Follow
Share

Destination was a lunch buffet with fellow residents on facility’s transport bus. Residents signed up to go. He was told he needed an aide for hire in order for him to go. He was refused entrance on the bus.
He feels discrimination regarding using the bus.
The facility also insists he rents an aide when leaving for doctor appointments when taking the provided transportation.
Despite his mobility handicap and slow pace, he wants to prove he does not need help.
The management appears to be discriminating upon his ADA rights. He does not have the extra funds for an aide that his facility is insisting he employ from them. He does fall, but can get himself back on his feet.
He always needs his walker, but is competent and stubborn.
This recent incident has the potential to isolate him from his independent lifestyle, since he does not drive a car.
The bus driver’s do not want the liability for him falling while he is on their bus. I think they have been told by management not to give him any assistance.
Next event is a baseball game outing, which they insist he has an aide to go.
He is slow moving, needs a handicap seat. The social service coordinator said” there are many steps where the seating has been reserved”. They have not made provisions for handicap seating for him.
He can get himself to bathrooms, get items from concession stands, etc. all independently, but he is slow.
He should be able to attend without paying for an aide to go on outings organized by his independent living facility.
The “paternalistic” nature demonstrated by his facility’s administration is starting to impinge his independence. It appears they have litigious concerns. They are ignoring his needs for independence due to his mobility challenges. He does not require assisted living yet, but that appears to be what the administrators are trying to persuade him to move into. He does not want to lose his privacy and autonomy.
Since ADA laws apply to employment and housing accommodations, it seems my father has limited recourse to stand his ground to access the transportation bus provided by his facility.
Can these impositions be legal?
Is this being singled out even OK?

Find Care & Housing
It appears that both you and he are in deep denial. He is not independent. He must adjust and realize he no longer has an “independent lifestyle.” He falls.
Helpful Answer (12)
Reply to MissesJ
Report

"He does fall..."

Please know that in the large metro county where I live, their senior bus system also requires a competent companion to travel with someone who has any risk issues: falling, memory, etc. No business wants to have the very real liability of being responsible for a bus full of elderly people who are all higher risk. And what about the poor bus drivers if one of their passengers falls? Are they expected to wreck their backs picking them up off the floor? Then what about the other passengers who have appointments who now have to wait for EMTs to show up? The drivers and their companies do not want that liability because they can get sued. My MIL was such a driver for the county. She was 65+ when she was doing it.

If your Dad doesn't want to lose his "autonomy" then he can do it in a private residence without imposing it on others. He can be all by himself pretending he is independent. He will soon learn that one's autonomy at 90+ gets whittled away whether they like it or not. It's called reality.

The transport company is correct in taking their stand and requiring an aid, and your Dad benefits from and is protected by this rule.
Helpful Answer (8)
Reply to Geaton777
Report
NYDaughterInLaw May 20, 2024
Great answer!
(3)
Report
Of course they are concerned about liability and looking to limit their exposure. Lawsuits from falls are an enormous burden. This only makes sense. There may be others in his same position being required to have a helper. Is there a friend or family member available to help in this role? That might be easier to take for him and could even be a nice time to spend with him
Helpful Answer (8)
Reply to Daughterof1930
Report
Rogerwyatt7890 May 20, 2024
That is a good answer. I don't think it has to be a facility aide but just someone.
(0)
Report
From what you describe it sounds like he can use assistance when going on outings. I don’t think the management is out of line insisting on him having an aide.
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to Hothouseflower
Report

This reminds me of parents who sent their children on school field trips when they were ill because they didn’t want their kid left out . I was on one such field trip as the school nurse where a parent had given their tiny skinny 11 year old two extra strength adult cold capsules at home that morning . I did not know this . The kid passed out while standing and fell , I couldn’t wake him up . I had know idea why . Even if I had known what he took I still would have sent him to the ER .

The parents were irate that I called an ambulance to have him checked out at the ER . It took the parents over an hour to call me back when I left a messages that the boy passed out and I couldn’t wake him up and that he was on his way to the ER . They were also irate that they now had to drive over an hour to the hospital he was taken to.

Many kids were sent with fevers , throwing up on the bus etc . Every one of these kids were miserable and wished they were home playing video games or sleeping . I was one nurse with 400 kids . I was there to give daily meds to children and help the diabetics as I did everyday in school . But some parents thought I was on the trips to mother their sick children who should have stayed home . I did not have a potable cot strapped to my back for their child to lie down .

They would also send kids on crutches who were miserable because they couldn’t keep up .

Your Dad has the great potential for needing help due to falls , send trained help along with him , or you be his chaperone . Otherwise he needs to go in AL and go on their trips where staff can help him .
Helpful Answer (7)
Reply to waytomisery
Report
waytomisery May 21, 2024
* spell check …. I meant portable cot .
(1)
Report
See 2 more replies
Policies are usually made because there have been past problems and many policies are overly broad, but is this really a hill worth dying on? If they are gouging about the price for the aide he can hire an outsider or look for a volunteer or friend to accompany him.
Helpful Answer (6)
Reply to cwillie
Report
Rogerwyatt7890 May 20, 2024
So are family members allowed to tag along on outings at Assisted Living?
(0)
Report
See 1 more reply
Are others taking the facility transportation required to hire an aide?
Does the driver give ANYONE else assistance when they get on the facility provided transportation?
Is his pace holding up a scheduled trip?
I would think if the driver helps ANYONE else then they should help him as well.
If others needing help are not required to hire an aide then he should not either.

Are there others that go at the same pace he does, if his pace is preventing a schedule from being met I understand that but an aide would not hurry him so that seems unlikely.

If others are paying for an aide and he can not afford it he could ask at the local Senior Center if they have a Volunteer program that would provide a volunteer that could be with him. The problem with that is if he does need help would a volunteer be able to help? I know when I volunteer at Hospice I can not do "hands on" care.

When I had my Husband in a Day program at a local facility I would check the calendar and if there was someplace they were taking the group I would let them know that we would be going and I would go with the group so that I could help my Husband. (I also helped with others if I could.)
Maybe that would be an option for you or other family member.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to Grandma1954
Report
igloo572 May 20, 2024
The CCRC are going to want anyone providing care or assistance to a resident of their community to be an CCRC employee or working for an outside agency they use. CCRC are like gated communities.

My first adventure in elder maze was last millennium for an “Aunt” who named me to be her Executor. & to my surprise too. She had done a buy-in at a CCRC. Nice garden style sm independent apt. She died within couple of months of moving in & for even more fun in this, she still had her old home that she not quite had cleared to put up for sale. The CCRC would NOT allow anyone to stay at her place at all, as Executor I could go during the day but if I was to try to get a meal there, I would have to be a guest of another resident. Management did immense foot dragging on approving its sale to prospective buyer too. They acted on the egregious landlord type of playbook. I’m still salty about it….
(3)
Report
See 1 more reply
If he's competent why is he insisting on holding everyone else up with his inability to keep up with the pace and knowing he is a fall risk? That's being inconsiderate rather than stubborn.

It's not the job of the facility or the transportation company to enable your father's belief that his mobility challenges are theirs to accommodate. As long as he's in independent living, the onus is on him to hire the help he needs.

Your father is a high fall risk because he's already had a fall. This is known. And yet you seem to think that he's being discriminated against when it sounds like both the facility and the bus driver are just trying to keep him safe and make sure that he has the assistance he needs. Perhaps it's time you had a chat with your dad and helped him understand that.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to NYDaughterInLaw
Report

“He does not have the extra funds for an aide”.
Imho someone who does not extra funds for something as minimal in cost as an aide for an outing should not have ever done a buy-in for a CCRC. CCRCs are not 1 sum & done. CCCR are set up in contractual obligations to take care of housing, property maintenance, meals, transportation, activities with personal assistance such as medical/ healthcare based on a residents ability and the level of care the resident is in at the CCRC with maximums set. What CCRC do is charge A La Carte fees if a resident goes past the max type of services provided as per contract for the level they are in. It’s a “life plan format” that most CCRC use to bill for this.

By this I mean, if you are in IL then you are fully expected to be able to go on your own about your day in your apt / condo / sm townhome and go to the meals and activities the CCRC has planned. If you need help on those ADLs to the point that this places significant issues to yourself AND others then you move up and over into the AL sector or you pay for whatever accommodation needed. For your dad, the accommodation is that he hires an aide to accompany him on any outings. Might be complaints from other residents on his inabilities to “keep up”. He’s not being discriminated against; he’s being accommodated.

What could be a path to take in this is for Dad to have an outside assessment done to see how IL he is or isn’t, this way you have some control over what the CCRC may want to have happen. Otherwise my guess is Dad is either going to have to realize he cannot go to any outside activities ever OR he moves into AL category OR you set up an account you 100% pay for to have the CCRC hire an aide. Something is going to have decided as Dad is going to have a doctors appointment in the near future that has to be figured out for it’s logistics.

I know this isn’t what you want to hear. Review his contract. Usually the life plan has zero assistance in IL; a certain a # of hours that assistance is provided for in AL at no extra cost as it’s included in the buy-in; only specific type of care done in the NH sector. Let’s say it’s 14 hrs of assistance a week if in AL sector as per contract terms, but a AL resident needs 19 hrs. Those additional 5 hrs are billed to the resident as it’s done on an A La Carte system for CCRC. Again, if right now he flat does not have the $ for an aide for a single evening, he will not be able to pay costs when his care increases.

I’ve got to ask… So is this a CCRC under the Springpoint umbrella? If so, how long ago did Dad do his buy-in? Is he within the withdrawal period? Please please pls asap review the very detailed contract your Dad did with this CCRC to see what his options are.
Helpful Answer (5)
Reply to igloo572
Report
Geaton777 May 20, 2024
I'm also wondering if the OP is going by her Dad's word only that "He does not have the extra funds...". This may not be true at all. Also, it's a generational thing about spending money. My 95-yr old Mom and 105-yr old Aunt are the same way. Having to pry money out of their hands to spend it on themselves and pay for their own good care. Gets so tiring. sheesh...
(5)
Report
See 1 more reply
Your father "wants to prove he does not need help" when in fact he DOES need help! He uses a walker, a mobility scooter and does fall. Although he's been able to pick himself up thus far, what happens when he hurts himself and cannot? That he "cannot afford" an aide does not mean he shouldn't have an aide accompany him for safety reasons, this is common sense, in my opinion and in the facility's opinion as well. How, btw, does one buy into a CCRC without enough funds for extra care???

If this were my father, I'd want him to have assistance during outings as well. Independent Senior Living means the senior has to be independent and not reliant on mobility devices to get around. It's unrealistic for dad to expect to attend a baseball game with tons of steps to climb, it's too dangerous! I have limited mobility myself and use a cane.....there is no way on God's green earth I'd even try to climb a bunch of outdoor steps alone w/o my husband to help me stay safe. I'm not trying to prove anything to anybody at 66.....I'm just trying to prevent myself from getting a broken neck. Which is what the CCRC is trying to prevent with your father.

Try to use logic and reason here instead of a knee jerk reaction to this facility using "discrimination" against your father!
Helpful Answer (4)
Reply to lealonnie1
Report

See All Answers
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter