Aging mid-Hudson boomers face big challenges
Times Herald-Record 9/12/2010 By Chris Mckenna
Photo caption: Sherrie and Fred DeBergh of Warwick, active baby boomers who love to participate in outdoor sports, go for a paddle in Wawayanda State Park in New Jersey.
As a huge number of Americans born between 1946 and 1964 reach retirement age, local and national governments fear services will be stretched too thin.
Photo credit: JOHN DeSANTO/Times Herald-Record
Earlier this month, a graying Crosby, Stills and Nash strolled onto the stage at Sullivan County’s Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, site of the famous Woodstock festival they performed at 41 years earlier, and treated their equally graying audience to some old chestnuts.
“Teach,” they crooned, “your children well.”
Sound advice, indeed; but their fans have a different set of concerns these days.
America’s baby boomers, the large generation that began after World War II and came of age in the Woodstock era, are nearing retirement age.
A group whose ’60s soundtrack included rebellious lines like “Hope I die before I get old” will soon qualify for senior-citizen discounts at the movie theater.
The aging of 79 million Americans born between 1946 and 1964 poses a host of challenges, such as: How will Social Security and Medicare taxes keep pace with the swelling ranks of retirees? And if large numbers of 60-somethings decide to stay put in their jobs instead of retiring, will they limit employment prospects for younger people?
In the Hudson Valley and Catskills, the rising ranks of the almost-old could exacerbate local problems that already are percolating, including the need for more affordable housing and public transportation. It could also intensify resistance to New York’s high property taxes.
Beware of 2015
Consider the looming demographic bulge: In 1990, about 73,000 people, or less than 13 percent of the population, were in the 50-64 age range in Orange, Ulster and Sullivan counties in New York and Pike County, Pa., according to the Census Bureau.
By 2008, more than 130,000 people, or 19 percent of the population, were in that age group.
“2015 is the year that everything is going to explode,” says Ann Marie Maglione, director of Orange County’s Office for the Aging. “The senior population is going to be bursting at the seams.”
Already, Maglione said, home health aides are scarce. Will that shortage make it harder for tomorrow’s seniors to stay in their homes? Will there be enough nursing-home beds for those who need long-term care or rehabilitation? And what effect will ballooning Medicaid costs for such services have on state and county budgets?
For many boomers, the golden years may not be as restful as they used to be. Since the mid-1990s, more Americans have continued working past age 65 — a trend that today’s weak economy and the collapse of retirement accounts is certain to continue.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts the percentage of people ages 65 to 74 in the labor force will leap by 83.4 percent from 2006 to 2016.
Need for affordable housing
Working or not, empty nesters who want to downsize and lighten their property-tax burden may have trouble finding cheaper, smaller homes in the Hudson Valley and Catskills.
A study released last year that analyzed housing prices and incomes in three neighboring counties calculated that nearly 10,000 affordable houses and apartments should be built in Orange County by 2015 to keep pace with demand. Ulster County will need 6,000 new units in that time, the study said.
The thirst for affordable senior housing is so great that when construction of The Birches at Chambers in the Town of Ulster began in 2009, its 66 future apartments were already claimed. And those openings barely made a dent in the 400-person waiting list next door at the Chambers Court complex.
For the full article, part of the Times Herald-Record’s coverage of the Boomer Boom series, click here






