Three years ago my father fell asleep at the wheel hit a tree and my mother died, brother-in-law also in car badly hurt. No doctors would tell him to stop driving, just told him to "stay close to home." Which he doesn't listen to anyway. The family thought the auto insurance would be so expensive that he could no longer drive but the cost didn't go up very much after the accident. We even wrote a letter to the Secretary of State office and they would not do anything! He refuses to listen to his family. Says he will have to be cold/dead before we get the keys! HELP!
But be careful. When my Dad stopped driving I was more than happy to be my parents chauffeur but I never knew they wanted out of the house 3 times a day... that Mom wanted to visit all the grocery stores in the area because each one had sales on items she wanted. Oh good grief, what in the world did I sign up for !! I found myself driving them for seven straight years taking time off from work, etc. I never learned to "set boundaries".
The advice about getting him an exam at the drivers license office is good - but I could not wait that long. Every time we wondered if he would come back or if we would hear of him killing someone else.
A man about twenty years younger than he is DID run over a lady in my town about a year ago. I couldn't let it happen.
Now my siblings who would not admit how dangerous it is, are getting to drive him around - YAY!
The police are not responsible for getting your father off the road - you are. Physically go to his DMV and report him as a dangerous driver. That is the first step of getting his bad driving "on the record." The DMV will send him a letter and ask him to come in and take some tests. Whether he passes or fails is up to the instructor but the determination will be official.
Sometimes you can work with the local cops. The car needs to go away, and call the local dealers and alert them to not sell him another. Dont screw around with this.
Do whatever you have to do to stop him.
Disable the car. Put a potato up the tail pipe. Remove a tire. Take the keys, for example, which is what I had to do with my mother. Then I went to police and explained it to them; told them she had dementia. When my mother called them to complain; they had the whole story and they just appeased her and said something, which she promptly forgot. The police helped me. Don't be afraid to let them know how it is.
Yes, this will be like jail sentence for you because once you take the keys,then you have to drive him around. DO IT. Or get someone else to take him shopping a few times a week. He has done enough damage.
All I can suggest is that you accompany him and record the journey on a smartphone or camcorder - if you haven't got one, hire or borrow one. Show the recording to the police. Make a statement giving concrete factual examples of his dangerous driving. Tell the police you've told them, and it is now up to them: you will hold them responsible for the consequences if they do nothing about it.
Has your father always been a terrible driver? I know my FIL didn't deteriorate much between ages 60 and 80 - he was a truly appalling driver to start with, and at least age slowed him down a bit. I don't know if it's any comfort, but at least your desire to get him off the road is nothing to do with ageism!
Curious, when was the last time your Dad had an eye exam? If it has been quite a while, a lot can change, maybe he just can't see to know where he is driving. That happened with my Dad, due to his eyesight he was hugging the right curb and occasionally would hit the curb damaging a tire. Eventually my Dad stopped driving when a doctor told him time to hang up the car keys.
Age shouldn't be an issue when it comes to driving as I have seen young people and middle age people be poor drivers, not paying attention, or thinking they own the road. Driving is such a huge independent issue.
This might sound an odd question, but what evidence do you have that his driving is not safe? Anyone can fall asleep at the wheel if they are irresponsible enough to drive tired. What else have you got?