Crash involving driver, 100, rekindles age debate
Topics: From the Wires, News
Preston Carter, left, 100, talks with police officers after police say his car went onto a sidewalk and plowed into a group of parents and children outside a South Los Angeles elementary school, Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2012, in Los Angeles. Nine children and two adults were injured in the wreck. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)(Credit: AP)LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jack Wyard is 92 and sees no reason to surrender his car keys, not to mention the freedom they give him to get up and go anywhere he wants, whenever he wants.
After all, he said, two years ago he got a perfect score on his written test to renew his license.
“I don’t know what to suggest for anyone else, but I’m still comfortable on the highway and I enjoy driving,” the retired sales manager from Los Angeles said Thursday.
A day earlier, a 100-year-old man who was attempting to back his Cadillac out of a grocery store parking lot struck and injured 11 people, nine of them children.
The accident in front of a South Los Angeles elementary school where children had lined up to buy after-school treats brought to the forefront again a debate over how old is too old to keep driving.
Is it 80? Or 90? And should anyone past 100 be allowed behind the wheel?
With the American Automobile Association reporting that 10,000 Americans are turning 65 every day, it’s a debate that will only intensify in coming years.
“I don’t think there should be a set age because people age differently,” said Ruth Nadel, 98, who was in her mid-80s when she decided it was time to hand over the keys to someone else.
After her vehicle was in a head-on collision, her children convinced her that, while she wasn’t to blame, her inability to get out of the way of an oncoming car indicated her reflexes might have slowed.
They told her it wasn’t worth risking another wreck and hurting herself or someone else. She said she has no regrets, although she believes she could have driven for a few more years.
While there should be no age limit, the Washington, D.C., woman said, a driving test would be good.
She suggested 80 as a reasonable age for that, adding that a person could be retested every five years. “But that’s as far as I’d go with it,” she added.
Indeed, many states do. California is one of 28 states that have special requirements for older people renewing driver’s licenses.
While younger California drivers with good driving records may automatically be granted two five-year license renewals, anyone over 70 must come to a DMV office and take a written test and eye exam.
“And if for any reason, the (DMV) employee might detect some kind of lack of ability or diminished ability to drive, they might ask them to take a physical driving test,” DMV spokesman Armando Botello said.




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