Leelanau County Administrator Chet Janik, appointed by the county’s elected officials in 2012, was feeding his eight chickens when he pondered why so many county residents rolled up their sleeves to be vaccinated. For Janik, it began with his county having not just the most lake frontage of any county in Michigan, but the second most of any county in the nation — just behind a county in Washington State that has nothing like Lake Michigan sand dunes, he said, citing a ranking by the National League of Counties.
“We have Sleeping Bear National Park,” Janik said. “So retirees really love coming here for all this natural beauty, and they tend to be people with incomes and education well above average.” Higher incomes and advanced educations are linked to greater vaccination rates, health officials have said.
Although the reputation of Leelanau as a dream retirement spot has made it one of Michigan’s top counties for seniors, age alone isn’t the deciding factor. . Half a dozen Michigan counties exceed Leelanau with even larger slices of seniors.
What’s different about Leelanau, Janik said, is the type of seniors it tends to have: affluent and educated.
Besides being drawn by the gorgeous geography, retirees who move there prize the county’s proximity to Traverse City, the site of two things that seniors invariably want: “a good airport and a good hospital,” Janik said. Munson Medical Center and Cherry Capital Airport fit the bill.
Munson, with 442 beds, is one of only two Level II trauma centers in the state north of Grand Rapids, the other being in the Upper Peninsula. Cherry Capital Airport is jointly owned by Leelanau County and neighboring Grand Traverse County.