlighting the potentials of older people and promoting their active participation in society and the economy.
The decision on the EY2012 defined a budget envelope of EUR 5 million for the period between January 2011 and December 2012. No new credits were allocated to the European Year, and the money was taken from existing financial appropriations. The budget for the European Year was mainly used to finance the communication activities of the Year
Most of the activities at the EU-level were designed to support stakeholders in the Member States and facilitate their participation in the European Year. The EU programme was thus implemented in close cooperation with national coordinators for the European Year and the Stakeholder Coalition.
The main activity at European level was a communication and promotional campaign implemented by a contractor. The central hub of this campaign was the European Year website.
Implementation and new initiatives : many Member States and civil society organizations have used the European Year as an opportunity to develop new initiatives or strengthen their existing ones (such as Generations@school ). The activities triggered by the EY2012 demonstrated the development of several new tools, mainly:
· the Guiding Principles on Active Ageing , endorsed by the EU's Social Affairs Ministers on 6 December 2012: the 19 Guiding Principles are structured under the headings of the Year: employment, participation in society, and independent living. They are addressed to Member States and other relevant levels of government and organizations which have a role to play in further improving conditions for active ageing. The application of these Guiding Principles would also contribute to the attainment of the employment and poverty reduction targets of the Europe 2020 Strategy, notably as a result of more people being able to work longer and earning better pension entitlements;
· the development of an Active Ageing Index which was developed in close cooperation with the United Nations Economic Committee for Europe (UNECE) and the European Centre for Social Welfare Policy and Research (Vienna). The index measures different dimensions of active ageing and quantifies untapped potentials for each country.
· a covenant of mayors on demographic change : this provides a framework allowing local and regional policy makers to commit to taking new measures in response to ageing. This goal of establishing such a covenant is now being pursued in the context of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP AHA) and its action group on ‘Innovation for age-friendly, buildings cities and environments
Policy maker in the Member States are invited to make the most of these tools. The EU will continue to support them. This will take the form of policy guidance , notably in the context of the European Semester, the cycle coordinating economic and budgetary policies in the EU.
Active and healthy ageing is, also one of the investment priorities of the European Social Fund (ESF) in the 2014-2020 programming period.
The independent living pillar of the European Year 2012 : the Commission supports the Social Protection Committee in producing a report on long-term care published in June 2014. It examined how the gap between long-term care demand and supply can be closed through appropriate investment in measures that reduce the need for long-term care and enhance the efficiency of its delivery, including through the use of technology-enabled services.
The Commission concludes that the European Year 2012 has contributed to establish active ageing firmly on the European and many national policy agendas in a cross sectorial multi-stakeholder approach. This momentum needs to be maintained. The strong solidarity between generations that characterise Europe’s societies and welfare systems can only be sustained in the context of ageing populations and tight budgets by promoting active ageing in all its forms.
PURPOSE : to designate 2012 as the ‘European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations’.
LEGISLATIVE ACT : Decision No 940/2011/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations (2012).
BACKGROUND : ageing is undoubtedly a challenge for the whole of society and for all generations in Europe, and it is also a matter for intergenerational solidarity and for the family.
The part of the population of the Union comprised of people in their late 50s and over will increase at a much faster rate than ever before. Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting the creation of a culture of active ageing as a lifelong process and thus ensuring that the rapidly-growing population comprised of people who are currently in their late 50s and over, who are, on the whole, healthier and better educated than any such age group before them, have good opportunities for employment and active participation in social and family life, including through volunteering, lifelong learning, cultural expression and sports.
The Council adopted, on 7 June 2010, Conclusions on ‘Active Ageing’ inviting the Commission ‘to pursue the reparation of a European Year for Active Ageing in 2012, during which the benefits of active ageing and its contribution to solidarity between generations can be highlighted and promising initiatives in support of active ageing at all levels can be publicised’.
The European Parliament adopted, on 11 November 2010, a Resolution entitled ‘Demographic challenge and solidarity between generations’, calling on Member States to make active ageing one of the priorities for the coming years. The resolution also stressed that the European Year should, in particular, highlight the contribution that older people make to society and afford opportunities to foster solidarity, cooperation and understanding between generations and to get younger and older people to work together.
The designation of a ‘European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations (2012) fulfills this request.
CONTENT : through this Decision, the European Parliament and Council establish a ‘European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations (2012)
Objectives : the overall objective of the European Year shall be to facilitate the creation of an active ageing culture in Europe based on a society for all ages. The European Year shall encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners, civil society and the business community, including small and medium-sized enterprises, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and over.
In doing so, it shall:
foster solidarity and cooperation between generations, taking into account diversity and gender equality; promote active ageing by creating better opportunities so that older women and men can play their part in the labour market, combating poverty, particularly that of women, and social exclusion, fostering volunteering and active participation in family life and society and encouraging healthy ageing in dignity; aim to adapt working conditions, combating negative age stereotypes and age discrimination, improving health and safety at work, adapting lifelong learning systems to the needs of an ageing workforce and ensuring that social protection systems are adequate and provide the right incentives.
Specific objectives : on this basis, the objectives of the European Year shall be:
to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing and its various dimensions and to ensure that it is accorded a prominent position on the political agendas of stakeholders at all levels in order to highlight the useful contribution that older people make to society and the economy, and to do more to mobilise the potential of older people, regardless of their origin, and to enable them to lead an independent life; to stimulate debate, to exchange information and to develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies; to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action , with the involvement of civil society, the social partners and businesses and to develop innovative solutions, policies and long-term strategies , including comprehensive age-management strategies related to employment and work, through specific activities; to promote activities which will help to combat age discrimination, to overcome age-related stereotypes and to remove barriers, particularly with regard to employability.
The Decision sets out the measures to be taken to achieve the objectives above, the main ones being as follows: (i) conferences, events and initiatives, to promote debate contributing to sustained and lasting impacts; (ii) information, promotion and educational campaigns, making use of multimedia; (iii) exchange of information, experience and good practice; (iv) research and surveys on a Union, national or regional scale.
When implementing these activities, the Decision provides that attention shall be paid to involving all generations in particular by encouraging the participation of older and younger people in common initiatives. Efforts shall be made to ensure that all activities of the European Year addressed to the wider public are easily accessible to all, including persons with disabilities.
Coordination with Member States and at EU level : each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator to be responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year. The national coordinators shall also see to it that national activities of the European Year are properly coordinated and may also promote and facilitate local and regional activities in this context, and foster the involvement of civil society, in the activities of the European Year.
The Commission shall implement the European Year at the level of the Union. It shall convene meetings of the national coordinators and shall facilitate and support the activities of the European Year at national, regional and local level, including by proposing, where appropriate, new pathways and tools for the achievement of the objectives of the European Year and their evaluation.
Priority given to the Year by the Commission and the European Parliament : the Decision provides that the theme of the European Year shall be made a priority by the Commission in the communication activities of its representations in the Member States and by relevant key Union-level networks receiving support for their running costs from the general budget of the Union in their work programmes.
The European Parliament, Member States, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions shall be associated in the activities of the European Year.
Financial and non-financial support : activities that occur at the level of the Union may give rise to a procurement contract or the award of grants financed from the general budget of the Union.
Where appropriate, programmes and policies in fields which contribute to the promotion of active ageing, such as employment, social affairs and equal opportunities, education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy may support the European Year, in accordance with the applicable rules and within their existing possibilities for priority setting.
Non-financial support may be granted by the Union for activities undertaken by public and private organisations.
Budget: the financial envelope for the implementation, at the level of the Union, of the Year for the period from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012, shall be EUR 5 000 000.
In a joint Interinstitutional declaration, it is stipulated that EUR 2.3 million will be used from the budget 2011 without utilizing available margins to fund notably communication activities and EU conferences for the European Year, and at least EUR 2.7 million , which shall be reprioritised from existing resources without utilizing the existing margins, will be reserved and made visible in a budget line in the draft budget 2012 .
Participating countries: participation in the European Year shall be open to:(a) Member States;(b) candidate countries;(c) the countries of the Western Balkans; and (d) European Free Trade Association States that are parties to the European Economic Area Agreement.
International cooperation: for the purpose of the European Year, the Commission may cooperate with relevant international organisations, in particular with the United Nations and the Council of Europe, while ensuring the visibility of the Union’s efforts to promote active ageing.
Report: the Decision provides that by 30 June 2014, the Commission shall submit a report containing an overall assessment of the initiatives provided for in the Decision with details of implementation and results to serve as a basis for future Union policies, measures and actions in this field. It must also provide information on how gender equality has been mainstreamed in the activities of the European Year and how the accessibility of those activities for persons with disabilities has been ensured.
ENTRY INTO FORCE : the Decision will enter into force on 24 September 2011.
The European Parliament adopted by 557 votes to 33, with 15 abstentions, a legislative resolution on the proposal for a decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European Year for Active Ageing (2012).
Parliament adopted its position at first reading following the ordinary legislative procedure. The amendments adopted in plenary are the result of a new series of compromise amendments negotiated between the European Parliament and the Council. They amend the proposal as follows:
Title of the Year : the title of this initiative has been changed. It shall now be known as the ‘European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations ’.
General objectives : the overall objective of the European Year shall be to facilitate the creation of an active ageing culture in Europe based on a society for all ages . It shall encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners, civil society and the business community , including SMEs, to promote active ageing and to foster solidarity and cooperation between generations , taking into account diversity and gender equality . To this end, the European Year shall aim to adapt working conditions, combat negative age stereotypes and age discrimination, improve health and safety at work, adapt life-long learning systems to the needs of an ageing workforce and ensure that social protection systems are adequate and provide the right incentives.
Specific objectives : new specific objectives are defined as follows:
to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing and its various dimensions and to ensure that it is accorded a prominent position on the political agendas of stakeholders at all levels in order to highlight the useful contribution that older persons make to society and the economy, raising the appreciation thereof, to promote active ageing, solidarity between generations and the vitality and the dignity of all people, and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons, regardless of their origin, and to enable them to lead an independent life; to stimulate debate, to exchange information and to develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies; to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable the Union, Member States and stakeholders at all levels, with the involvement of civil society, the social partners and businesses and with particular emphasis on promoting information strategies, to develop innovative solutions, policies and long-term strategies, including comprehensive age-management strategies related to employment and work, through specific activities, and to pursue specific objectives related to active ageing and intergenerational solidarity; to promote activities which will help to combat age discrimination , to overcome age-related stereotypes and to remove barriers, particularly with regard to employability.
The content of measures have been amended in accordance with the specific objectives. It is stated that when implementing the activities, attention shall be paid to involving all generations in the pursuit of the objectives of the European Year, in particular by seeking to develop an inclusive approach and by encouraging the participation of older and younger people in common initiatives. The Commission and Member States shall take into account gender mainstreaming in all their activities in connection with the running of the European Year. The Commission shall take into account the potential of cross-border activities taking place at a regional or local level for achieving the objectives. Lastly, efforts shall be made to ensure that all activities of the European Year addressed to the wider public are easily accessible to all, including people with disabilities .
Coordination with Member States : under the proposal, each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator to be responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year and shall inform the Commission of that appointment. The national coordinators shall also see to it that national activities of the European Year are properly coordinated and may also promote and facilitate local and regional activities in this context. The national coordinators shall also foster the involvement of all relevant stakeholders, including civil society, in the activities of the European Year.
The Commission shall implement the European Year at the level of the Union. It shall facilitate and support the activities of the European Year at national, regional and local level , including by proposing, where appropriate, new pathways and tools for the achievement of the objectives of the European Year and their evaluation.
Priority given to the Year by the Commission : the theme of the European Year shall be made a priority by the Commission in the communication activities of its representations in the Member States and by relevant key Union-level networks receiving support for their running costs from the general budget of the Union in their work programmes.
Budget : the financial envelope for the implementation, at the level of the Union, of this Decision, for the period from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012, shall be EUR 5 million .
In a joint Interinstitutional declaration, it is stipulated that EUR 2.3 million will be used from the budget 2011 without utilizing available margins to fund notably communication activities and EU conferences for the European Year, and at least EUR 2.7 million , which shall be reprioritised from existing resources without utilizing the existing margins, will be reserved and made visible in a budget line in the draft budget 2012 .
Financial and non-financial support : activities at the Union level may give rise to a procurement contract or the award of grants financed from the general budget of the EU. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in fields which contribute to promoting active ageing, such as employment, social affairs and equal opportunities, education and culture, health, may support the European Year, in accordance with the applicable rules and within their existing possibilities for priority setting.
Participating countries : Participation in the European Year shall be open to: (i) Member States; (ii) candidate countries; (iii) the countries of the Western Balkans, and (iv) European Free Trade Association States that are parties to the European Economic Area Agreement.
International cooperation : the Commission may cooperate with relevant international organisations, in particular with the United Nations and the Council of Europe, while ensuring the visibility of the Union's efforts to promote active ageing.
Report : Parliament calls for the Commission report to provide information on how the gender and disability have been mainstreamed in the activities of the European Year and how the European Year has contributed towards developing a sustainable active aging culture across Europe. This report shall serve as a basis for future Union policies, measures and actions in this field.
The Committee on Employment and Social Affairs unanimously adopted the report by Martin KASTLER (EPP, DE) on the proposal for a decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on the European Year for Active Ageing (2012). The committee recommends that the European Parliament’s position in first reading following the ordinary legislative procedure make certain the following amendments to the Commission proposal
Title of the Year: Members want the initiative to stress intergenerational solidarity and accordingly, they have re-named the Year 'European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations', with the subheading 'Maintaining the vitality and respecting the dignity of all’.
Objectives: the overall purpose of the European Year is to facilitate the creation of a sustainable active ageing culture in Europe based on a society for all ages and on solidarity between generations. In this framework, the European Year shall encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners, businesses and civil society, including religious organisations and associations active in combating poverty and social exclusion, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby maintaining the vitality of older people, enhancing their social participation, promoting the positive perception of older people in the society, creating a barrier-free society for all ages and fostering solidarity and cooperation between generations. In order to do so, it is essential for the European Year to support and make the most of initiatives that take account of the specific needs of older people, including those at local and regional level.
Members state that active ageing means creating better education, training and lifelong learning possibilities and better opportunities and age-friendly working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, supporting the role of older people in family life and voluntary activities and their active participation in society, combating age discrimination and prejudice and eliminating negative stereotypes, fighting poverty and social exclusion, encouraging healthy ageing with dignity and facilitating it through preventive measures and access to quality health and social services..
Specific objectives : Members insert some new specific objectives for the Year which may be summarised as follows :
to raise general awareness among the population of the value of active ageing and solidarity between generations, maintaining the vitality and respecting the dignity of all people, to combat ageism and negative stereotypes about old age, to remove barriers and recognise the diversity within all age groups, and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons regardless of their ethnic or cultural origin; to exchange information and to develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders, in order to promote active ageing policies, to promote sustainable and safe pension systems in Europe ; to raise the appreciation of and to bring about better overall recognition of and support for the contribution of older people to economic and social development in Europe; to promote activities stimulating the development of comprehensive age management strategies related to employment and work, activities facilitating the introduction of consistent family-friendly policies which can have a meaningful impact on demographic trends, activities highlighting the importance of prevention of health problems and healthy lifestyles; to introduce or to strengthen structural fiscal policies in favour of non-profit organisations.
Amongst the concrete actions proposed by the committee, Members stress: i) information and also mentoring and training campaigns which are adapted to national, regional or local circumstances ii) exchange of experience and good practices, including through the Open Method of Coordination (OMC), networks of contacts set up by stakeholders working to achieve the goals of the European Year and between local representatives iii) research and surveys focusing on the economic and social impact of promoting active ageing and of active-ageing-friendly policies.
When implementing these activities Members state that attention should be paid, on a horizontal basis, to preventative health-care oriented towards healthy ageing and to involving all generations in the pursuit of the objectives of the European Year, in particular by encouraging the participation of ageing and young people in common initiatives. The Commission and Member States shall be encouraged to provide greater opportunities for those who volunteer to support elderly people and who engage in fund raising programmes. Furthermore, they shall take account of the need to integrate the specificities of the situation of women and men and the need for all generations to be involved. Special attention shall be paid to the inclusion of persons with disabilities, as well as to combating all forms of discrimination to which older persons may be subject.
Decentralised approach : the initiatives taken in the light of the European Year for Active Ageing will have a decentralised approach and ensure multi-level ownership.
Implementation: the Commission will implement the Year at European level. Each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year and shall inform the Commission of that appointment. By 30 September 2011, each Member State shall inform the Commission of its work programme, which shall include details of the national activities planned under the European Year. The national coordinators should work independently, without reflecting solely the views of governments and should also see to it that national activities are and are properly coordinated and that stakeholders, including social partners and civil society organisations are fully involved in the design and implementation of the European Year at local, regional and national level. In order to ensure the participation of a diverse range of organisations, simplified procedures should be available for smaller scale events and operations.
Budget: Members specify that the financial envelope for the implementation, at Union level, of this decision, is, for the period from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2012, at least EUR 6 000 000 , of which EUR 2 000 000 shall be reserved for use within the period to 31 December 2011.
Financial and non-financial support : activities at the Union level may give rise to a procurement contract or the award of grants financed from the general budget of the EU. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in fields which contribute to promoting active ageing, such as employment, social affairs and equal opportunities, education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year in accordance with the rules applying and within the existing margins for priority setting. Non-financial support may be granted by the Union for initiatives undertaken by public and private organisations. .
Participating countries : Participation in the European Year shall also be open to EFTA States that are parties to the EEA Agreement, and to candidate countries,
International cooperation : the Commission may cooperate with the relevant bodies of other international organisations, in particular with the United Nations and the Council of Europe, in order to increase the Union’s effectiveness and to ensure the visibility of its efforts.
Report : the Commission’s report shall also provide information on how the gender and disability have been mainstreamed in the activities of the European Year and how the European Year has contributed towards developing a sustainable active aging culture across Europe.
Ministers adopted a general approach on a draft decision designating 2012 as the European Year of active ageing ( see Council Doc. 16511/10 ), pending the adoption of the European Parliament's opinion at first reading.
The draft decision is aimed to strengthen intergenerational solidarity by increasing awareness of the contribution of older people to society and by spreading innovative measures which could help to mobilise the full potential of the growing population in their late 50s and above. It seeks to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between member states in order to promote active ageing policies, and it offers a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders to develop policies through specific activities.
PURPOSE: to establish the European Year for Active Ageing (2012).
PROPOSED ACT: Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council.
BACKGROUND: the European Union is in a process of significant population ageing. According to Eurostat's latest projections released in 2008, there would be only two people of working age (15-64) for every person aged over 65 in the EU by 2060 compared to a ratio of four to one today. The strongest push in this direction is expected to occur during the period 2015-35 when the baby boom cohorts will be in retirement. This shift is due to a combination of low birth rates and rising life expectancy. These demographic changes present both challenges and opportunities. Population ageing may increase pressure on public budgets and pension systems, as well as on the staffing of social and care services for older people. There is a fear that the older generations might become too heavy a burden on younger, working-age people and that this could result in tensions between generations. This view neglects, however, the significant actual and potential contribution that older people — and the baby-boom cohorts in particular — can make to society. A key opportunity for tackling the challenge of demographic ageing and preserving intergenerational solidarity consists therefore in ensuring that the baby-boom cohorts stay longer in the labour market and remain healthy, active and autonomous as long as possible.
In the framework of the Employment Strategy, Member States have started to reverse the trend to early retirement so that the EU-27 employment rate for people aged 55-64 has increased from 36.9% in 2000 to 46% in 2009. Encouraging older workers to stay in employment requires notably the improvement of working conditions and their adaptation to the health status and needs of older workers, updating their skills by providing better access to life long learning and the review of tax and benefit systems to ensure that there are effective incentives for working longer.
Active ageing is also an effective tool for tackling poverty in old age. In 2008, 19% of people aged 65+ in the EU were at risk of poverty. A considerable number of older people experience old age as a time of marginalisation. While better employment opportunities for older people could help tackle some of the causes of poverty among this age group, active participation in voluntary activities could reduce the isolation of older people. The huge potential that older persons represent for society as volunteers or carers could be better mobilised by eliminating existing obstacles to unpaid work and by providing the right framework.
IMPACT ASSESSMENT: current activities at EU level do not seem properly geared to dealing with what needs to be done:
raise awareness among the general public, policy makers and other stakeholders of the importance of active ageing and of the need to do more to mobilise the potential of the baby boom cohorts; foster an exchange of information and experience between Member States and stakeholders; give Member States and stakeholders an opportunity to develop policies by way of specific activities and by committing to specific objectives.
The Commission considers that broad-based support will be required at all levels of society and from a wide range of stakeholders. The key challenge is to mobilise stakeholders in a way that will generate significant action at national, regional, local and company levels across the EU. With greater political momentum and visibility for active ageing policies, policy makers can be encouraged to take more ambitious initiatives. It is for this reason that implementation of the European Year for Active Ageing could be useful.
LEGAL BASE: Article 153(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU.
CONTENT: the year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing.
Objectives : the overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society, and encouraging healthy ageing. On this
basis, the objectives shall be:
to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons; to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies; to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing.
Activities : the measures to be taken to achieve the objectives the following activities at Union, national, regional or local level:
conferences, events and initiatives to promote debate, raise awareness and foster the making of specific commitments; information, promotion and educational campaigns; exchange of information, experience and good practices; research and surveys on a Union or national scale, and dissemination of the results.
The Year should be seen as the highlight of a major effort spanning the period 2011-2014, during which the EU would focus many of its programmes and policies on the issue of active ageing and put in place a framework in which new initiatives and partnerships supporting active ageing at all levels (Member State, regional, local, social partners, civil society) can be encouraged and publicised.
In 2011, public authorities, social partners and civil society organisations at all levels would be encouraged to commit themselves to specific goals related to active ageing; the focus would be on achievements during the European Year. The goals would be documented on a European website which would then become the website for the European Year and would also serve as a tool for monitoring and evaluation.
In 2012, the focus of the European Year would be on starting to implement the commitments made during 2011, on raising awareness among the general public, publicising these initiatives through media activities and the involvement of other multipliers. Results of active ageing projects funded under existing budget lines and programmes would be presented.
The primary intention is to promote active ageing in employment by creating better opportunities for the participation of older workers, and to promote active ageing in society, by combating social exclusion through voluntary work, healthy ageing and autonomous living.
Coordination at Union level : the Commission shall convene meetings of the national coordinators for the purpose of coordination at Union level and to exchange information, including on commitments made and their implementation in the Member States. The European Parliament, the Member States, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions will be associated in the activities.
Evaluation : by 30 June 2014, the Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the European Committee of the Regions on the implementation, results and overall assessment of the initiatives provided for in this Decision.
FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: no additional funding is sought for the European Year. The flexibility for annual or multiannual priority-setting based on the budget lines and programmes of the Directorate General for Employment and other relevant programmes provides sufficient financial margin for running the Year on a scale similar to previous European Years. The administrative resources can also come from existing administrative budgets.
This ex-ante evaluation follows a call from the Slovenian Presidency in 2008 for a European Year on Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (2012). The Commission plans to adopt a proposal for a Decision by Parliament and Council on designating 2012 as European Year on Active Ageing. The Commission opted for the short title of active ageing which implies that intergenerational solidarity is to be seen as an outcome of active ageing which presents a key opportunity for preserving solidarity between generations.
In preparing the ex-ante evaluation, the Commission services have also asked for the views of key stakeholders regarding the orientation and implementation of the European Year In addition, the Commission services took into account evaluation results of previous European Years.
This ex-ante evaluation considers the different options for an initiative on promoting active ageing. The structure of the document is as follows:
definitions and policy context, problem analysis and needs assessment, objectives, policy options, assessment of policy options, implementation of preferred option, monitoring and evaluation.
The option which has been selected by the Commission is a European Year without a specific budget coordinated and centralised by the Commission.
The purpose of a European Year would go beyond awareness-raising. It should be seen as the highlight of a major effort spanning the period 2011-2014 during which the EU would focus many of its existing programmes and policies on the issue of active ageing and put in place a framework in which new initiatives and partnerships supporting active ageing at all levels (Member State, regional, local, social partners, civil society) can be encouraged and publicised.
PURPOSE: to establish the European Year for Active Ageing (2012).
PROPOSED ACT: Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council.
BACKGROUND: the European Union is in a process of significant population ageing. According to Eurostat's latest projections released in 2008, there would be only two people of working age (15-64) for every person aged over 65 in the EU by 2060 compared to a ratio of four to one today. The strongest push in this direction is expected to occur during the period 2015-35 when the baby boom cohorts will be in retirement. This shift is due to a combination of low birth rates and rising life expectancy. These demographic changes present both challenges and opportunities. Population ageing may increase pressure on public budgets and pension systems, as well as on the staffing of social and care services for older people. There is a fear that the older generations might become too heavy a burden on younger, working-age people and that this could result in tensions between generations. This view neglects, however, the significant actual and potential contribution that older people — and the baby-boom cohorts in particular — can make to society. A key opportunity for tackling the challenge of demographic ageing and preserving intergenerational solidarity consists therefore in ensuring that the baby-boom cohorts stay longer in the labour market and remain healthy, active and autonomous as long as possible.
In the framework of the Employment Strategy, Member States have started to reverse the trend to early retirement so that the EU-27 employment rate for people aged 55-64 has increased from 36.9% in 2000 to 46% in 2009. Encouraging older workers to stay in employment requires notably the improvement of working conditions and their adaptation to the health status and needs of older workers, updating their skills by providing better access to life long learning and the review of tax and benefit systems to ensure that there are effective incentives for working longer.
Active ageing is also an effective tool for tackling poverty in old age. In 2008, 19% of people aged 65+ in the EU were at risk of poverty. A considerable number of older people experience old age as a time of marginalisation. While better employment opportunities for older people could help tackle some of the causes of poverty among this age group, active participation in voluntary activities could reduce the isolation of older people. The huge potential that older persons represent for society as volunteers or carers could be better mobilised by eliminating existing obstacles to unpaid work and by providing the right framework.
IMPACT ASSESSMENT: current activities at EU level do not seem properly geared to dealing with what needs to be done:
raise awareness among the general public, policy makers and other stakeholders of the importance of active ageing and of the need to do more to mobilise the potential of the baby boom cohorts; foster an exchange of information and experience between Member States and stakeholders; give Member States and stakeholders an opportunity to develop policies by way of specific activities and by committing to specific objectives.
The Commission considers that broad-based support will be required at all levels of society and from a wide range of stakeholders. The key challenge is to mobilise stakeholders in a way that will generate significant action at national, regional, local and company levels across the EU. With greater political momentum and visibility for active ageing policies, policy makers can be encouraged to take more ambitious initiatives. It is for this reason that implementation of the European Year for Active Ageing could be useful.
LEGAL BASE: Article 153(2) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU.
CONTENT: the year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing.
Objectives : the overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society, and encouraging healthy ageing. On this
basis, the objectives shall be:
to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons; to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies; to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing.
Activities : the measures to be taken to achieve the objectives the following activities at Union, national, regional or local level:
conferences, events and initiatives to promote debate, raise awareness and foster the making of specific commitments; information, promotion and educational campaigns; exchange of information, experience and good practices; research and surveys on a Union or national scale, and dissemination of the results.
The Year should be seen as the highlight of a major effort spanning the period 2011-2014, during which the EU would focus many of its programmes and policies on the issue of active ageing and put in place a framework in which new initiatives and partnerships supporting active ageing at all levels (Member State, regional, local, social partners, civil society) can be encouraged and publicised.
In 2011, public authorities, social partners and civil society organisations at all levels would be encouraged to commit themselves to specific goals related to active ageing; the focus would be on achievements during the European Year. The goals would be documented on a European website which would then become the website for the European Year and would also serve as a tool for monitoring and evaluation.
In 2012, the focus of the European Year would be on starting to implement the commitments made during 2011, on raising awareness among the general public, publicising these initiatives through media activities and the involvement of other multipliers. Results of active ageing projects funded under existing budget lines and programmes would be presented.
The primary intention is to promote active ageing in employment by creating better opportunities for the participation of older workers, and to promote active ageing in society, by combating social exclusion through voluntary work, healthy ageing and autonomous living.
Coordination at Union level : the Commission shall convene meetings of the national coordinators for the purpose of coordination at Union level and to exchange information, including on commitments made and their implementation in the Member States. The European Parliament, the Member States, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions will be associated in the activities.
Evaluation : by 30 June 2014, the Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the European Committee of the Regions on the implementation, results and overall assessment of the initiatives provided for in this Decision.
FINANCIAL IMPLICATIONS: no additional funding is sought for the European Year. The flexibility for annual or multiannual priority-setting based on the budget lines and programmes of the Directorate General for Employment and other relevant programmes provides sufficient financial margin for running the Year on a scale similar to previous European Years. The administrative resources can also come from existing administrative budgets.
Documents
- Follow-up document: COM(2014)0562
- Follow-up document: EUR-Lex
- Final act published in Official Journal: Decision 2011/940
- Final act published in Official Journal: OJ L 246 23.09.2011, p. 0005
- Draft final act: 00020/2011/LEX
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2011)8072/2
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading: T7-0332/2011
- Debate in Council: 3099
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading: A7-0061/2011
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading: A7-0061/2011
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE458.631
- Committee opinion: PE452.767
- Committee opinion: PE452.779
- Committee draft report: PE454.625
- Debate in Council: 3053
- Contribution: COM(2010)0462
- Contribution: COM(2010)0462
- Economic and Social Committee: opinion, report: CES1377/2010
- Legislative proposal: COM(2010)0462
- Legislative proposal: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: SEC(2010)1002
- Legislative proposal published: COM(2010)0462
- Legislative proposal published: EUR-Lex
- Legislative proposal: COM(2010)0462 EUR-Lex
- Document attached to the procedure: EUR-Lex SEC(2010)1002
- Economic and Social Committee: opinion, report: CES1377/2010
- Committee draft report: PE454.625
- Committee opinion: PE452.779
- Committee opinion: PE452.767
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE458.631
- Committee report tabled for plenary, 1st reading/single reading: A7-0061/2011
- Commission response to text adopted in plenary: SP(2011)8072/2
- Draft final act: 00020/2011/LEX
- Follow-up document: COM(2014)0562 EUR-Lex
- Contribution: COM(2010)0462
- Contribution: COM(2010)0462
Activities
- Luís Paulo ALVES
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- Maria do Céu PATRÃO NEVES
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- Clemente MASTELLA
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- Juozas IMBRASAS
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- Fiorello PROVERA
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- Oreste ROSSI
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- Anna ZÁBORSKÁ
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- Charalampos ANGOURAKIS
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- Regina BASTOS
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- Zigmantas BALČYTIS
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- Ole CHRISTENSEN
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- Mário DAVID
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- Proinsias DE ROSSA
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- Marielle DE SARNEZ
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- Elisabetta GARDINI
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- Martin KASTLER
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- Siiri OVIIR
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- Georgios PAPANIKOLAOU
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- Robert ROCHEFORT
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- Britta THOMSEN
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- Ramon TREMOSA i BALCELLS
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Amendments | Dossier |
201 |
2010/0242(COD)
2010/12/10
CULT
40 amendments...
Amendment 10 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 a (new) (4a) The demographic changes currently occurring in Europe are the most significant to have taken place in the last 50 years or more; due to improved healthcare systems, treatments, and lifestyle choices, it is possible for a growing population of elderly people to be economically, socially, and creatively active for far longer, and Member States and the Union should harness the benefits of this
Amendment 11 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more
Amendment 12 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing
Amendment 13 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 a (new) (5a) Member States should be encouraged to develop programmes that enable elderly people to continue working beyond their retirement age on a voluntary basis.
Amendment 14 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 7 (7) The Council adopted on 22 February 2007 a resolution on ‘Opportunities and challenges of demographic change in Europe: the contribution of older people to economic and social development’, which emphasised the need to increase the possibilities of active participation by older people, the new economic opportunities ("silver economy") created by the growing demand of older people for certain goods and services as well as the importance of a positive public image of older people. In the context of the enlargement, neighbourhood and development policies, a 'senior service' of retired experts, such as already exists in many countries, could prove extremely useful.
Amendment 15 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 7 (7) The Council adopted on 22 February 2007 a resolution on ‘Opportunities and challenges of demographic change in Europe: the contribution of older people to economic and social development’, which emphasised the need to increase the possibilities of active participation by older people, including in the form of voluntary work, the new economic opportunities (
Amendment 16 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 8 (8) The Council adopted on 8 June 2009 Conclusions on ‘Equal opportunities for women and men: active and dignified ageing’, which recognises that, throughout the EU, older women and men face serious challenges as they seek to live active lives and to age with dignity, and proposes a number of
Amendment 17 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 10 (10) The Commission emphasised i
Amendment 18 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 10 (10) The Commission emphasised it its Communication on ‘Europe 2020 — A strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth’ the importance to the European Union of promoting a healthy and active ageing population in the interests of social cohesion
Amendment 19 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year. In various sectors, therefore, the European Year will also afford an opportunity to raise public awareness and mobilise stakeholders to combat social exclusion, financial security and poverty among older people, inter alia as part of the Europe 2020 Strategy flagship initiative on a ‘European Platform against Poverty’.
Amendment 20 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, and in particular the Grundtvig programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co- financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi- annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year.
Amendment 21 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well, the CALYPSO Preparatory Action on Social Tourism and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year.
Amendment 22 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 a (new) (15a) Given the number of funding programmes available for the European Year, any extra funding should derive from these existing programmes and Member States should not be required to provide additional financial assistance.
Amendment 23 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 16 a (new) (16a) in accordance with the established case-law of the European Court of Justice, the compulsory retirement of women between the ages of 60 and 65 is prohibited, it should be possible - if so desired - to continue in gainful employment after attaining the national retirement age, on a part-time basis, for example.
Amendment 24 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 25 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to
Amendment 26 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations, promoting the perception of older people as a natural and integral part of society and highlighting the contribution that the invaluable experience they have gained over the course of their lives makes to society as a whole. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society, and encouraging healthy ageing. On this basis, the objectives shall be:
Amendment 27 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions for both paid and unpaid work to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society, and encouraging healthy ageing. On this basis, the objectives shall be:
Amendment 28 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market and in passing on expertise in traditional trades, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society, and encouraging healthy ageing. On this basis, the objectives shall be:
Amendment 29 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness at all administrative levels in Member States, cities and regions of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contributions older persons make to society and the economy by passing on their knowledge and skills, to promote active ageing
Amendment 30 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness among the population of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons
Amendment 31 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons, in particular by fostering the passing on of expertise in traditional trades;
Amendment 32 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing and combat negative stereotypes about old age in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons;
Amendment 33 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and support and develop mutual
Amendment 34 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate, exchange information and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 35 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing
Amendment 36 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific, concrete objectives related to active ageing by devising long-term strategies.
Amendment 37 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 3 a (new) (3a) to ensure that Member States encourage groups of all ages to interact and cooperate with one another and to engender a collegial relationship between all generations, thereby combating discrimination and exploitation.
Amendment 38 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 1 Amendment 39 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 – information, promotion and educational campaigns to disseminate the message of the European Year, using new media and the internet in order to do so;
Amendment 40 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 a (new) – the promotion of volunteering among older people, while ensuring that EU policies and funding programmes are based on solidarity between generations and encompass such solidarity; the organisation of training activities enhanced by the contributions of older volunteers, together with the collection of accurate, comparable statistics on the scale, scope and socio-economic benefits of volunteering;
Amendment 41 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 b (new) – wider access to lifelong education and training, and expansion of the Grundtvig programme;
Amendment 42 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 c (new) – the promotion of intergenerational cultural and artistic activities, and the creation of a prize for the best intergenerational project in 2012;
Amendment 43 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 3 – exchange of information, experience and good practices through national coordinators and networks of contacts set up by stakeholders working to achieve the goals of the European Year;
Amendment 44 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. The Commission and Member States shall be encouraged to provide greater opportunities for those who volunteer to support elderly people and engage in fund raising programmes, thereby putting their enthusiasm and experience to positive use.
Amendment 45 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of gender mainstreaming and the disabled in the running of the European Year.
Amendment 46 #
Proposal for a decision Article 4 Each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year. The national coordinators should also see to it that national activities are properly
Amendment 7 #
Proposal for a decision Title 1 – title Proposal for a DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (2012) (text with EEA relevance)
Amendment 8 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 a (new) (3a) The part of the population of the European Union comprised of persons over the age of 50 will increase at a much faster rate than ever before. The largest increase is expected to occur during the period 2015-2035, when the population aged 60 and over will be increasing by 2 million people per year. This increase is very positive, as it is a logical consequence of improvements in health care and quality of life. Nevertheless, owing to the reality of demographic change, the EU faces a number of challenges such as a shrinking population and the unattractive nature of certain areas.
Amendment 9 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting active ageing and thus ensuring that the baby boom cohorts, who are, on the whole, healthier and better educated than any such cohort before them, have good opportunities for employment and active participation in society. In particular, voluntary work by older people should be promoted as an activity that is beneficial both to society and to the individuals involved, drawing on the achievements of the European Year of Volunteering 2011.
source: PE-454.461
2010/12/14
REGI
26 amendments...
Amendment 15 #
Proposal for a decision Title 1 – title Proposal for a DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on the European Year
Amendment 16 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 a (new) (3a) The proportion of the population of the European Union comprising persons in their late 50s and over is set to increase at an unprecedented rate. The largest increase is expected to occur during the period 2015-35 when the population aged 60 and over will be increasing by 2 million people per year. This increase is very positive in so far as it is a logical consequence of improved health care and quality of life. Nevertheless, due to the reality of demographic change, the EU faces a number of challenges such as a shrinking population and the fact that certain areas will become less attractive.
Amendment 17 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more
Amendment 18 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 10 (10) The Commission emphasised it its Communication on ‘Europe 2020 — A strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth’ the importance to the European Union of promoting a healthy and active ageing population in the interests of social cohesion
Amendment 19 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 (11) The Council adopted on 7 June 2010 Conclusions on ‘Active Ageing’, inviting the Commission ‘to pursue the preparation of a European Year for Active Ageing in 2012 during which the benefits of active ageing and its contribution to solidarity between generations can be highlighted and promising initiatives in support of active ageing at all levels can be publicised’. The Commission published on 10 November 2010 its Fifth Report on Economic, Social and Territorial Cohesion, in which ageing is highlighted as one of the most important challenges for the future. Sufficient resources should be secured to achieve these objectives.
Amendment 20 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 13 (13) In its Communication on "A Digital Agenda for Europe", the first EU2020 flagship initiative adopted on 19 May 2010, the Commission stressed the importance of ICT for ageing well, proposing in particular the reinforcement of the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme. The Digital Agenda for Europe also recommended taking concerted action to increase the digital competences of all Europeans, including older persons, a group that is over- represented within the 150 million citizens, or about 30% of the total, who have never used the internet. In the coming years, investments should particularly be made in the infrastructure of the outermost regions, so that the opportunities presented by the Digital Strategy can be exploited in the areas where there is the greatest need for them, e.g. in the form of e-Health services.
Amendment 21 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 13 a (new) (13a) In the context of ‘Europe 2020’, the Commission has proposed launching a pilot project on active and healthy ageing by the beginning of 2011 within the framework of the Innovation Union. This pilot project, which is the first innovation partnership, will include social innovation seeking to promote a better quality of life, prevent disease, improve social networks within public sectors and among social partners, and promote the introduction of new technologies supporting the quality of life, and seeks to increase citizens’ healthy lifespan by two years by 2020.
Amendment 22 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 a (new) (14a) The conclusions of the fifth report on economic, social and territorial cohesion: the future of cohesion policy, of 9 November 2010, recognise the need for the European Union to develop a cohesion policy capable of responding to societal challenges such as population ageing.
Amendment 23 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year. Accordingly, the European Year will also be an opportunity to raise public awareness across the board and mobilise stakeholders to combat social exclusion, deprivation and poverty among older people, particularly in the context of the European Platform against Poverty and Social Exclusion, a flagship initiative of the EU 2020 Strategy.
Amendment 24 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well, the CALYPSO Preparatory Action on Social Tourism and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year.
Amendment 25 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy, may support the European Year. In the field of regional development, too, consideration should be given to taking demographic factors into account as indicators for decisions on funding. EU funding to overcome the challenges presented by ageing should not be restricted solely to the European Year of Ageing: demographic challenges and the funding they require should be permanently taken into account in the Union’s policy.
Amendment 26 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 16 a (new) (16a) It should be recognised that regional and local public authorities play a key role in achieving the objectives of the European Year of Active Ageing, in particular where their responsibilities include the social integration of those in difficulties and the provision of support to older people.
Amendment 27 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 16 b (new) (16b) Article 174 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union recognises that some EU regions have serious and permanent demographic characteristics that may hamper their level of development and require particular attention so that the objective of economic, social and territorial cohesion can be achieved.
Amendment 28 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 16 c (new) (16c) The problem of population ageing is frequently linked to the characteristics of rural areas but is nevertheless not exclusive to such areas, as this issue is also related to the conditions to be found in urban environments and the role of cities in integrating and shaping the population.
Amendment 29 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 16 d (new) (16d) Active population ageing is underpinned by intergenerational solidarity that goes beyond integration into the labour market by creating more and better opportunities for older workers to participate, since it also targets their full integration in society, combating social exclusion by raising awareness with a view to their autonomy and quality of life, in particular through participation in activities such as tourism and voluntary work.
Amendment 30 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations (hereafter referred to as
Amendment 31 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote
Amendment 32 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy by passing on their knowledge and skills, to promote active ageing
Amendment 33 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate, encourage support and develop mutual learning between Member States
Amendment 34 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States
Amendment 35 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 3 – exchange of information, experience and good practices, particularly between local representatives with responsibilities relating to active ageing and solidarity between generations;
Amendment 36 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 – research and surveys on a Union
Amendment 37 #
Proposal for a decision Article 4 Each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year. The national coordinators should also see to it that national activities are properly coordinated and that civil society organisations are fully involved in the design and implementation of the European Year at local, regional and national level.
Amendment 38 #
Proposal for a decision Article 6 The Commission — together with the Member States — shall ensure that the measures provided for in this Decision are consistent with any other Union, national and regional schemes and initiatives that help attain the objectives of the European Year, and with projects carried out as part of previous European Years, in particular the European Year for Combating Poverty and Social Exclusion (2010) and the European Year of Volunteering (2011).
Amendment 39 #
Proposal for a decision Article 6 a (new) Article 6a International cooperation For the purpose of the European Year, the Commission may cooperate with the relevant bodies of other international organisations, in particular with the United Nations and the Council of Europe, in order to ensure the visibility of the efforts of the Union and to increase its effectiveness.
Amendment 40 #
Proposal for a decision Article 6 b (new) Article 6b Budget 1. The additional budget for implementing this Decision for the period from 1 January 2012 to 31 December 2012 is EUR 8 000 000. 2. Annual appropriations shall be authorised by the budgetary authority within the limits of the financial framework.
source: PE-454.569
2011/02/15
EMPL
135 amendments...
Amendment 100 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to facilitate the creation of a sustainable as well as environmentally barrier-free active ageing culture in Europe based on a society for all ages and on solidarity between generations. In this framework, the European Year shall encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners, and civil society, including churches and associations active in combating poverty and social exclusion, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby
Amendment 101 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the
Amendment 102 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to
Amendment 103 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society, family life and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons, in order to counteract the adverse effects of the wave of retirements of baby-boomer children and the shrinkage of the active population;
Amendment 104 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of healthy and active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to the family, society and the economy, to promote a
Amendment 105 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to
Amendment 106 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the
Amendment 107 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons, by providing education and lifelong learning opportunities throughout the course of their lives, by enabling the active participation of older people in economic development and voluntary activities and by encouraging the participation of older persons in family and community life, as they grow older;
Amendment 108 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons; it is important for higher education and vocational training programmes to encourage a management culture reflecting an awareness of the valuable contribution which can be made by older members of staff and for measures to be adopted with the specific intention of keeping both workers and employers properly informed;
Amendment 109 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 (1) to raise general awareness of the value of active ageing in order to highlight the useful contribution older persons make to society and the economy, to promote active ageing and intergenerational solidarity and to do more to mobilise the potential of older persons, paying special attention to concrete plans to combat poverty in old age, particularly that of women;
Amendment 110 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 1 a (new) (1a) to protect older persons who continue carrying on an activity, regardless of the category of organisation in which that activity is performed, via suitable medical monitoring;
Amendment 111 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote healthy and active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 112 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify challenges and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 113 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to support sustainable and secure pension schemes in Europe, to identify and disseminate good practice, and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 114 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders – particularly the social partners –at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 115 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies and to build a sustainable and safe public pension system in the Union, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 116 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 2 (2) to stimulate debate and develop mutual learning between Member States and stakeholders at all levels in order to promote active ageing policies, to promote sustainable and safe pension systems in Europe based on different combinations of the systems of occupational and private pensions, to identify and disseminate good practice and to encourage cooperation and synergies;
Amendment 117 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies and a horizontal approach through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to healthy and active ageing (including measures to facilitate access to appropriate and high quality health and social care).
Amendment 118 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop
Amendment 119 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels, with the active participation of civil society and the social partners, to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing.
Amendment 120 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable the European Union, Member States and stakeholders at all levels, with the strong involvement of civil society, including the business sector, to develop and share policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related
Amendment 121 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to
Amendment 122 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing, with particular emphasis on promoting information strategies and encouraging the correct implementation of health and safety at work guidelines, this being of key importance for an active ageing policy.
Amendment 123 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitments and concrete actions to enable the European Union, Member States and stakeholders at all levels, with the strong involvement of civil society and the business sector, to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing and to combat the unfair social distribution of the costs of the crisis, because, in some Member States, elderly people are most affected by anti-recession measures, by pension cuts and by the poor quality of health and social care services.
Amendment 124 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 (3) to offer a framework for commitment and concrete action to enable Member States and stakeholders at all levels, with the strong involvement of civil society and churches, to develop policies through specific activities and to commit to specific objectives related to active ageing.
Amendment 125 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) to promote the introduction of consistent structural policies on the family which can have a meaningful impact on the demographic trend; these could take the shape of measures in support of motherhood, child education, the reconciliation of work and family life and the upgrading of the work older people do for the family, in a perspective of the exchange of culture and values between older persons and the young.
Amendment 126 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) to either introduce or strengthen structural fiscal policies in favour of non- profit organisations, so that they can plan and carry out their activities in support of ageing people and of the disadvantaged parts of the population continuously and not just occasionally.
Amendment 127 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) to stimulate the development of comprehensive age management strategies at national and company level, by developing new forms of work-life balance provisions adapted to the specific needs of older workers and by rewarding people who work longer.
Amendment 128 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) to encourage an exchange of ideas at European level on the importance of prevention as a separate health policy issue, with particular emphasis on age- related disorders.
Amendment 129 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) together with the aims set out by the European Parliament in its report of 6 October 2010 on solidarity between generations: – to enhance older people’s dignity, health, quality of life, and autonomy; – to allow them equal access to health care regardless of income; – to highlight in particular the health risks for people who suddenly cease being active; – to emphasise prevention of health problems, which requires the Member States to support healthy lifestyles and take appropriate measures to reduce smoking, alcohol misuse, obesity and other major health risks.
Amendment 130 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – point 3 a (new) (3a) Overall better recognition of and support for the contribution of older people to economic and social development in Europe, with particular recognition of their experience as explicit added value for economy and society.
Amendment 131 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 1 – conferences, events and initiatives, in which the business sector and SMEs will be closely involved, to
Amendment 132 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 1 Amendment 133 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 1 – conferences, events, cultural forums, workshops and initiatives to promote debate, raise awareness and foster the making of specific commitments;
Amendment 134 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 1 – conferences, events and initiatives, with the strong involvement of civil society and churches, to promote debate, raise awareness and foster the making of specific commitments contributing to sustained and lasting impacts;
Amendment 135 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 – information, promotion and educational campaigns in a form adapted to national, regional or local circumstances and to targeted groups; making use of multimedia and innovative and new methods;
Amendment 136 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 Amendment 137 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 – information, promotion
Amendment 138 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 2 a (new) - forums for consolidating and analysing evidence of benefits, as well as different methods of involving elderly people, in order to develop evidence-based best practice guidelines;
Amendment 139 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 3 – exchange of information, experience and good practices within the framework of the Open Method of Coordination (OMC), aiming, in particular, to ensure social inclusion for all and access to high quality health and long-term care;
Amendment 140 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 – research and surveys on a Union or national scale, and dissemination of the results – with emphasis on the economic and social impact of an active ageing policy.
Amendment 141 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 – research and surveys on a Union or national scale,
Amendment 142 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 a (new) - programmes for the participation of citizens in the objectives of the European Year.
Amendment 143 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 a (new) - measures focusing on health-care prevention oriented towards healthy ageing.
Amendment 144 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 1 – indent 4 b (new) - measures to involve ageing and young people in common initiatives aimed at highlighting their typical features and the opportunities afforded by intergenerational exchange.
Amendment 145 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of gender mainstreaming, as well as the inclusion of persons with disabilities and persons belonging to ethnic minorities, and in particular the Roma minority, in the running of the European Year.
Amendment 146 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of gender mainstreaming
Amendment 147 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of gender
Amendment 148 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of
Amendment 149 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 3. The Commission and the Member States shall take account of gender mainstreaming in the running of the European Year, focusing mainly on the particular needs of both women and men, and especially the needs of single elderly women (inter alia chronic diseases, poverty etc).
Amendment 150 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 – paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. The Commission shall take into account the potential of crossborder activities on a regional or local level for achieving the objectives set out in Article 2.
Amendment 151 #
Proposal for a decision Article 3 a (new) Article 3a Financial framework and budget The European Union shall provide a budget of EUR 20 million for the European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations, of which EUR 10 million shall be reserved for activities in Member States, which undertake to contribute a further EUR 10 million.
Amendment 152 #
Proposal for a decision Article 4 Each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year. The national coordinators should also see to it that national activities are properly coordinated and that stakeholders, social partners and civil society organisations are involved in the programmes.
Amendment 153 #
Proposal for a decision Article 4 Each Member State shall appoint a national coordinator responsible for organising its involvement in the European Year. The national coordinators should work independently, without reflecting solely the views of governments and should also see to it that national activities are properly coordinated and implemented.
Amendment 154 #
Proposal for a decision Article 5 – paragraph 1 The Commission shall convene meetings of the national coordinators for the purpose of coordination at Union level and to exchange information, including on commitments made and their implementation in the Member States. The Commission shall monitor the developments at national, regional and local level by assessment methods, including the use of comparative indicators, and may introduce, where appropriate, new pathways and tools for the achievement of policy goals.
Amendment 155 #
Proposal for a decision Article 5 – paragraph 1 a (new) Co-financing at Union level of activities within the framework of the European Year shall be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multiannual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines, particularly in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields which also contribute to the promotion of active ageing, such as education and culture, health, research, the information society, regional policy and transport policy as well as home- and mortgage policies and practices, may also support the European Year.
Amendment 156 #
Proposal for a decision Article 5 – paragraph 3 a (new) The theme of the European Year will be a priority in the communication activities of the Representations of the Commission in the Member States and in the work programmes of relevant key European level networks benefiting from support for their running costs from the Union budget.
Amendment 157 #
Proposal for a decision Article 5 – paragraph 4 a (new) The Commission shall, for the purpose of evaluation, encourage national statistical offices to pay special attention to evaluating the activities set out in Article 3(1) that took place within their territory during the European Year, in particular by taking account of public support.
Amendment 158 #
Proposal for a decision Article 7 By 30 June 2014, the Commission shall submit a report to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the European
Amendment 159 #
Proposal for a decision Article 7 – paragraph 1 a (new) By the 31 December 2013, the Member States shall submit a country report to the Commission on the implementation and on the results, along with their overall assessment of the initiatives provided for in this Decision.
Amendment 25 #
Proposal for a decision Title Proposal for a DECISION OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND OF THE COUNCIL on the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (2012) (text with EEA relevance)
Amendment 26 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 (3) Pursuant to Article 25 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights, the Union recognises and respects the rights of
Amendment 27 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 a (new) (3a) Ageing is undoubtedly a challenge for the whole of society and for all generations in Europe, but it is also a matter of intergenerational solidarity and above all the role of the family.
Amendment 28 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 a (new) (3a) Pursuant to Article 34 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights, the Union recognises and respects the entitlement to social security benefits and social services providing protection.
Amendment 29 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 3 b (new) (3b) Pursuant to Article 35 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights, the Union recognises the right for everyone to a high level of health protection.
Amendment 30 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting healthy and active ageing and thus ensuring that the baby boom cohorts, who are, on the whole, healthier and better educated than any such cohort before them, have good opportunities for employment and active participation in society. Flexibility in labour relations – especially so-called atypical contracts – must be promoted so as to ensure that everyone will be able to work in accordance with their circumstances.
Amendment 31 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting active ageing and thus ensuring that the
Amendment 32 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models, especially in times of economic slowdown and increased budgetary constraints. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting active ageing and thus ensuring that the baby boom cohorts, who are, on the whole, healthier and better educated than any such cohort before them, have good opportunities for employment and active participation in society.
Amendment 33 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in
Amendment 34 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models.
Amendment 35 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting active ageing and thus ensuring that the baby boom cohorts, who are, on the whole, healthier and better educated than any such cohort before them, have good opportunities for employment and active participation in society. Active ageing accordingly requires the adoption of a multidimensional approach and a commitment to measures applicable on a lifelong basis rather than to a specific age group.
Amendment 36 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting
Amendment 37 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 4 (4) Successive European Councils have recognised the need to tackle the effect of ageing populations on European social models. A key response to this rapid change in the age structure consists in promoting
Amendment 38 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing by ensuring universal and equal access to healthcare. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems.
Amendment 39 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing. A crucial factor in this is access to health and social services. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems.
Amendment 40 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing for all. Healthy ageing
Amendment 41 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems. In this context, reaching the pension age should be accompanied with a project aimed at allowing the ageing person to keep his/her skills active, by continuing to work or by carrying out voluntary activities, including those within the ambit of work
Amendment 42 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing and to sensitise the awareness of European citizens to problems connected with an ageing population. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer and to participate in socially beneficial activities such as volunteering, improve
Amendment 43 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems. The comprehensive integration of older people in society is vital in order to avoid any form of segregation which might lead the elderly to consider themselves or be perceived as second-class citizens.
Amendment 44 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people
Amendment 45 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing for all and, in particular, for older persons, supporting their vitality and dignity. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life by a higher level of services and a barrier-free environment and curb the strains on health and social care systems.
Amendment 46 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems. Older people with chronic conditions who are otherwise well should be treated without prejudice or discrimination.
Amendment 47 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing for all and, in particular, for older persons, supporting their vitality and dignity. Healthy ageing is the process of optimising opportunities for physical, social and mental health to enable older people to take an active part in society without discrimination and to enjoy an independent life of good quality. Healthy ageing can also help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems.
Amendment 48 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 (5) The growing proportion of older people in Europe and the consequent increase in chronic conditions makes it more important than ever to promote healthy ageing and develop initiatives to counter health risks associated with the ageing process, such as malnutrition. Healthy ageing can help raise labour market participation of older people, enable them to be active in society for longer, improve their individual quality of life and curb the strains on health and social care systems.
Amendment 49 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 a (new) (5a) Further measures must be taken to combat the information isolation of the ageing generation. Access to and use of the new technologies is a basic condition for active ageing and social inclusion.
Amendment 50 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 a (new) (5a) Active ageing has taken on strategic importance since the impact of the economic crisis, which has led to a mass increase in unemployment, the dismissal of the oldest workers and a growing precariousness of employment, presents a further challenge to meeting the objectives of the Europe 2020 Strategy involving older persons, such as social inclusion and reducing the numbers of people at risk of poverty.
Amendment 51 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 a (new) (5a) Healthy ageing should be a process of enabling people to take control over and to improve their health, through equitable access to quality healthcare and long-term care. Healthy ageing may be attained through engaging in appropriate physical activity, eating healthily and taking correct medication in older age, as well as eliminating elder abuse, including physical, sexual, psychological and financial abuse and neglect.
Amendment 52 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 5 a (new) (5a) The promotion and planning of an active ageing strategy must, in view of problems such as the severe economic and social crisis affecting many countries of Europe, take account of vulnerable sections of society and the workforce so as to avoid any fragmentation of the employment market and any increase in poverty levels.
Amendment 53 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 6 (6) The Commission presented its views on the demographic challenges the EU faces and on opportunities for tackling them in its communications on ‘The demographic
Amendment 54 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 6 a (new) (6a) The cultural and ethnic diversity of the older generations in Europe will increase further. It is therefore necessary to actively promote equal opportunities and to encourage participation. Active citizens from different cultural backgrounds have important bridge functions in society, foster integration and contribute to the economy.
Amendment 55 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 7 (7) The Council adopted on 22 February 2007 a resolution on ‘Opportunities and challenges of demographic change in Europe: the contribution of older people to
Amendment 56 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 7 a (new) (7a) The conference ‘Together for Mental Health and Well-being’, which was held during the Slovenian Presidency of the EU, on 12-13 June 2008, launched the European Pact for Mental Health and Well-being.
Amendment 57 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 8 (8) The Council adopted on 8 June 2009 Conclusions on ‘Equal opportunities for women and men: active and dignified ageing’, which recognises that, throughout the EU, older women and men face serious challenges as they seek to live active lives and to age with dignity, and proposes a number of measures to Member States and the Commission inter alia to promote active ageing policies, taking into account the different situations in the various Member States and the different challenges faced by women and men.
Amendment 58 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 9 (9) The Council adopted on 20 November 2009 Conclusions on ‘Healthy and dignified ageing’, inviting the Commission, inter alia, ‘to develop awareness-raising activities to promote active ageing, including a possible European Year on Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity in 2012’. These conclusions also stress the importance of taking account of issues related to informal care and carers, which is highly important in the context of intergenerational solidarity.
Amendment 59 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 9 a (new) (9a) 2012 was to be designated European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity, as specifically called for by the European Parliament in committee debates and in its resolution of 11 November 2010 on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations, the final outcome of which was an official proposal from the EU Commission to announce the designation of this European year.
Amendment 60 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 10 (10) The Commission emphasised it its Communication on ‘Europe 2020 — A strategy for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth’ the importance to the European Union of promoting a healthy and active ageing population in the interests of social cohesion and higher productivity. It proposed a flagship initiative ‘An agenda for new skills and jobs’, under which Member States should notably promote active ageing policies, and a flagship initiative on a ‘European Platform against Poverty’. Achieving these policy goals requires action from all levels of government and various non- governmental stakeholders; they can in
Amendment 61 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 10 a (new) (10a) The European Year should ideally result in the creation of a European network for the exchange of experiences and the various solutions adopted at national and local level in the sector in question.
Amendment 62 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 (11) The Council adopted on 7 June 2010 Conclusions on ‘Active Ageing’, inviting the Commission ‘to pursue the preparation
Amendment 63 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 a (new) (11a) The European Parliament adopted, on 11 November 2010, a resolution ‘on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations’, calling on the Member States to make active ageing one of the priorities for the coming years and stressing that the European Year 2012 should, in particular, highlight the contribution that older people make to society and afford opportunities to foster solidarity, cooperation and understanding between generations.
Amendment 64 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 a (new) (11a) The European Parliament adopted, on 11 November 2010, a resolution ‘on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations’, calling on the Member States to make active ageing one of the priorities for the coming years and stressing that the European Year 2012 should, in particular, highlight the contribution that older people make to society and afford opportunities to foster solidarity and cooperation between generations.
Amendment 65 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 a (new) (11a) The opinions drawn up by the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions also stress the importance for Europe of a culture of active ageing. One particular aspect of this concerns cross- generational health care and protection from what the Economic and Social Committee refers to as age-related disorders in its opinion on ‘The impact of population ageing on health and welfare system’ of 15 July 2010 ______________ 1 OJ C 44, 11.2.2011, p.10.
Amendment 66 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 a (new) (11a) In its resolution of 11 November 2010 on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations, the European Parliament expressly welcomed the fact that many voluntary organisations had declared 29 April a day of Solidarity between Generations. In addition, it urged the Commission to draw up a recommendation that 2012 be designated European Year of Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity, highlighting the contribution of older people to society and seeking ways of involving younger and older people in joint initiatives.
Amendment 67 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 11 b (new) (11b) The Commission reported in its Second Biennial Report on social services of general interest that while there is an increasing demand for social and health services, many countries experience a shortage of workers in the care sector due in part to the ageing of the care workforce and that there is a high turnover of staff. Because of the key role of staff in care services, tackling these shortages is necessary in order to ensure that social and health care services of sufficient quality are accessible to support active ageing.
Amendment 68 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 12 (12) The Commission proposed in its proposal for a Council Decision on ‘Guidelines for the employment policies of the Member States’ of 27 April 2010, which calls under the guidelines 7 and 8 on Member States to increase labour force participation through policies to promote healthy and active ageing, to raise employment rates of older workers through innovation in work organisation and to increase the employability of older workers through up-
Amendment 69 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 12 (12) The Commission proposed in its proposal for a Council Decision on ‘Guidelines for the employment policies of the Member States’ of 27 April 2010, which calls under the guidelines 7 and 8 on Member States to increase labour force
Amendment 70 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 12 (12) The Commission proposed in its proposal for a Council Decision on ‘Guidelines for the employment policies of the Member States’ of 27 April 2010, which calls under the guidelines 7 and 8 on Member States to increase labour force participation through policies to promote active ageing, to raise employment rates of older workers through innovation in work organisation and to increase the employability of older workers through up- skilling and participation in lifelong learning schemes. Guideline 10 emphasises the need to enhance social protection systems, lifelong learning and active as well as environmentally barrier-free inclusion policies with the aim
Amendment 71 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 12 a (new) (12a) The Conference on ‘Active and Healthy Ageing’, which was held under the Spanish Presidency of the EU, on 29- 30 April 2010, presented good practices carried out in Europe in the field of social participation and intergenerational solidarity.
Amendment 72 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 (14) The Commission is implementing the European Disability Action plan that contains relevant actions for older persons given the frequent correlation between disability and ageing. In particular actions on accessibility following Design for all approaches would be relevant. Actions to support independent living and inclusion in the community are relevant, including those directed at older persons with disabilities, in need of a high level of support and with complex needs, who are particularly vulnerable and prone to social exclusion. Furthermore the EU and all Member States have signed the UN Convention on the Rights of
Amendment 73 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 (14) The Commission is implementing the European Disability Action plan that contains relevant actions for older persons given the frequent correlation between disability and ageing. In particular actions on accessibility following Design for all approaches would be relevant. Actions to support independent living and inclusion in the community are relevant, including those directed at older persons with disabilities, in need of a high level of support and with complex needs, who are particularly vulnerable and prone to social exclusion. Furthermore the EU and all Member States have signed the UN Convention on the Rights of persons with disabilities that contains inter alia relevant provisions for older persons. The Recommendation of the Council of Europe on ageing and disability in the 21st century adopted in 2009 aims to promote autonomy and an independent life for ageing people with disabilities, enhancing the quality of services and ensuring equal access to them. It calls on Member States to adopt innovative approaches.
Amendment 74 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 (14) The Commission is implementing the new European Disability
Amendment 75 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 a (new) (14a) The Commission will use approximately EUR 2 300 000 from the budget 2011 to primarily fund communication activities and EU conferences for the European Year, and it intends to reserve a similar amount in the draft budget 2012.
Amendment 76 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 b (new) (14b) The theme of the European Year will be a priority in the Communication activities of the Representations of the Commission in the Member States and in the work programmes of relevant key European level networks benefiting from support for their running costs from the EU budget.
Amendment 77 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 14 a (new) (14a) In its resolution of 11 November 2010 on the demographic challenge and solidarity between generations, the European Parliament warned that birth rates in the Member States had remained low for a number of decades, a situation which, if not tackled in a timely manner, would place a heavy burden on rising generations and lead to conflict over burden sharing. Given the urgency of this matter, exceptionally high budget appropriations should be earmarked for the European Year of Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity, a realistic example being 2010, for which the European Union made available €17m, of which €9m were earmarked for initiatives in the Member States, the latter having committed a further €9m for this purpose.
Amendment 78 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active and healthy ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. Union co- financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi- annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines
Amendment 79 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the Public Health Programme, the specific programmes on information and communication technologies and on socio-economic sciences and humanities in the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Development, the Action Plan on ‘Ageing well in the information society’, the Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Joint Programme for research and innovation, the Competitiveness and Innovation Programme with pilot deployment projects on ICT for Ageing Well and the Action Plan on urban mobility. In the context of ‘Europe 2020’, the Commission has proposed launching a pilot project on active and healthy ageing by the beginning of 2011 within the framework of the Innovation Union. This pilot project, which is the first innovation partnership, will include social innovation seeking to promote a better quality of life, prevent disease, to improve social networks within public sectors and among social partners and to promote the introduction of new technologies supporting the quality of life. It also seeks to increase citizens’ healthy lifespan by two years by 2020. Union co-financing of European Year activities will be in accordance with the priorities and rules applying, on an annual or multi-annual basis, to existing programmes and autonomous budget lines in the field of employment, social affairs and equal opportunities. Where appropriate, programmes and policies in other fields, such as education and culture,
Amendment 80 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 (15) Active ageing is targeted by several Union programmes, such as the European Social Fund, the European Regional and Development Fund, the PROGRESS programme, the Life Long Learning Programme, the
Amendment 81 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 a (new) (15a) In order to ensure the participation of a diverse range of organisations, simplified procedures should be available for smaller scale events and operations.
Amendment 82 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 a (new) (15a) The irreplaceable value of the family as a natural and fundamental social unit should be recognised when putting the initiatives associated with the European Year into practice, as should its prime role in the education, training and upbringing of young people, and in the development of intergenerational solidarity.
Amendment 83 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 a (new) (15a) The initiatives concerning demographic ageing associated with the European Year should stimulate thought on how to renew social protection and solidarity systems, with the full participation of the social partners, civil society and non-profit organisations.
Amendment 84 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 a (new) (15a) The Commission proposes to launch an Active and Healthy Ageing Innovation Partnership (AHAIP) under the Europe 2020 flagship initiative ‘Innovation Union’ which will address individuals as patients and consumers by developing innovative solutions, clinical tests, medicines and treatments to combat and address major chronic and rare diseases. The AHAIP will focus on social and health care systems by developing innovative policies and business models for more integrated care systems for older people (including home-based and self- care ones). The AHAIP will also target EU-related markets, contributing to enabling older people to lead independent and active lives by promoting the development and deployment of innovative products, devices and services, including ICT-based, specifically suitable for older people. As the objectives and planned activities of the AHAIP and the European Year are closely linked, synergies between the two initiatives will need to be ensured.
Amendment 85 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 b (new) (15b) Given that a number of relevant EU level networks may be facing severe budgetary constraints which might limit their participation in the European Year, this should be taken into account if additional money becomes available at Union level.
Amendment 86 #
Proposal for a decision Recital 15 b (new) (15b) Synergies between the European Year of Volunteering 2011 and the European Year for Active Ageing 2012 should be promoted.
Amendment 87 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 88 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing - Promoting solidarity between generations (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 89 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing: Promoting intergenerational solidarity (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 90 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 91 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing - promoting active ageing and mutual solidarity between generations, maintaining the vitality and respecting the dignity of all (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 92 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Intergenerational Solidarity (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’).
Amendment 93 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing and Solidarity between Generations (hereafter referred to as ‘the European
Amendment 94 #
Proposal for a decision Article 1 The year 2012 shall be designated as the European Year for Active Ageing (hereafter referred to as ‘the European Year’). The Year's subheading shall be: 'Fostering the vitality, dignity and solidarity of generations.'
Amendment 95 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations.
Amendment 96 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means
Amendment 97 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to facilitate the creation of a sustainable active ageing culture in Europe based on a society for all ages and on solidarity between generations. In this framework, the European Year shall encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners
Amendment 98 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities and working conditions to enable older workers to play their part in the labour market, according to their capabilities and preferences, combating social exclusion by fostering active participation in society,
Amendment 99 #
Proposal for a decision Article 2 – paragraph 1 – introductory part The overall purpose of the European Year shall be to encourage and support the efforts of Member States, their regional and local authorities, social partners and civil society to promote active ageing and intergenerational solidarity and to do more to mobilise the potential of the rapidly growing population in their late 50s and above, thereby preserving solidarity between generations. Active ageing means creating better opportunities
source: PE-458.631
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