In the News
As reported by The Hartford Courant, July 16, 2007.
A Place For The Elderly, But Big
Scale Would Lower Prices Of Farmington Units
By Jessica Marsden
From the road, all that is visible of the Linden Ponds
development in Hingham, Mass., is the gatehouse.
Just past the entrance, the scale of the project becomes clear.
There are two clusters of buildings, each several stories tall. A
vast construction site at the end of the main road serves as a
reminder that this is only the halfway point for the project, slated
to be completed gradually over the next several years.
When it is complete, Linden Ponds will be home to more than 2,000
retirees, some active, some elderly. They will move into apartments,
but the development will offer assisted living and nursing to
residents who can no longer live independently. Along with the
promise of "aging in place," still-active residents will be able to
take advantage of a multitude of on-site recreational activities as
well as off-campus trips.
Linden Ponds, south of Boston, and the 18 other developments
operated by Erickson Retirement Communities are among the largest
such entities in the country. In fall 2008, Erickson hopes to start
construction on a similar complex in Farmington.
The company, based in Maryland, has pioneered a financial
structure that aims to make "continuing care" available to
middle-income Americans, with an entrance fee that is fully
returnable and relatively low monthly fees. To make such a structure
work, its communities are significantly larger than most.
If it succeeds in its bid to move into Farmington, the company
will change the face of retirement living in Connecticut. Erickson
would not be the state's first continuing care retirement community
- there are more than a dozen across the state - but would almost
certainly be the largest, by far. And its lower fees would make its
many amenities more affordable to Connecticut residents, many of
whom see such communities as desirable, if pricey, options for
retirement.
"By having it this size, you don't have to be rich to live here,"
said Mark Hunter, development director for Erickson.
Unprecedented Size
Among Erickson's selling points to skeptical towns such as
Farmington is that it would boost the tax rolls without adding much
to the cost of services in surrounding communities, chiefly because
it does not directly add to school enrollment. But the sheer size of
the facilities may crank up local costs because of a domino effect:
Older residents leave their homes in town to move into an Erickson
facility, and young families with children replace them.
These issues are sure to come up in Farmington, where opponents
of the company's plans for the Krell Farm have already made their
voices heard at local planning meetings.
Industry experts could name no facility in Connecticut larger
than the one proposed by Erickson - or even close. Among about a
dozen communities in the state that are members of the American
Association of Homes and Services for the Aging, none has more than
a total of 500 units, said Steve Maag, director of assisted living
and continuing care for the organization.
In addition to its 1,500 apartment-style units, Erickson plans to
build a 300-bed assisted living and nursing care facility in
Farmington.
"I would be surprised if there is anybody that's anywhere close
to that in Connecticut," Maag said.
Heritage Village, an active-adult community in Southbury, has
2,580 condominium units, but provides "totally independent living,"
according to sales administrator Joyce Upson. While the community
has recreation facilities and 24-hour security, it does not operate
restaurants, stores or a full schedule of activities for residents,
and those who need nursing care must either arrange for in-home care
or leave the community, she said.
The average age for residents is in the low 70s, Upson said,
compared to the late 70s or early 80s at Erickson facilities.
The unprecedented size of the proposed Erickson community is
troubling to some in Farmington. The first meeting to consider the
zoning changes needed for the site drew a large crowd on June 25,
and residents have expressed concerns about the influx of
population, traffic and added demand for town services.
Erickson, in its local presentations, has said it will not burden
the town, not only because of the lack of children but also because
it would provide a one-stop shop for recreational activities as well
as care. Residents would have little demand for local services for
the elderly, company representatives argue.
But Hingham's experience paints a more complicated picture. A
majority of Linden Ponds residents moved to the community from
houses in Hingham, which led to rapid turnover in the neighborhoods.
There was already growth in the number of schoolchildren, but Town
Administrator Charles Cristello said it has accelerated somewhat
since Linden Ponds opened.
Emergency services have also seen additional demand since Linden
Ponds opened. Fire chief Mark Duff said his department makes one or
two visits to the community each week for emergency medical calls.
The new tax revenue has allowed the department to add another
ambulance, but Linden Ponds is in a dead zone for the department's
radio communications, Duff said. An upgrade is needed, and the town
is currently negotiating with Erickson over funding for the project,
he said.
"It's a work in progress," Duff said.
Village In A Town
The Farmington community would employ more than 1,000 people when
it is completed, and would add construction jobs for the estimated
seven years of "build-out." Though residents would be able to take
care of most of their basic needs on-site, local stores and
restaurants would get a boost from the influx of new residents, said
Scott Hayward, an Erickson regional vice president based in
Massachusetts.
Erickson is banking on the idea that its offerings will appeal to
some of the 225,000 elderly residents living within a 25-mile radius
of the town.
For Ben Pettersson, one of the first residents of Linden Ponds, a
primary attraction of the community was its location in Hingham,
where he has lived since 1959. When the facility opened in 2004,
Pettersson was active and healthy enough to maintain his home,
though he was tiring of the maintenance work involved.
Pettersson, 74, now occupies a one-bedroom apartment in Linden
Ponds, which has allowed him to stay involved in his activities in
the town. He teaches computer classes for Hingham seniors, and also
introduces new Linden Ponds residents to the area with a tour of
restaurants, stores and churches. Staying in Hingham has kept him
close to his two daughters and his grandchildren, who live in
Hingham and Hanover, Mass.
"I've never regretted it," he said.
Erickson officials describe Linden Ponds as a close analogue of
the proposed community in Farmington. The Hingham facility is about
halfway completed, with 800 residents in place. Within its walls,
the community offers residents the choice of four restaurants, a
library, a convenience store, a fitness center and an all-weather
swimming pool. A pharmacy will open later this year, and the medical
staff will grow from two full-time doctors to five or six when the
complex is completed, along with a number of part-time specialists.
The buildings are all linked by weatherproof walkways, so
residents can reach any service without setting foot outdoors. The
grounds themselves are intensively landscaped with walking trails
for residents seeking fresh air.
A high-definition TV in one of the lounges made it possible to
see July 4 fireworks "as though you were looking through a window,"
Pettersson said. Recently arrived Ruth Diezemann said residents at
Linden Ponds can now play simulated golf on a new Nintendo Wii video
game system, a gadget more likely to be marketed to their grandkids,
but apparently popular with Erickson folks as well.
Middle Income?
Erickson markets its aim to make this level of services available
to "middle America" with a financial structure somewhat different
from that of many continuing-care retirement communities, company
officials said.
Traditionally, many have required entrance deposits that are
mostly or entirely non-returnable, and fixed monthly fees that
spread the costs of assisted living to all residents whether they
needed the additional care or not. Erickson, by contrast, returns
the entrance deposit to residents or their heirs when they leave,
years later, without interest.
The monthly charges are "fee-for-service," so the cost rises when
a resident moves into assisted living, and many amenities come at an
extra charge.
"Our goal is to meet the needs of the middle-income senior," said
Rick Grindrod, Erickson's president for health and operations.
Nationwide, continuing-care community residents typically have
household incomes of more than $75,000 a year, said John Krout, a
professor of aging studies at Ithaca College in New York. The median
annual income for an Erickson household is $42,147, the company
reports. That figure is still significantly higher than the national
median income for households headed by a person 65 or older, which
is just over $26,000, according to the U.S. Census.
At Linden Ponds, the entrance deposit ranges from $156,000 to
$449,500, depending on the size of the apartment. The monthly fees
range from $1,327 to $2,304 while residents are in independent
living. When the assisted living and nursing facility opens next
year, it will probably charge between $3,500 and $8,000 a month,
depending on the level of care required.
Erickson requires that its residents have at least $130,000 in
assets above the entrance fee, as well as a monthly income that is
at least 1.5 times the initial monthly fee. A resident who runs out
of money can use part of the entrance deposit to cover costs. If
that is fully depleted, Erickson maintains a "Benevolent Care Fund."
The company said no one has ever been forced to leave an Erickson
community because of lack of money.
Erickson's monthly fees tend to be at the middle or lower end of
the spectrum, while its entrance fees are comparable to those of
similarly structured facilities, said Maag, at the American
Association of Homes and Services for the Aging.
As a result, an Erickson facility in Farmington could help fill a
gap documented in a new study on long-term care needs, done for the
state, which showed that not everyone who would want to move into
such a community could afford to.
"People just have expectations that they're not going to be able
to achieve," said Julie Robison, a University of Connecticut
professor and a lead researcher in the study.
But while Robison said Erickson's cost structure is "more
flexible" than that of many communities, she questioned whether the
income requirements were truly "middle income" for an elderly
population, as Erickson advertises. Few Connecticut residents have
more than $25,000 to spend annually on their care, she said.
For Pettersson, one of Erickson's attractions was the security of
the returnable deposit. He will be able to pass on a legacy to his
children, and receiving the cash deposit back will be simpler for
his heirs than having to sell his house, he said.
But that day should be far in the future. Pettersson said he has
only gotten healthier since moving in to Linden Ponds. He is on
medication to manage his diabetes, but he credits a combination of
herbs and stress-reducing tai chi for his high level of mobility and
activity.
"I plan on being the oldest resident they have," he said. |