Proposal: Test Older Drivers Wisconsin Legislation to Require More Vision Exams

Proposal: Test Older Drivers

BILL FROM SEN. LEHMAN WOULD REQUIRE MORE VISION EXAMS

January 2, 2014 6:43 am

A proposal from state Sen. John Lehman would make elderly drivers pass vision exams every four years instead of every eight.

In Wisconsin, drivers who have advanced beyond a probationary license must take a vision test every eight years to renew their driver’s licenses. Lehman’s proposal would change that to every four years for those 75 and older; they would have to pass a vision exam but would not have to retake a driving test, the Racine Democrat said.

Individuals would be able to take the vision exam at their regular eye doctor and would not necessarily need to visit a state Division of Motor Vehicles location, Lehman added.

“We decided on the (proposal) the way it is because its price tag is not as high as making sure that everybody goes into the driver’s testing station and has another road test,” Lehman said, explaining the change as proposed would have a very minimal annual cost.

Lehman said his proposal comes from two concerns: elderly drivers being the second-most dangerous group on the roadways, after young, inexperienced drivers; and how difficult it can be to take a driver’s license away from an elderly parent or grandparent.

“What children of older parents run into is trying to make sure there’s a good decision about whether or not mom or dad should be driving and we think that this will help the discussions by making sure that there is a shorter period of time between when that license has to be renewed,” he said.

AARP-Wisconsin spokesman Jim Flaherty acknowledged those family discussions can indeed be difficult but said that doesn’t mean laws should change.

While AARP-Wisconsin will not take a position on the proposal, Flaherty said the organization in general “does not favor legislation that looks at drivers based solely on their age. Diminished capacity of driving is not necessarily linked to age.

“It’s up to our state and our department of motor vehicle regulators to be monitoring people (based) more on medical capacity than (on) age,” he continued.

Flaherty said that’s especially important when dealing with older drivers, whose independence often hinges on being able to drive themselves around town.

Numerous other states already have more frequent examination periods for older drivers, though, Lehman said.

There is no specific timeline for when his proposal might be taken up by the state Senate. The proposal also comes from 86-year-old state Sen. Fred Risser, a Madison Democrat who Lehman said is the Senate’s oldest member.

 

Source: The Journal Times

WORKING TO PUT THE BRAKES ON UNSAFE OLDER DRIVERS

Working To Put The Brakes On Unsafe Older Drivers

Article By Katherine Bontrager & Photography By Lisa Harrison – December 2013

LL_Page_34_Image_0001Leawood family has turned a personal tragedy into a mission to protect an aging driving population from making serious mistakes.

Every time Susan Cohen hears of an elderly driver losing control and crashing into another car, a building, or, terrifyingly, onlookers at a parade, her frustration—and resolve—grow. She understands all too well the heartbreak older impaired drivers can wreak. Cohen lost her son Nathan Krasnopoler in August of 2011 when an 83-year-old driver made the most tragic of mistakes.

A sophomore at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md., Nathan was riding his bike, returning from the farmer’s market via the bike lane, when an elderly driver turned into him, trapping him under her Honda Civic. Confused and disoriented, the driver got out of her car—which remained running— and sat down on a nearby wall. It was up to horrified witnesses to turn off the engine, call for emergency services, and help paramedics free Nathan.

While Nathan’s helmet protected his head, his lungs collapsed, depriving him of oxygen for more than 20 minutes and causing severe brain damage. His face, scalded by the car’s engine, was covered in fourth-degree burns. After 10 surgeries to repair his skin, and five months with no sign of cognition, doctors confirmed his parents’ worst nightmare: He was in a vegetative state and would never recover cognitive functions.

Cohen and her husband, Mitchell Krasnopoler, were left grieving and in shock. To add insult to grievous injury, the police who responded to the accident never turned the driver over to the Department of Motor Vehicles, which has a medical advisory board that reviews drivers’ ability to function behind the wheel.

“Those police felt sorry for her,” Cohen says. “She was the age of their grandparents. And they didn’t understand the laws well enough to know that she’d violated some laws. They thought our son was at fault. But she’d failed to yield to him in the bike lane. In addition, she broke the law that states cars have to stay at least 3 feet away from a cyclist at all times, and the law that dictates that when you’ve been in an accident, you have to summon medical help if it’s needed. She was never turned in for an evaluation to determine if she was fit to drive. She’d had three glaucoma surgeries, which can restrict your field of vision, but she was free to return to the road.”

It was clear to Cohen and her husband that the accident that ripped their lives apart was entirely preventable. Not only were state driving laws not advanced enough to handle an ever-increasing influx of elderly drivers, but law enforcement was often not properly trained to handle these potentially impaired citizens.

“As we researched the accident and learned more about older drivers in this country, we came to one conclusion and that is, in America, you can drive until you drop dead,” Cohen says. “No one will stop you, unless your children or grandchildren do. But for the most part, no one will stop you. We want to address these problems.”

Cohen and Krasnopoler have done just that—first in Maryland and now in Kansas and Missouri through their organization Americans For Older Driver Safety (AFODS). (Although AFODS does not yet have charitable organization status from the IRS, another local non-profit, KidsAndCars.org, agreed to sponsor AFODS so that charitable gifts could be made to AFODS through the sponsor.) Its mission is to advocate for safer roads through driver education, assessment, retraining and transitioning; and to raise public awareness of the safety risks related to unmonitored changes in driver abilities.

Their mission is not, Cohen emphasizes, to force older Americans to hand over their car keys. “Driving in America is absolutely important. There is not enough alternative mobility. And the economy needs older drivers and Baby Boomers, of which I’m one, to shop until we drop. So it’s not about keeping safe drivers off the road. It’s about keeping us safe. Nobody wants to be in the shoes of the woman who took Nathan’s life. Simply put: It’s not a matter of age, it’s a matter of ability. My own mother, at age 89, is a very good driver. She’s very safe, very cautious. We need to work together as a community to educate older drivers of the aging-related changes that affect driving and how to address those changes to safely continue driving.”

And the number of older drivers on the road is about to skyrocket. Baby Boomers make up the largest generation in American history—with more than 80 million people, representing about one-quarter of the U.S. population.

“I’ve heard it referred to as a ‘senior tsunami,’ because the number of Americans 65 and older is expected to more than double from 40 million today to 88.5 million by 2050,” Cohen says.

This in itself is not a bad thing. However, according the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the number of fatal crashes per mile begins to climb at 70, then steeply increases after the age of 80—even while these same age groups drive fewer miles. The organization notes that this is largely due to the fragility of older drivers and age-related declines in vision, physical mobility, reaction time, and cognitive impairments that may affect driving abilities. [Insert graph on United States Annual Drivers]

And sadly, most state licensing offices aren’t equipped to handle this onslaught of aging drivers. In Kansas, drivers age 65 and older receive a four-year license (those younger renew every six years), and in Missouri, 18- to 20-year-olds and those 70 and over renew every three years (compared to six years for those outside those age groups). As Cohen points out, dramatic mental and physical changes can occur to the elderly in such a broad time period. She thinks a two-year span would be far safer, potentially catching dangerous changes before too much time is spent driving.

What other changes does AFODS hope to impart locally? Aside from more frequent license renewal for those over 70, the group wants to push for additional education for families

, older drivers themselves, law enforcement, as well as training for DMV staff so they can better spot drivers who may be impaired.

“No law change in the world is going to make up for counter staff who have no training or procedure to deal with an older driver who is not understanding even the most basic directions about the renewal of their license,” Cohen says.

Cohen also plans to offer classes to seniors to teach the situations that cause the most older driver crashes, such as intersections with no signal for left-hand turns, and increasing their awareness that medications they may be taking could affect their driving skills.

“There are so many little things drivers can do to remain on the road more safely,” she says. “The mirrors in the car may need to be enlarged or changed. Back-up cameras can be installed. And drivers can be trained to determine when someone is in their blind spot. Also, everyone needs to be aware of what resources are available to them in regards to driver rehabilitation and training.”

And most potently, Cohen can offer stories. “Even in some of the less tragic stories, every driver who caused a crash or incident didn’t think anything was wrong with their driving. We need to explain that everyone needs to be aware of the changes that take place as we age, and realize those changes could have a serious impact on our ability to safely sit behind the wheel.”

For those who’ve come to accept that driving may no longer be in their—or anyone’s—best interest, the group hopes to offer mobility counseling.

“Really it’s to help people find other means of transportation,” Cohen says. “You can’t assume an older person can get themselves on a city bus. It might be too rough of a ride, or the stairs are too steep, or the whole experience too confusing. So really people need assistance in trying to find alternatives that work for them to keep them mobile. Before someone can hang up the keys, they need to discover their mobility options and get comfortable with them.”

It is tiresome work, navigating individual state laws, motivating law enforcement and those at the DMV to listen and get on board, and struggling through the ubiquitous red tape that’s inherent with taking on the powers-that-be. But Cohen is ready. As a lawyer who formerly worked for the Attorney General of Maryland, she knows what it takes to get change accomplished. And she most fervently hopes she can make that difference before more lives are needlessly lost.

Source: Leewood Lifestyle

AFODS In The News

AFODS in the News

After Fatal Crash, Questions Arise About Elderly Driver
Post-Gazette.com – November 28, 2014

Mother Wants More Eyes On Older Drivers After Her Son Was Killed
ABC2News.com – February 26, 2014 

Families Struggle To Get States To Take Keys From Elderly Drivers
WFAA.com – February 20, 2014 

Study Finds Older Drivers Getting Into More Crashes
KMBZ.com – February 21, 2014 

Wheels of Change: Baltimore’s Bike Crusade
Baltimore Sun – January 22, 2014 

Working To Put The Brakes On Unsafe Older Drivers
Leawood Lifestyle – December 2013 

Columbia Missourian – March 20, 2013
 

Drivers, Old and Young
Frederick News Post.com – February 24, 2013

Frequent License Renewals Proposed for Older Drivers
Cumberland Times-News – February 23, 2013

Frequent License Renewals Proposed for Older Drivers
Baltimore Post-Examiner – February 20, 2013

 

EDITORIAL: Dangers of Older Drivers
The Baltimore Sun – February 19, 2013

Parents Of Student Killed By Elderly Driver Fight For Safer Roads
WJZ Channel 13 CBS – February 19, 2013

 
Lawmakers Reviewing Md.’s Licensing Laws
Fox 45 – February 19, 2013
 
WJZ Channel 13 – May 3, 2012 (View Video)
 
Family, Friends Remember Krasnopoler

North Baltimore Patch – February 27, 2012
 
 
WBAL Radio – February 26, 2012
 
 

 
WTOP Radio – February 2, 2012
 
Maryland Morning – February 1, 2012 
Southern Maryland – February 1, 2012 
 
 

 

Five Top Crash Types for Older Drivers

Five Top Crash Types for Older Drivers

1 –Turning left at an intersection with a stop sign.

2 –Turning left at an intersection on a green light without a dedicated green turn arrow. 

3 –Turning right at a yield sign to merge with traffic at speeds of 40 to 45 mph. 

4 — Merging onto a highway from a ramp that has a yield sign.

5 — Changing lanes on a road that has four or more lanes

 

Source: NHTSA

Police: Driver Speeds at 80 mph

Police: Driver Speeds at 80 mph, Teen Boy Dead, 6 Injured in SF Crash

By ChristieSmith and LisaFernandez | Friday, Sep 27, 2013 | Updated 11:29 PM PDT

A 16-year-old boy died and six others were injured — two critically — Friday morning after a multiple vehicle crash in San Francisco’s Lower Pacific Heights neighborhood. “This is about as ugly an accident that I’ve ever seen,” Police Chief Greg Suhr said. “And when you lose a child, it just doesn’t get worse than that.” Police say a 58-year-old female driver appeared to have been driving at speeds of up to 80 mph – in a 25-mph zone – just before 7 a.m. at Pine and Gough streets when her silver Mercedes-Benz smashed into a minivan carrying a mother and two children, and a delivery van with three inside. After the crash, witnesses said the driver got out and put her hands behind her head. She was not seriously injured, but was being questioned at the hospital, Suhr said. Police said Friday afternoon the driver, who has not been identified, would face involuntary manslaughter charges upon her discharge from the hospital. The teen was identified by the San Francisco medical examiner as Kevin San, 16, of San Francisco. Suhr said San’s mother and another child were also in the car, comprising the two critical injures. The three in the delivery van were also injured. Aerial images taken from NBC Bay Area’s chopper showed two cars flipped on their sides with extreme damage. Firefighters and emergency crews poured what appeared to be salt on the roadway, and a Muni bus was stopped with lights blinking just behind the accident. “It sounded like a bomb,” one witness told NBC Bay Area. The intersection of Pine and Gough was shut down and is expected to be closed for an extended period of time. 

Source: http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/local/One-Dead-2-Critic

April 2013

April 2013

NEW ORGANIZATION TO ADVOCATE FOR SAFER ROADS
Welcome to the inaugural issue published by the newly launched national organization, Americans for Older Driver Safety, a non-profit project of KIDS AND CARS, Inc. Susan Cohen and Mitchell Krasnopoler founded Americans for Older Driver Safety (AFODS) following the 2011 death of their 20-year-old son, Nathan. An 83-year old driver making a right turn crossed into the bicycle lane where Nathan was riding resulting in the crash that took his life. The mission of Americans for Older Driver Safety is to advocate for safer roads for older drivers and all Americans, through driver education, assessment, retraining and transitioning; and to raise public awareness of the safety risks related to unmonitored changes in driver abilities. After more than 20 years as a practicing attorney, Susan Cohen left the Maryland Office of the Attorney General to direct AFODS and promote best practices, good ideas and top-notch research and ensure that all drivers have the functional ability to drive. Over the past year AFODS has had a significant impact raising awareness and advocating for safer roads across the country.  Some of the highlights and accomplishments are described below.

AFODS PUBLISHES 2013 POLICY BRIEF
Older drivers are expected to triple in number over the next fifteen years: Road safety policies are needed now. Federal recommendations, national and state-based research, and rapidly changing demographics indicate that changes to state driver licensing practices and highway policies are needed to address older driver safety.  Best practices suggest that, older drivers should be reviewed every two years to identify changes in cognitive and physical function that affect driving. States across the country have begun to shorten driver license renewal period for older drivers to every two years. For more read the 2013 Policy Brief: Maryland’s Older Drivers: Ensuring Road Safety.  

AFODS HOSTS MARYLAND LEGISLATIVE BRIEFING 
In February 2013 AFODS hosted a legislative briefing to inform members of the Maryland General Assembly on older driver safety concerns with Maryland’s eight-year renewal periods.  In light of the rapidly changing demographics that will double the number of Maryland drivers over 70 in just seven years and more than triple the number of drivers over 70 in 15 years, the briefing looked at the need to improve Maryland’s older driver license renewal process. Counter to the trend in other states, in Maryland there are currently no special provisions in place for older drivers. Maryland drivers renew every eight years and in-person renewals are required every other renewal, or every 16 years.  A driver renewing at age 70 is not required to return to an MVA office for renewal until age 86.  The research shows that older drivers become more crash prone with age, even though they drive less.  Age-related declines in vision, physical mobility, reaction time, and cognitive processing affect the driving ability of some older adults. Based on research showing how aging negatively affects driving abilities, the U.S. Dept. of Transportation has issued recommendations to states to modify licensing procedures for older drivers that include shorter renewal periods and in-person renewals.  Maryland’s practices, as of 2012, put Maryland far afield of those traffic safety recommendations. 

AFODS IN MISSOURI 
At a March 20, 2013 press conference in Columbia, Missouri, Susan Cohen, AFODS Founder, was part of a five-member panel addressing safety concerns of older drivers and the need for some drivers to move to  alternative mobility options.  The purpose of the event was to highlight a new pilot program, Mobility Transition Counseling, to facilitate transitioning from driving to other mobility options.  The Missouri Coalition for Roadway Safety, Subcommittee on Elder Mobility and Safety (SEMS), meets quarterly to address road safety concerns of older drivers and uses the slogan, Arrive Alive After 65. 

AFODS IN KANSAS
In Kansas, AFODS will join a support team on older drivers that has been formed by the Kansas Department of Transportation to determine actions to take to reduce older driver injuries and fatalities as part of the Kansas Strategic Highway Safety Plan.  The support team includes representatives from AAA, AARP, University of Kansas Transportation Research Institute and other stakeholders and experts. The team will issue a final report identifying steps to take to reduce older driver crashes.

kac1

Donate

Donate

Make a Tax-Deductible Contribution to AFODS Today

Join us in in our passionate pursuit to keep our roads safe by taking action to help prevent these tragedies. Your tax-deductible contribution will make a difference. 

As a new organization, AFODS can accept donations through our fiscal sponsor, KidsAndCars.orga 501(c)(3) charitable organization. 

DONATIONS BY CHECK

Make checks payable to “KIDS AND CARS, Inc.” with “For AFODS” on the memo line.

Mail donations to:

KidsAndCars.org 

7532 Wyoming St.

Kansas City, MO 64114

 

ONLINE DONATIONS

To donate online, click on: 

Donate to AFODS through KidsAndCars.org

This will direct you to the donate page of KidsAndCars.org which accepts donations through PayPal. 

Follow these steps at the KidsAndCars.org donate page:

1. Select a donation amount or “Other Donation” and click on Donate.

 

 

 

2. You’ll then be directed to the Kids and Cars PayPal page. Either log in to PaPal or to complete your credit card information, click on Continue under “Don’t have a PayPal account?

 

 

3. After you’ve logged in or entered your credit card information, click on Review Donate and Continue.

 

4. Important: Click on “Add special instructions to the seller.” Enter ‘AFODS’ in the text box.

 

 

 

6. When done, click on Donate $xx.xx USD Now

 

Thank you for your donation!