By Danielle Rexrode
THE ERICKSON TRIBUNE
The Sunshine State is losing its luster as America’s top retirement destination. According to a study by The American City Business Journal, today’s retirees are thinking beyond traditional hot spots like Florida and putting higher emphasis on maintaining personal connections, like family, friends, and community.
Three retirement principles
While the media has long labeled Florida, Arizona, and California as the most popular retirement destinations, only about 4.5% of people over 60 actually move across state lines, says Chuck Longino, director of the Reynolda Gerontology Program at Wake Forest University.
Longino, who studies migration trends, has discovered three principles:
1. Regionally rooted people search for a retirement location only 30 to 50 miles away from where they have lived in order to stay close to friends, family, and patterns of life.
2. Proximity to a metropolitan area provides access to the amenities of a city while offering a relaxed, small-town style of life.
3. Regional retirement centers allow people to more easily maintain some degree of social continuity.
“People want the best of both worlds—a place without the hassles of city life, but with the lifestyles they’ve developed over the years,” Longino says.
Benefits of staying close to home
Maryland combines all three of Longino’s principles, appealing to people who have lived here their whole lives, as well as those who first retired elsewhere.
Audrey Soracoe of Charlestown, moved back to Maryland from Florida’s Palm Coast.
“I wanted to be close to my family,” says Audrey. “My son lives in Catonsville and now we’re only ten minutes from one another. I knew about Charlestown for a long time and chose it because of the lifestyle. There are so many activities and things to get involved in here,” she says.