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Do you have power of attorney for them? If so, I'd get the car off their property entirely -- out of sight, out of mind.
Don't cave on this. You'd hate for one of them to not only lose their assets but for one of them to kill someone or each other.
That being said, as Fawnby said, if they were managing their day-to-day by driving themselves places - they will need to backfill that somehow- whether that is with grocery deliveries and scheduled rides (uber, senior rides, friends, church volunteers, you if you have time, etc) planned activities, etc or however that can be managed - OR if that means it is time to consider a move to an AL where they will have additional assistance.
What is the saying? The hard part is over, now the hard part begins...
thank you for your reply
You do need to figure a way for them to have the independence they desire. On the other hand, it might be time to consider moving them to a facility that can take care of them, yet allow their independence.
I think you dodged a huge bullet when you took the keys away from them. Congratulations and good job!
I had to sell his vehicle to get him into a NH with memory care because I had to spend down his finances to get him onto Medicaid. We still tell him he has his vehicle and its out at his sister in law's. His driver's license has been expired now for 3yrs.
You can't trust your parents especially if both of them show decline you did the right thing.
Prayers
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