Orlando Sentinel

Small town undergoing migration reversal

Residents struggle to afford housing after its median sales price increases by 60%

- By Jenna Russell

In 2019, when Celine Kelley’s daughter was born, there were 13 births and 31 deaths in the coastal town of Searsport, Maine — a familiar phenomenon in a state where deaths had outpaced births for more than a decade.

But the pandemic brought a countervai­ling force. Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire have seen an uptick in new residents arriving from other states, more than 50,000 across the three states since April 2020, even as other Northeaste­rn states — and especially large metro areas — have experience­d a surge in out-migration. While experts say it is unclear if the blip will become a lasting trend in largely rural northern New England, Kelley already sees both good and bad effects.

With more children showing up, she said, it feels more certain that her 3-year-old will have activities to join. But Kelley also owns a cafe and bakery in Searsport, a town of 2,600 about two hours north of Portland, and as she watches her employees struggle to find housing in a market gone wild, she worries about unintended consequenc­es.

One of her kitchen workers just moved back in with his parents, she said; another lives in a house with no running water, unable to afford rent elsewhere while making repairs. Many residents make do in drafty, run-down trailers.

“No one can just work and save and buy a home,” Kelley said. “No one I know in their 20s can afford to rent an apartment on their own.”

Population shifts — even small ones — carry high stakes in this rural, sparsely populated state and across northern New England, where leaders have worried for years about a so-called “silver tsunami” with implicatio­ns for the economy and the fate of rural communitie­s. Maine had the oldest population in the nation in 2020 and one of the lowest birthrates; the only consistent population growth has been among those 65 and older.

But the latest census numbers suggest Maine has been thrown an unexpected lifeline. In a milestone few would have imagined a few years ago, it was the only state in the country where the median age declined from 2020 to 2021, the state economist said, largely the result of younger people moving in.

This turn of events has received enthusiast­ic notice from leaders including Gov. Janet Mills, who heralded the burst of new arrivals — which gave Maine the seventh-highest in-migration rate in the country — in her recent inaugural address.

“For decades, we’ve been complainin­g about a brain drain, young people leaving, and we’re turning that around,” Mills said in an interview. “We’re excited about people coming to Maine, and we want to make sure it remains affordable.”

In Searsport, the effects of the influx have been far-reaching. Housing prices were already on the rise before the pandemic struck, but the sudden surge in interest from outsiders cranked up new pressure on the market.

The median sales price for a home in Waldo County, where Searsport perches at the edge of Penobscot Bay, ballooned to $292,000 in 2022

from $181,500 in 2019, an increase of 60%, according to the Maine Associatio­n of Realtors. As eager out-ofstate buyers snapped up desirable properties sight unseen, relying on video tours and waiving inspection­s, the supply of available housing drasticall­y contracted.

Three years into the pandemic, outside interest in the region remains strong.

The frenzy has frozen many renters and would-be

buyers in place, preventing them from entering the market.

In every Maine county except one, “the average house price is unaffordab­le to the average income household,” according to a report last fall by the state housing authority.

The latest state budget proposed by Mills includes $30 million for new affordable housing, targeting rural areas, on top of $70 million in new investment­s last year.

Experts say it is too soon to know if pandemic-driven population gains will continue, hold steady or dwindle.

Andrew Crawley, an economist at the University of Maine who is scrutinizi­ng housing, labor and school data for clues to the future, said the number of workers in the state is still down since the pandemic. School enrollment may be ticking up, he added, but so far, the results are inconclusi­ve.

“For now, it’s a blip, not a trend — but even as a blip, it’s incredible, and if it holds steady, then it’s huge,” Crawley said. “For those arguing we need more people, more nurses, more teachers, more plumbers, this is good news; the question is if it will continue.”

Across the country, movement out of major metropolit­an areas more than tripled between 2020 and 2021, census data shows.

Massachuse­tts, New York, Connecticu­t and Rhode Island all lost population to out-migration from April 2020 to July 2022, the same period when arriving migrants shored up population­s to the north: by 30,000 in Maine, 16,000 in New Hampshire and 6,000 in Vermont.

Among those who fled the Boston area for Searsport were Arnaud and Allison Lessard. When the world shut down in 2020 and quiet descended, Arnaud Lessard heard with sudden clarity the question he had pushed aside for years: How did he really want to spend the rest of his life?

The answer crystalliz­ed quickly — and it did not include a four-hour commute in peak Boston traffic.

Within a few months, the Lessards hatched a plan to quit their corporate jobs, sell their suburban home outside the city and pursue a decadeslon­g dream of running an inn and restaurant with their close friend Kip Dixon, a chef who made the leap to Maine with them.

“We said, that’s it — we’re going to do the things we want to do with the time we have left,” said Arnaud Lessard, 46, now a proud owner of the lovingly restored Homeport Inn and Tavern, a former sea captain’s home built in 1861.

 ?? TRISTAN SPINSKI/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Arnaud and Allison Lessard, and Kip Dixon, co-owners of the Homeport Inn and Tavern, pose Jan. 20 in the inn’s living room in Searsport, Maine.
TRISTAN SPINSKI/THE NEW YORK TIMES Arnaud and Allison Lessard, and Kip Dixon, co-owners of the Homeport Inn and Tavern, pose Jan. 20 in the inn’s living room in Searsport, Maine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States