Addressing Essential and Quality-of-Life Needs for Rural Older Mainers

The Catherine Cutler Institute’s Kimberly Snow, along with her CAPRA Co-Director colleagues, Mary Lou Ciolfi and Patricia Oh, wrote a commentary, “Meeting Essential and Quality of Life Needs of Rural Older Mainers through the Community Connector Pilot,” for the Rural Issue of the Maine Policy Review ( Maine Policy Review 34.2 (2025): 287 -291, https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mpr/vol34/iss2/39).

Rural America is aging rapidly and experiencing health and population declines. Older-age counties – those in which more than 20% of the population is age 65 or older – are overwhelmingly rural. While some rural locations in Maine are destinations for retirees due to the beauty of the natural environment, those communities face challenges with housing, healthcare, and service access, as well as environmental pressures.

Maine’s recent Statewide Needs Assessment for our State Plan on Aging identified many essential and quality of life unmet needs and preferences of older Mainers, including the many older adults living in rural areas. A recent State of Maine initiative, the Community Connector Pilot, shows promise for addressing the unmet needs of older people residing in rural locations. The Pilot will inform policy change for state and local governments and can be a successful model in future locations in Maine and other rural.