Goodwill Retirement Community

    891 Dorsey Hotel Rd, Grantsville, MD, 21536
    4.6 · 29 reviews
    • Independent living
    • Assisted living
    • Memory care
    • Skilled nursing
    AnonymousCurrent/former resident
    2.0

    Compassionate care, unsafe neighbor issues

    I lived at the village for seven years (including two truly wonderful years). The care and rehab were excellent - compassionate nurses I called angels, attentive 24/7 staff, no skin breakdowns, roomy apartments with garages and a lovely campus - but it's a buy-in community with a very high upfront cost. Major problems: persistent understaffing/high turnover, uneven food, and disruptive neighbors while administration failed to act; I lost trust, moved out for safety reasons, took a financial hit, and would not return despite many dedicated staff.

    Pricing

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    Amenities

    Healthcare services

    • Activities of daily living assistance
    • Assistance with bathing
    • Assistance with dressing
    • Assistance with transfers
    • Medication management
    • Mental wellness program

    Healthcare staffing

    • 24-hour call system
    • 24-hour supervision

    Meals and dining

    • Diabetes diet
    • Meal preparation and service
    • Restaurant-style dining
    • Special dietary restrictions

    Room

    • Cable
    • Fully furnished
    • Housekeeping and linen services
    • Kitchenettes
    • Private bathrooms
    • Telephone
    • Wifi

    Transportation

    • Community operated transportation
    • Transportation arrangement
    • Transportation arrangement (non-medical)

    Common areas

    • Beauty salon
    • Dining room
    • Garden
    • Outdoor space
    • Small library

    Community services

    • Fitness programs
    • Move-in coordination

    Activities

    • Community-sponsored activities
    • Resident-run activities
    • Scheduled daily activities

    4.55 · 29 reviews

    Overall rating

    1. 5
    2. 4
    3. 3
    4. 2
    5. 1
    • Care

      3.8
    • Staff

      3.6
    • Meals

      2.5
    • Amenities

      4.0
    • Value

      2.8

    Pros

    • Friendly, attentive, and compassionate staff
    • 24/7 nursing and patient care availability
    • Safe, secure campus (locked doors at night)
    • Choice of cafeteria dining or private kitchen cooking
    • Staff assistance with meal prep and cooking
    • Help with travel arrangements and group trips
    • Staff mediate and help settle disagreements
    • Welcoming atmosphere (staff greet residents)
    • Separate cottages and private living options
    • Well-laid-out campus with larger apartments and garages
    • Extensive care facilities and very good rehab services
    • Long-term residents reporting good clinical outcomes (no bedsores)
    • Positive atmosphere and attractive location
    • Buy-in community structure perceived as good value by some

    Cons

    • Inconsistent management responsiveness to resident disputes
    • Safety concerns from disruptive neighbors not adequately addressed
    • Distrust in administration leading some residents to leave
    • Understaffing, high turnover, and minimal staff training
    • Variable and sometimes poor dining quality and menu monotony
    • High upfront buy-in cost and affordability issues
    • High ongoing prices relative to quality complaints

    Summary review

    Overall sentiment from the reviews is mixed but leans positive around direct caregiving and campus amenities, with recurring concerns about management responsiveness, staffing stability, dining consistency, and cost. Multiple reviewers praised the staff as friendly, attentive, and compassionate; several comments specifically highlighted nursing and patient care as excellent, noting 24/7 availability and clinical outcomes such as no bedsores for long-term residents. The community is frequently described as welcoming — staff greet residents and assist with everyday needs like meal prep, cooking, travel arrangements for group trips, and mediating disputes. The facility’s rehab services are called out as very good, and some long-term residents reported sustained positive experiences over many years.

    Facility and layout attract positive feedback. Reviewers noted a safe, secure campus with locked doors at night, separate cottages and private living options, larger apartments with garages, and a well-laid-out campus in a beautiful area. The buy-in community model is seen by some as providing value and access to extensive care facilities. The option to choose between cafeteria meals and cooking in small private kitchens was highlighted as a meaningful amenity, and staff often help with cooking and meal preparation for residents who need it.

    However, there are notable and consistent concerns. Multiple summaries describe incidents of disruptive neighbor behavior and an administration that failed to take adequate action, prompting distrust and, in at least one case, a resident to move out for safety reasons and suffer a financial hit. These accounts emphasize that when administrative response is perceived as weak or inconsistent, it undermines residents’ sense of security and trust in the community, even when direct caregivers are praised.

    Operational issues also appear in several reviews. There are repeated comments about understaffing, high staff turnover, and minimal training, which can create uneven care experiences despite the dedication of individual employees. Dining evaluations are mixed: some find the cafeteria food quite good, but others report poor quality, overcooked vegetables, repetitive menus, canned fruit, and prepackaged desserts — pointing to variability in food service standards. Cost is another recurrent theme: while some reviewers consider the community an exceptional value, others call out the high upfront buy-in and overall prices as not affordable and a barrier for some families.

    In summary, Goodwill Retirement Community presents a strong offering in terms of hands-on caregiving, a welcoming staff culture, a secure and attractive campus, and robust rehab and care facilities. These strengths are tempered by management and operational shortcomings that have significant impact when they occur: inconsistent administrative responses to resident conflicts, staffing shortages and turnover, uneven dining experiences, and the financial burden of buy-in costs. Prospective residents and families should weigh the reported high quality of direct care and campus amenities against the documented concerns about management responsiveness, dining variability, staffing stability, and affordability. Asking specific questions about incident resolution policies, current staffing levels and training, dining menus and quality controls, and the financial terms of the buy-in could help families assess fit and risk before committing.

    Location

    Map showing location of Goodwill Retirement Community

    About Goodwill Retirement Community

    Goodwill Retirement Community sits a mile north of Grantsville, Maryland, up there on Dorsey Hotel Road, and it's been around since 1959, started by local Mennonite churches, and now they've got a mix of different living options for older folks, like an Independent Living Retirement Village with thirty cottages, some well-kept Assisted Living Apartments for people who still do a lot for themselves but want a hand when needed, and a Skilled Nursing Home that has a Secured Memory Care Unit called Memory Lane for folks with memory troubles. The community's certified as a Continuing Care Retirement Community, which just means that as people's needs change, they can move through different levels of care-so you can stay put even if you come to need more or less help as time goes on, and everyone pays just for the care and services they use, not more. The staff works hard to keep things clean and inviting, and families have recognized them for offering professional, compassionate care over the years, and they've grown to now have 108 beds in the skilled nursing part, which is called Goodwill Mennonite Home. Residents who are able to live on their own can lease a modern one- or two-bedroom residence for a lifetime, so there's a sense of stability, and they don't have to worry about mowing yards or fixing leaking faucets, which is nice as people get older. Folks in assisted living get 24-hour help and medication management, and the people who run the activities program even consult with a Certified Occupational Therapist to keep everyone as active and involved as they want. For those who need special attention because of Alzheimer's or other memory issues, the Memory Lane unit is kept secure for safety but also welcoming, and inside you'll find a routine built on care and understanding. Anita Funk directs some key programs, and there's also a Certified Nursing Assistant class right on site, which helps train students to get their CNA certification so they'll be ready to give basic care, and that brings in even more people invested in quality health care. The campus has had several upgrades and expansions across the years, and there are inviting courtyards and well-kept apartments, which make for a calm setting out among the rolling Maryland hills. Goodwill Retirement Community operates as a non-profit, and it's connected with organizations like LeadingAge and LifeSpan Network, so it stays in touch with broader developments in elder care. There's nothing real flashy here-just steady, capable care and a simple way to move through life as needs change, surrounded by people who pay attention to both comfort and dignity.

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