Once seniors are too old to drive, our transportation system totally fails them [View all]
Last edited Mon Apr 4, 2016, 04:54 PM - Edit history (1)
http://www.vox.com/2015/6/12/8768827/seniors-aging-car-driving
During the early years of his retirement, he'd been very active, volunteering at the local library and chauffeuring older folks who couldn't drive themselves. Over time, he slowed down, but remained independent so much so that after a year or so in a retirement home, he stubbornly moved back into his own apartment. Though he was in his 80s, he didn't like the idea of being surrounded by as he put it "old people."
Eventually, his health declined to the point where it really wasn't safe for him to drive anymore. And though he used to take long walks daily, he could no longer traverse the vast parking lots and six-lane arterial roads surrounding his suburban Maryland apartment.
Ultimately, he ended up largely stuck at home, entirely dependent on family to bring him food, give him rides, and provide simple human contact. In his final years, the car-based transportation system he'd relied on for his whole life really failed him.
His story is shared by millions of other American seniors, about 80 percent of whom live outside of urban areas. "As people have aged in the suburbs, they've been left behind," says Phil Stafford, director of Indiana University's Center on Aging and Community.
edit: Same goes for many people with disabilities of all ages, including yours truly and my 55 walk score (in America's Tenth-Largest City(TM)!).