Did you know that 80 people sell their family home and buy into a retirement village across Australia every day of the week?
All up, 200,000 people live in retirement villages and these people are the best salespeople for future residents – usually locals who hear about the village by word-of-mouth.
However the reputation of retirement villages receives a regular hit in the media – it feels like it’s a three monthly cycle that the media searches for a bad story.
And they find them. With 2000 retirement villages across the country not every one is perhaps perfect. As a result village operators have developed a code of conduct which they are committing to deliver on. It commences in three weeks’ time, on 1 January. It sets minimum standards for the relationship with village residents.
The cornerstone of the code is for operators and staff to act with integrity.
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Sean Rooney (pictured), CEO at LASA, says, “This Retirement Living Code of Conduct intends to set standards above and beyond statutory obligations.
“The code covers all aspects of a resident’s experience in a retirement community: from signing the contract to enter the community, their on-site experience of living in the retirement community, through to their decision to leave the community”.
It’s a voluntary code, so if you or friends live in a village you should ask the management if they are taking up the code.