As Young People Ship Out, Suburbs Grow Older
BY GENARO C. ARMAS, Chicago Sun Times
January 15, 2003
WASHINGTON--The face of
suburbia is changing, especially in the industrial Northeast and
Midwest.
Younger families are moving
out, leaving large populations of older residents and local
officials who must try to meet the demand for services for the
aging.
For example, providing
transportation for the elderly to visit doctors or senior centers
can be a major problem for a suburb, said Mary Ellen Walsh, director
of the Amherst Center for Senior Services in suburban Buffalo, N.Y.,
where 17 percent of all residents are senior citizens.
''In the city you have access
to public transportation, but in suburbs and rural areas, you don't,
and that's a big issue because people are so spread out,'' Walsh
said Tuesday.
Alice Hilliard, director of
Eastern Area Adult Services in the Pittsburgh suburb of Wilkinsburg,
Pa., said reaching out to older people who live in isolated areas
and finding money and volunteers to help care for them are daunting
tasks, particularly in economically depressed areas.
''Sometimes we sit and hold our
heads and think, 'How is this all going to come together?' ''
Hilliard said.
Many couples moved to the
suburbs to raise families in the mid-20th century. When factories
closed and the economies of industrial cities declined during the
latter decades, younger people moved away.
Many headed South and West,
where jobs were more plentiful. And once their parents reached
retirement age, many of them sought warmer weather and a better
quality of life..
About 35 million people 65 and
older now live in America, roughly 12 percent of the population. But
nearly 30 percent of the people in the suburbs of Sarasota are 65 or
over, the highest among the 102 most populous metropolitan areas in
the nation, according to a Brookings Institution study of Census
Bureau figures being released today.
Two other Florida retirement
centers, West Palm Beach and Tampa-St. Petersburg, were next on the
list, although the rest of the top 20 metro area suburbs were
dominated by Northeast and Midwest areas around such cities as
Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Youngstown, Ohio.
The 65-and-over population in
the suburbs of El Paso, Texas, rose 83 percent between 1990 and
2000, the largest gain of any metro area. Las Vegas, Colorado
Springs, Colo., Honolulu and Tucson, Ariz., had the next
four-largest gains.
University of Michigan demographer William Frey, who wrote the Brookings
report, said boomtowns in the South and West generally have stronger
economic bases to provide senior services than do the more depressed
suburbs of the Northeast and Midwest. AP
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