Rural newcomers: Young, educated, there by choice

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Maribeth Olson, shown here with her husband, Kent, daughter, Brooklynn, and son, Brayden, was recruited from Pittsburgh to a physician’s assistant job in Madison, Minn. (MCT News Service)
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They miss the convenience of all-night grocery stores and a variety of restaurants, but her husband, Kent Olson, said “overall, it was a better move.”

Like the Olsons, many newcomers grew up in rural areas, but a majority are not returning home, moving instead to different small communities, Winchester said.

Real estate firms try to appeal to their sensibilities. United Country-Milaca, in Mille Lacs County, advertises “find your freedom.”

“We sell a lifestyle,” broker Brad Maitland said. “It’s a feeling that you have when you wake up in the morning and you look out in the pasture and you see your horses grazing. … People that have that desire, when they can attain it, which is usually probably in that age demographic … they go for it.”

Denise Green came “kicking and screaming” to her hometown of Milaca 10 years ago, she said, when her husband wanted to move from the metro area.

“I swore I’d never come back … the teenage years aren’t easy, and you look at the small-town mentality a lot different,” she said. “You think everybody’s cliquey and they hate you.”

Now, at 52, she sees it differently. She has developed deep friendships, she said. “Because of the lack of entertainment and things to do, there’s more of a community feel.”

Living there is worth the hassle of commuting to the Twin Cities for her human resources job, she said. “My priorities are different,” she said. “I needed to slow down.”

The migration enriches rural communities, Winchester and others say, because newcomers bring ideas and skills to civic, school and church clubs.

A survey in west-central Minnesota showed that 60 percent of newcomers took leadership roles in the community, and 81 percent donated to local causes. Most had some higher education, too, with 68 percent holding bachelor’s degrees or above, and 19 percent holding associate degrees.

In Lac qui Parle County, Dr. Brant Hacker, 43, moved to Madison seven years ago after working in the Twin Cities and earning a medical degree at the University of Minnesota.

Living in Madison required adjustment, he and his wife, Julie, said. The first time they shuttled their children to the local swimming pool, a grade-school boy asked for a ride home. Stunned, they gently declined. They didn’t want anyone to think they were stealing a child, Julie recalled, smiling.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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