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Elders Donate Their Cars, Get Free Rides
For donating their cars seniors receive free rides
based on value
By Christine Vestal,
Stateline.org Staff Writer
Dec. 21, 2005 - As his health declined, Irving
Anzmann of Portland, Maine, decided it was no longer safe to drive. But
he still needed to visit a dialysis center three times a week. It was
there that he learned about a local service for the elderly that would
give him and his wife door-to-door rides in exchange for donating their
car.
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The 84-year-old used the service offered by
Independent Transportation Network
(ITN) for the last few months of his life, and his wife, Necia, has been
getting free rides ever since. “He set up a good thing for me. He didn’t
want me to get out there on the roads alone,” she said.
The Antzmanns were fortunate. Many older people are
stranded once they decide to give up their keys.
Policymakers in many states cite a shortage of
appropriate transportation as the No. 1 problem facing their aging
populations. Improving transportation options for the elderly was among
the top three priorities adopted by delegates at the White House
Conference on Aging, an event convened almost every 10 years since 1961
and which concluded a five-day summit Dec. 14.
Despite increased overall state spending on public
transportation, many elderly people in suburban and rural areas either
don't have access to mass transit or find it too confusing or physically
challenging. They are left with no way to get to the doctor’s office and
grocery store, much less community events and the homes of friends and
family.
Maine’s ITN program makes it easier for elders to
give up driving, because they don’t have to face the daunting task of
learning how to navigate a public transportation system designed
primarily for younger people who commute to and from work.
In return for donating their cars, seniors receive
a number of free rides, based on the value of their vehicle. “It’s like
a reverse mortgage on their car,” said founder Katherine Freund.
Elders also can volunteer to drive in return for
free rides later, when they decide to give up their cars -- a sort of
“transportation social security,” she said. Many riders who donate cars
choose to give their free credits to needier elders through a fund
called the “Road Scholarship.”
Maine’s ITN project -- initially funded by AARP,
the U.S. Department of Transportation and private donations -- was
started with the hopes of expanding it nationwide. The Maine
Legislature stepped in to help when the group received so many donated
cars that it needed an exemption from state auto dealership rules to be
allowed to sell some of its vehicles to pay for gas, maintenance and
other operating expenses.
The bill, signed by Gov. John Baldacci (D) this
year, will help expand the project by exempting nonprofit senior
transportation services from dealership requirements and incorporating a
previous law that prohibits auto insurance companies from raising rates
for volunteer drivers.
Launched in 1995, ITN is available only in the
Portland, Maine, area. But Freund hopes the program will be expanded
throughout the state and country.
Connecticut recently passed a law allocating seed
money to launch a program patterned after ITN, and legislators in
Florida, New York and Rhode Island are considering similar senior
transportation projects.
States may need to provide start-up funds to
re-create Maine’s ITN project, but once the community-based program
starts operating, public funds are not tapped because vehicles are
donated, drivers are volunteers and operating expenses are covered by
fees paid by riders who either do not donate cars or have exceeded their
number of free rides.
While ITN works well in the Portland area, “it’s
not a silver bullet,” Freund said. The program is designed to serve
suburban areas, which have a high density of older people and typically
are not well-served by public transportation. It is not suitable for
rural areas where trips to the doctor may be as much as 200 miles away,
she explained.
Even when available, public transportation isn’t
necessarily the best alternative for senior citizens. “Have you ever
tried to read a bus schedule?” asked Susan Samson, associate planner
with Florida’s area agency on aging of Pasco-Pinellas.
One of the most common reason elders stop driving
is dementia and an inability to deal with the stress of the roadways.
In those cases, public transportation is not a realistic option, she
explained.
Local volunteer programs such as ITN can fill some
of the gaps left by inadequate federal and state funding for public
transportation. The cost of maintaining the country’s existing public
transportation network is $14.8 billion annually. To improve current
systems to meet the needs of the country’s burgeoning elder population
would cost $43.9 billion annually, according to a recent study by the
Surface
Transportation Policy Project (STTP).
Four in five Americans ages 65 or older worry that
they will be stranded and unable to get around when they give up their
cars, according to a recent survey by the
American Public
Transportation Association. Half of people ages 65 or older
do not drive, and more than half of those stay at home during any given
day, according to the STTP study.
For the story at Stateline.org as published on
December 16 –
click here.
For more state
news from Stateline.org, a Pew Research Center website - click here
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