Interstate 89 as seen from the Route 2 bridge joining Burlington and South Burlington. Photo by Alexandre Silberman/VTDigger

Vermontโ€™s population is stagnating. And one major reason is that residents keep leaving.

From 2010 to 2018, 10,000 more people left Vermont than moved here from elsewhere, according to Census data.

Lawmakers have tried to attract new workers with a high-profile strategy: offering a cash incentive for people to move to Vermont. The incentive is for people who earn considerably more than minimum wage.

But recent research from the Legislature suggests that itโ€™s working-class and middle-class residents that Vermont is at risk of losing. By proportion, only a small number of wealthier households come to Vermont.

โ€œBlue collar workers, those with low and moderate incomes โ€ฆ have decided to move away from Vermont,โ€ Gov. Phil Scott said at a press conference Thursday.

According to the Joint Fiscal Office report, Vermont lost thousands of people with incomes of under $100,000 a year. Outward migration was particularly high among 45- to 64-year-olds earning $25,000 to $75,000.

โ€œI constantly hear stories in committee and on the floor of the Senate that weโ€™re pushing wealthier people out,โ€ said Sen. Anthony Pollina, P/D-Washington. โ€œIn reality, the opposite is true.โ€

Sunny Florida wins out

Migration data can be rather limited because itโ€™s hard for researchers to track people as they move from one state to another. The IRS does it by comparing where people live from one year to the next on Form 1040 tax returns. Although that doesnโ€™t capture every taxpayer โ€” some earn too little to file โ€” it gives a snapshot of residentsโ€™ movement across states.

In general, Vermont lost the most people to the Southeast and the West, along with Florida, Maine and New Hampshire. It gained the most people from New York and other states in the Northeast. Vermont ranks 20th in the nation in the percentage of its population lost to domestic outmigration.

These trends arenโ€™t unique to Vermont; Florida gained residents from throughout New England. Meanwhile, native New Yorkers and New Jersey residents are moving all over the country (though both statesโ€™ population numbers are buoyed by international immigration).

The IRS doesnโ€™t give data on the age of those moving to Florida, and it doesnโ€™t track part-timers who move to another state but spend part of their year in Vermont.

Vermontโ€™s wealthy new arrivals tend to be on the younger side, between 26 and 44, with incomes over $200,000 a year โ€” including both single and joint filers.

High earners moving here saw their incomes decline 22% on average the year after the move, according to the JFO. That could be because theyโ€™re cashing out an asset, like a mortgage, or it could be due to Vermontโ€™s relatively low income compared to Northeast states.

Sen. Randy Brock, R-Franklin, said he believed wealthy out-migrants were underreported because they tended to leave before a major windfall. He pointed to examples of accounting firms that help high-income Vermonters plan their leave.

But Brock, a retired vice president of Fidelity Investments, said even ordinary Vermonters could be feeling the brunt of Vermont tax bills and energy costs.

โ€œIโ€™ve heard people say that their money will go further elsewhere, and they wonโ€™t have to plow snow,โ€ he said.

Scott, who has made affordability a central part of his agenda, said he hears concerns from Vermonters about the costs of living in the state.

โ€œMainly, what I hear is property taxes,โ€ he said. โ€œThat’s what I hear most.โ€

Where did you come from, why did you go?

For politiciansโ€™ oft-cited reasons that Vermonters are leaving โ€” taxes and jobs โ€” the evidence is not so clear. Many of the places Vermonters are moving to do have a lower tax burden and better job growth, but there are exceptions.

The reasons people leave are often complicated and multifaceted, said Cheryl Morse, a geography professor at the University of Vermont.

โ€œWhen you ask โ€˜why do you live where you live,โ€™ you find people are not robots,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s a really emotional process.โ€

Morse and her colleague Jill Mudgett, a Vermont historian, sent out a survey to Facebook friends asking current and former Vermonters why they decided to leave or stay. They received nearly 3,700 responses from across the country and abroad.

Former Vermontersโ€™ responses were scattered across the spectrum, from jobs and income to diversity and the desire to live in an urban area, Morse said. Some moved because of the weather.

But among those who stayed, the consensus was clear: More than two-thirds cited their attachment to Vermontโ€™s natural landscape. More than half cited the stateโ€™s culture and community, and many cited family as well, although women were more likely to stay for family than men.

โ€œMost migration literature looks at economic and family factors, so this was really something,โ€ Morse said.

Morse has presented her findings to government agencies. She said while sheโ€™s found them โ€œreceptive,โ€ they sometimes canโ€™t get over their own experiences or their friendsโ€™ experiences of leaving or staying in Vermont.

โ€œTheir experience isnโ€™t the dominant story of all Vermonters,โ€ she said.

VTDigger’s Erin Petenko discusses her findings on Vermont population data on this week’s Deeper Dig podcast.

VTDigger's data and Washington County reporter.

77 replies on “People are leaving VT in droves. Where are they going?”