Then again with G DUHbya and the oil boys in charge this may be just a dream.
Neal Peirce / Syndicated columnist
You can see it coming: efforts across the 50 states to test aging drivers to reduce horrors such as 86-year-old Russell Weller apparently confusing his brake and accelerator and plowing through a farmer's market in Santa Monica, Calif., killing 10 people and injuring dozens of others.
Nine days later, Louis Nirenstein, 79, a polio victim who uses a wheelchair when not driving, lost control of his station wagon and careened into another outdoor market, this one in Flagler Beach, Fla. Despite injuries, no deaths were reported.
What's sure is that we can expect more incidents. Fatalities among drivers aged 70 or older jumped 27 percent from 1991 to 2001.
Elders drive an average of 37 minutes a day, 28 percent more than a decade ago, according to the Washington-based Road Information Program.
What's more, as baby boomers age, a virtual tsunami of older drivers is headed for our roads. By 2030, more than one in five Americans will be 65 or older and one in 11 of those individuals will be 85 or older. Waning physical alertness and response is virtually inevitable at advanced ages.
So what to do? Brad Kahn, co-director of the Active Living Network, sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, poses the critical question: "If we, as a nation, are going to consider taking licenses away from unfit elderly drivers, what are we offering as an alternative to the car?"
-more-
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2001542039_peirce18.html