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Old 09-24-2013, 10:21 AM   #1
Just Sold
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Post Modest Population Growth Troubling

http://www.laconiadailysun.com/index.php/newsx/local-news/71729-lakes-region-demographic?utm_source=MailingList&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Sept2413+Browser

Modest population growth trend thought troubling sign for Lakes Region economy


LACONIA — The population growth that has driven growth and prosperity throughout much of the Lakes Region since 1970 slowed markedly during the last decade and shows scant sign of accelerating soon.
Demographic data compiled and presented by the Lakes Region Planning Commission in the course of updating its Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy for the region offers a pattern of slackening in-migration and rapid aging that threaten to slow population growth in the years ahead. Unless mitigated, these trends will weigh on the development of the work force needed for a dynamic economy.
As defined by the commission, the Lakes Region includes the 11 municipalities of Belknap County, eight towns in Carroll County (Effingham, Freedom, Moultonborough, Ossipee, Sandwich, Tamworth, Tuftonboro and Wolfeboro), six towns in Grafton County (Alexandria, Ashland, Bridgewater, Bristol, Hebron and Holderness) and five municipalities in Merrimack County (Andover, Danbury, Franklin, Hill and Northfield).
In the 70 years between 1900 and 1970 the population of the 30 municipalities in the Lakes Region grew by just 16,092 — slightly more than the current population of Laconia — from 44,369 to 60,461. By contrast, in the 40 years since 1970 the population has risen by 52,272, an increase of 87-percent, from 60,461 to 112, 735. However, 88-percent of this population growth — 45,967 people — occurred between 1970 and 2000, when in successive decades the population increased by 29 percent, 18 percent and 16 percent.
From 2000 to 2010, the population added only 6,307 people to grow at a pace of 6 percent. Nearly half this increase occurred in just four towns — Alton, Barnstead, Belmont and Gilmanton — which together added 2,812 residents, 45 percent of the increase in the entire region. These towns are within reach of centers of employment: Alton and Barnstead fall within the orbit of Rochester. Dover and Somerswoth and Belmont and Gilmanton of Concord.
In a third of the 30 municipalities the pace of growth was less than 6 percent, lagging the average for the entire region. The two cities in the region — Laconia and Franklin — represented 26-percent of the regional population in 1990, but from 2000 to 2010 the first shrank and the second stagnated and their share of the regional population fell to 22-percent.
In an aging state, the Lakes Region is aging relatively rapidly. In New Hampshire the median age rose from 37.1 years in 2000 to 41.1 years in 2010, an increase of 11-percent. Only three of the 30 municipalities in the Lakes Region — Barnstead, Franklin and Northfield — posted median ages below the state average while the percentage increase in the median age reached double digits in 19 of the 30 municipalities in the region. The median age in all four counties in the Lakes Region topped the state median age, led by Carroll County at 48.3 years and followed by Belknap County at 44.7 years, Grafton County at 41.2 years and Merrimack County at 41.4 years.
The aging of the population is highlighted by the increase in those over 65. Between 2000 and 2010, the number of senior citizens rose by 20 percent, from 147,970 to 178,268, and from 12 percent to 13 percent of the total population. In the Lakes Region the numbers climbed 17 percent, from 16,838 to 19,740, to 17 percent of the regional population. With the exception of Laconia, Franklin, Moultonborough and Sandwich the percentage increase in the number of senior citizens reached double digits in all the municipalities in the Lakes Region.
With the last members of the "Baby Boom" generation, which consists of those born between 1946 and 1964, turning 65 in 2029, the aging process will be magnified and prolonged without an increase in either the rate of birth or pace of in-migration.
Meanwhile, after peaking at more than 61,000 in 2008 the labor force in the Lakes Region fell to about 59,000 in 2011, below where it stood in 2002. Likewise, the number of those employed peaked at 59,000 in 2008 before dropping to less than 56,000 in 2011, more than 1,000 fewer than were working in 2002.
The employment figures reflect the impact of the recession. Between 2005 and 2010, private employment fell by 3,196 jobs, 2,005 of them in the manufacturing sector where employment shrank by 32-percent., from 6,199 to 4,194 jobs. Altogether total employment in the region decreased by 7 percent between 2005 and 2010.


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Old 09-24-2013, 08:27 PM   #2
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....yup....everyone is growing older with each passing year .... and there's no jobs around here in Belknap County for young people once they get out of www.lrcc.edu/ .....and that's because all the jobs at McDonalds are already taken by the older folks that got here first .... what Belknap County really needs is a brand new county jail ... that would create great jobs for a lot of locals!
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Old 09-25-2013, 06:29 AM   #3
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Hmmm....I was actually at McDonalds on the way home last night and didn't see any old folk in there at all. They must work the early shifts, so they can get home to bed by 6pm.
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Old 09-25-2013, 06:45 AM   #4
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IMHO, part of the problems in the Lakes Region are due to past rapid population growth causing infra-structure problems that can't be easily fixed (think of Meredith traffic & 3/25 and lake pollution that other threads are talking about).

This is just an "old folks" point of view as I remember what it used to be like with little traffic, no need for speed traps and plenty of resources (no lines) for everyone.

Disclaimer: I don't work at McDonalds.
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Old 09-25-2013, 09:10 AM   #5
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Well, we just moved to Gilford this past week! Bought a year-round house here, sold our Florida condo, moved out of it last Thursday, and here we are! LOVE THIS AREA! And we know of another couple from New Jersey who has just bought a home a stone's throw from us in Gilford and will also soon be living here full time! I guess we don't fit within the statistical trends.
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Old 09-25-2013, 10:13 AM   #6
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The state is working to address this issue.

http://stayworkplay.org/
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Old 10-03-2013, 08:26 PM   #7
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Default Exciting news

I cant understand why anyone who appreciates the lakes region for what it is.. would want MORE people and what comes with them. Slow growth? THANK GOD
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Old 10-04-2013, 09:35 AM   #8
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Locals need jobs.

Maybe a chemical manufacturer or oil refinery would be a good fit?

But seriously, with the mills closing there is no real manufacturing base any more.

Then again, this is true across most of the country.
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Old 10-04-2013, 11:10 AM   #9
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It is a New England-wide issue. NH is facing this problem to a lesser extent that any other New England state. Graying population, legacy industries sending jobs to low cost red states, aimless hoards of disaffected young layabouts with no jobs. And it's cold.

Beats CT I promise you. Only state with negative GDP growth in 2012.
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Old 10-04-2013, 01:54 PM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shore Driver View Post

Beats CT I promise you. Only state with negative GDP growth in 2012.
You're singing to choir brother!

Pineedles back in Southington, CT. Land of no jobs, no growth, and no clue as to what got us here.
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Old 10-05-2013, 01:01 PM   #11
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The rush or need to constantly grow and expand everywhere only exacerbates the the up and down cycle.. like everything (see real estate). With expanse comes the perceived decline when expansion outpaces necessity for growth.
Locals need jobs is like asking what came first the chicken or the egg.
I realize you cant halt progress (if thats what you want to call it) but we dont have to rush the process so more and more people can wonder what ever happened to the local economy after they move here to get away from it all <--HUH
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