Mobility For The Aging Population
Download
in Adobe PDF format
As people age, isolation becomes a growing problem, and access
and mobility become increasingly critical needs. For older Americans,
affordable, reliable transportation options are essential. Public
transportation in various forms provides:
-
The ability to live independently
-
Access to medical and social services
-
Contact with the outside world
-
The feeling of belonging to the community
America’s aging population is growing at a faster rate than any
other U.S. population group, and public transportation systems must
continue to be expanded and enhanced to meet this group’s needs.
Through the commitment of more transportation dollars to public
transit systems, the U.S. will be better able to keep pace with
the mobility needs of older persons.
Meeting the most basic needs of America’s older individuals requires
enhanced mobility. And the car is not the only travel option. There
is a growing recognition of the broad-ranging benefits of public
transportation for older Americans, including:
-
Greater freedom to live in a variety of settings
-
More mobility as a result of more travel choices
-
Greater access to varied destinations
-
Enhanced opportunities to lead a full and meaningful life
Our national transportation policy can address more comprehensively
and more effectively the needs of aging Americans through reauthorization
of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA 21).
Reauthorization is the best way to assure that public transportation
is adequately funded, more widely available, more accessible and
more fully integrated with community-based and human-service transportation
services.
The Demographics
Statistics on the aging of America are dramatic:
-
Today, more than 35 million Americans are 65 or older; 4.2
million are 85 or older.(1)
-
By 2010, the numbers will rise in both age groups, with the
most striking increase in the 85+ age group, which will expand
over 30 percent to 5.8 million.(2)
-
As America’s "baby-boomers" age, the over-65 age group will
grow at a rate nearly four times faster than the population
as a whole in the two decades from 2010 to 2030.(3)
-
By 2030 one out of five people in the U.S. will be age 65 or
older. (4)
-
More older people now live in suburban settings that lack transit
options.(5)
|
Through reauthorization of the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA 21), our national transportation
policy can address more comprehensively and effectively the
needs of America’s aging population. Reauthorization provides
an immediate opportunity to address these needs by assuring
that public transportation is adequately funded, more widely
available, more accessible, and more fully integrated with
community-based and human-service transportation services.
|
Figure 1
Growth Rate of America’s Aging Population

Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census, Projections of the Total
Resident Population by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex, with Special Age
Categories, Middle Series 1999- 2100 (NP-T3), www.census.gov/population/www/projections/natsum.html
A Quality of Life Issue
For America’s aging population, isolation is a growing problem
that severely affects this group’s ability to take care of basic
needs and function as contributing members of society. And studies
show that, as people grow older, isolation—in the form of lack of
transportation access and mobility—becomes increasingly acute.
Medical progress has enabled people to live longer, enjoying more
years of health and activity. However, this growing population also
includes an increasing number of people, particularly among those
over 85, with widely varying health and medical conditions that
preclude driving and dramatically reduce mobility.
A 2002 AARP study found that:
-
Compared to people ages 50 to 74, nearly four times as many
people over 85 (41% vs. 12%) had not left home the previous
day.(6)
-
The percentage of those 85 and over who do not leave their
homes at all is three times greater than in the 80-to-84 age
group.(7)
Studies also demonstrate a growing dependency on transportation
assistance among older individuals. Sixty percent of older Americans
expect to depend on rides from friends and family when they can
no longer drive.(8) Lack of options and
mobility can contribute to isolation.
Signs of Progress
Both large public transportation agencies and smaller nonprofit
providers are taking steps to improve transportation options for
the aging population. Many public transportation agencies are expanding
services in exciting new ways, putting programs and enhancements
in place to make public transportation more available and user friendly
for older individuals throughout the day.
-
Phoenix, AZ. With a goal of 100 percent replacement,
the Valley Metro System has replaced 80 percent of its entire
bus fleet with low-floor vehicles to ease access for older persons.
In addition, the system is introducing state-of-the-art information
technologies that automatically announce bus stops for riders
and identify the route of the bus for waiting passengers. The
system is also introducing neighborhood circulator services
using small vehicles to allow older users to travel safely between
home and busy activity centers and major street and highway
corridors.
-
Charlotte, NC. Charlotte Transit is undertaking development
of a database of bus stop features that will identify elements
needing improvement and allow a new tripplanning system to show
photographs of stops to riders. In addition, through the Elderly
General Purchase Transportation Program, the agency, in cooperation
with the Department of Social Services, funds subsidized vouchers
for use on local taxis for aging residents who neither live
near a bus route nor are eligible for transportation assistance
through human service programs.
In addition to these breakthroughs, over 5,200 public and private
non-profit providers, nationwide, now offer demandresponsive "paratransit"
service to a wide range of clients requiring transportation to human
and social services.
Figure 2
Elderly Place of Residence, 2000

“Aging in place” has meant that more elderly are living in suburban
settings where new transit options must be found.
Source: Testimony of Ms. Lavada DeSalles, AARP Board Member,
before the U.S. Senate Housing and Transportation Subcommittee,
Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, July 17, 2002.
-
Tompkins County, NY. Gadabout Transportation Services
Inc., a non-profit agency, provides transportation services
for people age 60+. While Gadabout depends on 45 volunteers
for operation, it also pays 11 drivers for transportation services.
In 1999, Gadabout provided 49,000 one-way rides on 20 buses.
-
Loudoun County, VA. The county, whose aging population
experienced an 86% increase between 1990 and 2000, funds four
major transportation programs in addition to the service provided
by two public providers. Human-service transportation programs,
operated by two county departments, include both fixed-route
and demand-responsive service, provided through contracts with
6 private taxi-type providers operating approximately 550 trips
per day in sedans, station wagons and vans.
-
Des Moines, IA. The MTA has introduced a special "On-Call"
service to assist aging residents within suburban Johnston—the
fastest growing Des Moines-area suburb, with a large concentration
of elderly housing—in making trips between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Those wishing rides call roaming On-Call bus drivers directly.
In the Urbandale area, similar On-Call service is provided for
seniors during rush hour to park-and-ride lots and express bus
services. On-Call services promote a direct relationship between
customers and drivers, who are encouraged through pay incentives
to better serve customers and increase ridership.
-
Rhode Island. The Rhode Island Public Transit Authority’s
(RIPTA) nationally recognized paratransit service—The Ride Program—is
coordinated with other specialized human and social services
transportation across the state, allowing integration of multiple
federal and state funding streams, reduced duplication of service,
enhanced productivity and maximum service delivery.
Other communities are organizing grass-roots transportation services
for seniors. A 2001 Beverly Foundation/AAA Foundation for Traffic
Safety study identified 370 transit programs in rural, urban and
suburban areas across the country that are oriented toward helping
older persons access medical services, shopping areas, and many
recreational and everyday activities that would otherwise be out
of reach. (9)
Need for a Broader Commitment to Ongoing Innovation
While these programs represent exciting breakthroughs, continuing
innovations in transit services for aging Americans requires expanded
investment and support on a number of fronts.
System design. Traditional public transportation systems
must continue to be enhanced and designed to make everyday services
more easily available. More older adults, as well as young mothers,
children and people with disabilities, could access transit vehicles
if more systems implemented designs that are now available, such
as:
Community design. Transit investment must include improvements
in community design to increase ease of access to all transportation
alternatives and community services. For example, about one in five
non-drivers among the aging population could access regular fixed-route
bus services if better sidewalks and resting places were provided.
Advanced technologies. Increased emphasis must be placed
on state-of-the-art information systems to improve information about
alternative services and take the anxiety and uncertainty out of
trip planning and transit use. Examples include:
-
Web-based trip-planning systems, such as The RideGuide system
in Washington, D.C., that link route, schedule and fare information
for multiple transit systems across metropolitan areas
-
State-of-the-art electronic fare systems and multi-trip ticketing,
such as stored-value "Smartcards," that ease and speed the boarding
process, taking the guesswork out of paying fares and ultimately
allowing riders to use a single electronic ticket on a variety
of regional transportation services
-
Real-time vehicle arrival and departure information at transit
stops, such as systems in Washington, DC and Salt Lake City
rail stations, to reduce rider uncertainty about schedules and
conditions on the system
Coordination of services. Coordination of services and joint
investment between transit providers and other human service and
community service programs must be encouraged and rewarded, not
frustrated or discouraged. For example, in North Carolina service
coordination is carried out across each of the state’s 100 counties
by partnering at the county level in the delivery of small urban
and rural transit services through jointly developed plans.
An Achievable Goal
While transit agency and community programs are demonstrating that
innovation and determination can stretch limited transit dollars
and help make public transportation user friendly to older people,
more must be done. What’s needed is forward thinking and coordination
that allows municipalities to accommodate the needs of the aging
population into the designs of their transit systems and their communities
— and the funding to follow through on their ideas.
TEA 21 is critical to this effort. In the months ahead, local,
state and national elected officials will have a unique opportunity
to expand the reach and quality of public transportation for older
Americans through the reauthorization of this legislation.
For more information on how to communicate the extraordinary value
of transit for America’s aging population, contact your:
-
Local transit systems
-
Local human service agencies
-
State transit associations
-
The American Public Transportation Association
Works Cited
-
U.S. Bureau of the Census, Projections
of the Total Resident Population by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex,
with Special Age Categories, Middle Series 1999-2100 (NP-T3),
www.census.gov/population/www/projections/natsum.html
-
Projections of the Total Resident Population
by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex, with Special Age Categories, Middle
Series 1999-2100 (NP-T3)
-
Projections of the Total Resident Population
by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex, with Special Age Categories, Middle
Series 1999-2100 (NP-T3)
-
Projections of the Total Resident Population
by 5 Year Age Groups and Sex, with Special Age Categories, Middle
Series 1999-2100 (NP-T3)
-
Testimony of Lavada DeSalles, Member
AARP Board of Directors, before U.S. Senate, Housing and Transportation
Subcommittee, Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs,
July 17, 2002, Washington, DC
-
AARP Public Policy Institute, Understanding
Senior Transportation: Report and Analysis of a Survey of Consumers
Age 50+, p. 19, 2002, Washington, DC
-
AARP Public Policy Institute, Understanding
Senior Transportation: Report and Analysis of a Survey of Consumers
Age 50+, p. 22, 2002, Washington, DC
-
AARP Public Policy Institute, Community
Transportation Survey, p. 15, 1997, Washington, DC
-
The Beverly Foundation, Supplemental
Transportation Programs for Seniors, Prepared for the AAA Foundation
on Traffic Safety, June 2001, Washington, DC
Other Sources
Valley Metro System, Phoenix, AZ, Interview with senior staff
Charlotte Transit, Charlotte, NC, Interview with senior staff
Loudoun Co., VA, Interviews with senior staff
MTA, Des Moines, IA, Interview with General Manager
Rhode Island Public Transit Authority, Interview with General Manager