Few communities
have started to think long term about how to
plan and redesign services for aging baby
boomers as they move out of the workforce and
into retirement.
Even more troubling, dwindling budgets in a
tight economy have pushed communities to cut
spending on delivering meals to the homebound
and shuttling folks who can no longer drive to
grocery stores and doctor's offices.
These cuts, advocates for older Americans say,
are coming when the services are needed more
than ever. And those needs will grow
tremendously over the next two decades.
The nation's population of those 65 and older
will double between 2000 and 2030, according to
the federal Administration on Aging. That adds
up to one out of every five Americans — 72.1
million people.
Just eight years from now, researchers say, a
quarter of all Ohio's residents in half of the
state's counties will be 60 or older. Arizona
and Pennsylvania project that one in four of its
residents will be over the age of 60 by 2020.
"The bottom line is, the baby boomers are
hitting," Chuck Gehring of LifeCare Alliance, an
agency serving seniors in central Ohio, told The
Columbus Dispatch. "Are communities prepared for
this? No."
Six years ago, the National Association of Area
Agencies on Aging said less than half of cities
it surveyed at the time were preparing to deal
with the needs of older folks. It said the
results "should serve as a wake-up call for
communities to begin planning now."
Five years later, the Washington, D.C.-based
group revisited the survey and found little had
changed. There was still a great need for
transportation and housing for aging boomers, it
said.
"There are a lot of communities that recognize
they need to do something but haven't done it
yet," Sandy Markwood, the group's chief
executive officer, told The Associated Press.
Some of the changes cities can make include
offering training to help older people drive
more safely, installing road signs that are
easier to read or creating ride-share programs,
said Jo Reed, who oversaw the latest survey.
The biggest reason why cities have made little
progress is the economy.
Nearly 21,000 times last year, drivers for the
Licking County Aging Program in Ohio took
elderly residents in communities east of
Columbus to medical appointments. The gasoline
bill has more than doubled in the past four
years, topping $7,000 a month.
"With federal funding for these programs very
flat, the burden is on local communities," Dave
Bibler, the agency's executive director, told
The Dispatch.
Transportation usually tops the list of unmet
needs in local aging-agency surveys, advocates
say. Public transit routes and stops sometimes
aren't flexible enough; volunteer transportation
networks are popping up in a few places but
remain rare.
"How do we keep people involved in the community
once they stop driving?" said Cindy Farson,
executive director of the Central Ohio Area
Agency on Aging. "It's one of those bottomless
pits of need and demand. It's going to take a
lot of creative thinking."
Home and apartments will need boomer makeovers
too.
Two Ohio lawmakers have proposed a tax credit to
install bar handles, light switches and ramps to
improve accessibility in homes. Supporters say
it will save money because fall-related
hospitalizations in Ohio cost $298 million a
year in medical costs.
Communities can do some preparations on the
cheap, said Henry Cisneros, the former mayor of
San Antonio and the secretary of the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development in
the Clinton administration.
Cisneros, now executive chairman of Los
Angeles-based CityView, an institutional
investment firm geared toward urban real estate,
said communities can be creative with zoning for
denser housing and what he called "granny flats"
next to houses.
Although the task looms large, communities that
address these issues now could reap benefits
that reach beyond the boomer bubble. Creative
planners like to envision neighborhoods that
appeal to those who are young and old.
Young people actually have similar tastes to
seniors when looking for a place to live,
coveting walkable communities with easy access
to shopping, entertainment and transit. And
boomers want affordable and accessible housing,
transportation, recreation options and, when the
time comes, in-home care and services to help
them avoid nursing homes.
Edward Elberfeld, a retired art teacher, and his
wife, Barbara, plan to stay in their home near
downtown Columbus as long as they can.
Elberfeld, 63, has been working with
neighborhood residents to form a group of
volunteers to help other seniors do the same.
Their "aging in place" effort is based on
similar projects in affluent neighborhoods of
cities such as Boston and Washington, D.C.,
where private, nonprofit corporations formed to
provide services and social activities so
seniors don't have to move.
When residents are no longer able to drive, or
walk down steep basement stairs, volunteers
would ferry people around, check on a basement
furnace, or help landscape the yard. Residents
usually pay an annual membership fee, but far
less than the cost of staying in a nursing-home.
Minnie Figart-Braden, 63, who oversees a
meals-on-wheels kitchen in the city, said it's
best for people to realize that good plans and
quality care might call for sacrifice. "The
boomers have to learn to give," she said. "They
have to be responsible enough to give back to
the community, to see what's going on."