Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

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Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1,

Transcript of Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

Page 1: Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

Planning for Our Aging Population

Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPPMonday,

December 1, 2014

Page 2: Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

Planning for Our Aging Population

• Why we need to pay attention to aging• Planners and others responsible for built environment

slow to adapt to demographic shift• Can urban strategies work for rural areas?

Page 3: Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

Why We Need to Pay Attention to Aging

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Why Focus on Aging: the Changing Demographic Reality

1961 1 Canadian in 14 is 65+

1927 Old Age Security1957 Registered Retirement Savings Plans1965 Canada Pension Plan1967 Guaranteed Income Supplement

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Physical, social & fiscal impacts

By 2041– More seniors than school age

children– More seniors than people of

working age– Dependency ratio will be 2:1– Low growth or decline in rural

communities

Source: “Canada’s Aging Population” by Health Canada and the Interdepartmental Committee on Aging and Seniors Issues, 2002

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Percentage of seniors in 2036•21.3%in the GTA •30.5% in the Northeast•43.8% in Prince Edward

Ontario Ministry of Finance 2014

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•How rural is rural?•Metropolitan Influence Zones – relocation of urbanites•“Pure” rural communities see out- migration of youth •Low growth rural economy strains municipal fiscal capacity to enhance ACT resources

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Planners and others responsible for built environment slow to adapt to demographic shift

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Why Planners Have Been Slow to Embrace “Age-Friendly Communities”

WHO Global Age Friendly Cities, A Guide (2005)

Outdoor spaces and buildingsTransportationHousingSocial ParticipationRespect and Social InclusionCivic Participation and EmploymentCommunity and Health Services

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Scale and Focus of AFC Unclear

•Competes for resources with other mainstream models•Difficult to integrate into policy & development control processes•Specific role for municipal departments unclear•Focuses on today, not adapting for tomorrow

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Can Strategies Developed for Cities Work in Rural

Communities?

Page 13: Planning for Our Aging Population Glenn Miller, FCIP, RPP Monday, December 1, 2014.

The Mobility Continuum

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Defining mobility“The freedom to move is life itself” - L. Ling Suen

• The ability to travel where and when we want• Having enough information about our travel options• Knowing how to use those options• Having the means to pay for those options • Living in an environment that offers choices throughout the lifecourse

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Reasons & Means to be Mobile

Friends & FamilyWorkplaceShoppingPlaces of WorshipHealthcareBankingRecreationEntertainment

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Factors Driving the Decision to Relocate

DRIVERS PUSH PULL

PHYSICAL Declining health/mobility Empty nester

ECONOMIC Reduced income Right sizing

SOCIAL Single householder Carefree lifestyle

LOCATION Isolated…no longer viable Attractive alternative

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The Five As applied to housing

• Availability: a range of options• Accessibility: close to services and amenities• Acceptability: safe, comfortable, pleasant• Affordability: goes without saying• Adaptability: accepts walkers, wheelchairs,

mobility scooters, or guide animals.

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• Aging in place in one’s home – risk of isolation, lack of access to amenities, or….

• Municipalities can encourage redevelopment of key sites to provide options for younger seniors to transition from SFD to apartments

Aging in Place – in the Neighourhood

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Can suburbs be successfully retrofitted?

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Aging in a familiar place?

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Successful Aging in Rural Communities Will Need Strategic Interventions

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“Design for the young and you exclude the old. Design for the old and you include everyone.” Bernard Isaacs

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