Research and discussion for citizens and decision makers

Cities growing for increased elderly population

Preparing for the future

Share This

The population of adults over the age of 65 is expected to double by 2050, “but in dozens of communities, the older population has already passed that demographic milestone” according to the Washington Post:

Ahead of a federal mandate that will kick in in 2012, Aiken has begun installing oversize street signs downtown and on major thoroughfares; they have increased reflectivity as well, designed to help older drivers who may not see as well as they used to.

In Mayfield, Ohio (23.8 percent over age 65), the large number of seniors who no longer drive threatened to swamp a program offering $3 rides for older people to doctor’s offices, shopping and the like. Says Stacey O’Brien, director of the Tri-City Consortium on Aging, “The demand is far greater than we anticipated.” After analyzing people’s travel patterns and consulting with the managers of complexes with high senior populations, the consortium is making plans to move away from what has essentially been a taxi system and toward a scheduled shuttle that would run a loop among set locations such as grocery stores and medical facilities.

More from Beyond

Comments

Name:

Email:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:





Houston Tomorrow
3015 Richmond Ave. Suite 201 Houston, Texas 77098 United States
Phone 713.523.5757

RSS Feed