September 01,
09:30 AM US Eastern Timezone

Where Will You Get
the Most for Your Nest Egg?; New Edition of
Retirement Places Rated Evaluates the Best
Places to Spend the Golden Years
HOBOKEN, N.J.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 1,-Florence, Oregon is America's top place to
retire, according to the completely revised and
updated edition of Retirement Places Rated
(R) (Wiley, Inc., ISBN: 0-7645-4438-1; September
; 352 pages; $23.99). This long-awaited
update of the #1 book on retirement reflects the
concerns and priorities of the boomer generation
as they leave the workforce and relocate to
communities across America.
Author and retirement expert David
Savageau based his rankings on exhaustive
research and analysis, as well as his travels.
The top ten cities are:
1. Florence, Oregon
2. Scottsdale, Arizona
3. Charleston, South Carolina
4. Melbourne-Palm Bay, Florida
5. North County San Diego, California
6. Tucson, Arizona
7. Medford-Ashland, Oregon
8. Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire
9. Daytona Beach, Florida
10. Fayetteville, Arkansas
A total of nineteen
places have been added to the list, including
Cedar City, UT; Las Vegas, NM and Chestertown,
MD. Returning after a long absence are
Burlington, VT; Chewelah, WA; Flagstaff, AZ;
Fort Royal, VA and Key West, FL.
The book picks out 203
retirement destinations across the U.S., based
on safety, affordability, age-based demographic
trends, population size and natural resources,
then rates and ranks them according to six major
factors - ambience, cost of living, climate,
personal safety, services, and the economy
(especially important to seniors who plan to
work during their retirement).
Boomers today seem to
have different priorities and to place less
importance on a mild climate and traditional
leisure activities - like golf and shopping -
and more on a community's ambience and cultural
authenticity. Many in this generation plan to
continue working part- or full-time during their
retirement, making a strong local economy more
important than ever.
Not every highly-rated
destination will appeal to every potential
retiree, so Retirement Places Rated(R) offers
more than numbers. The book begins with a list
of 45 questions, which help readers identify the
factors most important to them. Then it explains
those factors in six in-depth chapters:
Ambience takes into
account historic architecture; access to
beaches; lakes and rivers; scenic and recreation
areas; quality restaurants, and cultural
amenities.
Cost of Living
quantifies typical expenses for big items such
as housing, utilities, food, transportation, and
health care. This chapter also looks at how
local taxes affect retirement income.
Climate rates the
comfort of each location, taking wind chill into
account in the winter, measuring humidity in the
summer, looking at year-round psychological
factors such as cloud cover, rain, and fog, and
warning about hazards such as snow, ice, high
winds and thunderstorms.
Personal Safety
measures annual violence and property crime
statistics for each location, as well as the
latest 5-year trends.
Services evaluates
local physicians and specialists, the
availability of hospital services, public
libraries, and continuing education.
The Economy compares
job prospects in the three industries of
greatest interest to seniors: finance (including
insurance and real estate), retail, and service,
focusing on the availability of part-time
employment. In addition, the author assesses
each location's vulnerability to recession.
The directory profiles
and assigns detailed ratings to 203 communities.
Readers learn, for instance, that is ambience is
important, the should consider Tucson, Arizona,
which achieves a perfect score in that category.
But if outdoor recreation is your passion,
Tucson may lose out to nearby Sedona, with its
bounty of protected natural and recreational
areas and 4.79 square miles of water to enjoy.
Certain cities are
highlighted within the text as well, such as
Iowa City (praised for its arts scene) and
Northampton-Amherst, Massachusetts, which boasts
an unusually low crime rate for a college town.
A final chapter
entitled Putting it All Together helps the
reader weigh all these factors and pinpoint the
cities and regions most likely to make their
golden years happy ones. In easy-to-understand
language, Retirement Places Rated guides readers
through the major considerations in deciding
where to retire. Whether they decide to stay put
in their hometown or move across the country,
this book gives them the information they need
to make a wise, well-informed choice.
About the Author
David Savageau is the
author of the best-selling Places Rated Almanac.
Since 1982, he has traveled throughout the
country visiting locations that attract older
adults. He lives in Washington, D.C., and is a
featured speaker at the U.S. Department of
State's quarterly seminars on retirement.
With almost 350 titles,
Frommer's(R) has a travel series for every kind
of traveler, including Frommer's Complete
Guides, Frommer's $-a-Day Guides, Frommer's
Irreverent Guides and Frommer's Portable Guides.
Frommer's is an imprint of Wiley Publishing,
Inc., which also publishes the For Dummies(R)
guides and the Unofficial Guide(R).
Plan and book your trip
with Frommers.com! Rated the #1 Travel Web site
by PC Magazine. Frommers.com is a comprehensive,
opinionated travel resource featuring over 3,000
world destinations with hotel and restaurant
reviews, attractions and insider tips on
cruises, flights, and hotels. Frommers.com also
features vacation giveaways, message boards and
more. Be the first to receive breaking travel
news and deals with the Frommers.com newsletter.
All of your travel needs are only a click away
on Frommers.com.
About Wiley Publishing,
Inc.
Wiley is a global
knowledge company with a diverse portfolio of
technology, business, consumer and how-to
brands, computer-based learning tools, Web-based
products and Internet e-services. Wiley's
best-selling brands and imprints include Jossey-Bass,
For Dummies, Betty Crocker, Culinary Institute
of America (CIA), Bible, CliffsNotes, Frommer's,
Unofficial Guide, Visual, Weight Watchers, Ernst
& Young, JK Lasser, and Webster's New World.
Wiley has thousands of active titles in 39
languages and also owns the Websites
www.cliffsnotes.com,
www.dummies.com, and
www.frommers.com.
Founded in 1807, Wiley
provides must-have content and services to
customers worldwide. Its core businesses include
scientific, technical and medical journals,
encyclopedias, books and other online products
and services, professional and consumer books
and subscription services and education
materials for undergraduate and graduate
students and lifelong learners. Wiley has
publishing, marketing and distribution centers
in the United States, Canada, Europe, Asia and
Australia. The company is listed on the New York
Stock Exchange under the symbols JWa and JWb.
Wiley's Internet site can be accessed at
http://www.wiley.com.
2002 Wiley All rights reserved.
Wiley is a registered
trademark of John Wiley & Sons in the United
States and other countries, and may not be used
without written permission. Places Rated is a
registered trademark of David Savageau used
under exclusive license. Frommer's is a
registered trademark of Arthur Frommer, used
under exclusive license. All other trademarks
are the property of their respective owners.
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