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Florida
Slips As Retirement Destination By Genardo C. Armas Associated
Press, August 12, 2003
Frank
Falsetti doesn't want to retire to Florida like his parents did, so the
former New York stock broker is trading his Long Island home for a gated
community in northern Virginia, 35 minutes from his kids. He's
not alone. Census Bureau (news
- web
sites) figures show Florida is slipping as the destination of choice
for retirees, while states such as Georgia, Virginia, Arizona and Nevada
are growing more popular. "We
do not like Florida. It's just too hot," said Falsetti, 62. "I
prefer mountains." Florida
still is the top destination for people 60 and older. It attracted 19
percent, or about 394,000, of the nearly 2.1 million U.S. residents in
that age group who made interstate moves between 1995 and 2000, according
to an analysis of 2000 census data by Wake Forest University sociology
professor Charles Longino. But
it was the first time in at least four decades that Florida attracted less
than one-fifth, Longino found. The 2000 figure was down 13 percent from a
decade earlier. Arizona,
which attracted 6.5 percent, or about 134,000 people 60 and older, was
second to Florida in 2000, followed by California, Texas and North
Carolina. The
number of older residents moving into California from other states
declined slightly, by about 3 percent over the decade. Arizona's
figure was 36 percent larger than a decade ago, while Nevada grew by 42
percent. Texas, Virginia and Georgia also had increases of at least 28
percent. There
are myriad reasons for the changes. Among them: cheaper housing, lower
property taxes, more open spaces and closer proximity to family, said Mark
Fagan, a sociologist at Jacksonville (Ala.) State University, an expert on
retiree migration. The
number of retirees who move is expected to climb as millions of baby
boomers leave the work force in the next 10 years. Officials in states
with growing elderly populations are looking for ways to serve that
population, as are builders. Kira
McCarron, vice president of marketing of Huntingdon Valley, Pa.-based Toll
Brothers, a luxury home builder, said her company is focusing more on
retirement communities in states such as Virginia that have a growing
population of retirees. Her
company is building the 55-and-older-only community in Haymarket where
Falsetti will be moving. It boasts mountain vistas and an 18-hole golf
course designed by Arnold Palmer. Despite
the economy's recent stumbles, today's retirees generally are more
prosperous than previous generations, making older Americans an attractive
source of economic development for states. A
report earlier this year by the Destination Florida Commission said that
while older residents cost the state more in health care, their taxes help
pay for schools. The
report also noted that older residents paid $2.8 billion more in taxes to
state and local governments than the governments spent on them in
services. The
report recommended the state begin a marketing campaign aimed at getting
baby boomers to retire to Florida. It also suggested property taxes be
frozen for people older than 55 and that home care programs should be
supported. An
influx of older residents also brings challenges for local officials,
particularly increased demand for medical attention and social services. "When
they start to age in place, they start putting a stress on the health
systems and typically they've moved away from their original support
structure," said Carol Sala, administrator for the Nevada Division
for Aging Services. "We're trying to plan for that." The
state last year released a strategic plan that called for, among other
things, strengthening the state's transit program for the frail elderly,
and increasing affordable housing options. Nevada,
the report said, is already straining to meet the needs of its senior
citizens.
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