Each year, Money magazine rates hundreds of American cities in order to help folks who may be yearning to move be able to find the best new place to settle. The magazine compiles statistics on various factors, such as housing affordability, job growth, commute time, schools, weather, access to health care, leisure pursuit possibilities, crime rate, and quality of life, and then publishes its findings once a year.
For the year 2006, the overall winner was Fort Collins, Colorado, followed by Naperville, Illinois, and Sugar Land, Texas. Money magazine was especially impressed by the many parks in Fort Collins, including some sixty miles of biking and hiking trails in a town of 128,000 people located some 5,000 feet up in the Rocky Mountains. There are plenty of jobs in Fort Collins, too, with giant companies like HP, Eastman Kodak, and Agilent Technologies maintaining a large presence in town. Fort Collins is also the home of Colorado St. University and Poudre Valley Hospital, which provide 10,000 more jobs between them.
Rounding out the rest of the top ten most livable American towns were: Columbia/Ellicott City, Maryland; Cary, North Carolina; Overland Park, Kansas; Scottsdale, Arizona; Boise, Idaho; Fairfield, Connecticut; and Eden Prairie, Minnesota.
Money magazine also rates the country's largest cities annually, as well, and publishes a separate list of America's top ten most livable big cities. This year's winner was Colorado Springs, Colorado, making it a clean sweep for the Centennial State, although Colorado Springs was the second smallest city on the list in population, at 369,800. Coming in second was Austin, Texas (690,300), followed by Mesa, Arizona (442,800).
The top ten list of big cities was rounded out by Raleigh, North Carolina (341,500); San Diego, California (1,255,500); Virginia Beach, Virginia (438,400); Omaha, Nebraska (414,500); Wichita, Kansas (354,900); and New York, New York (8,143,200).
Since many people are concerned about crime, Money ranked cities according to crime rates, and the safest city in America turned out to be Wayne, New Jersey, followed by a pair of Connecticut towns, Fairfield and Greenwich. Two Nevada towns, Paradise and Sunrise Manor, were next, and the rest of the top ten was comprised of another Connecticut town (Manchester, 7th); and four more New Jersey cities (East Brunswick, 6th; Cherry Hill, 8th, Edison, 9th, and Hamilton, 10th).
If you're single and yearn to live in a city with lots of other single people, Money magazine's data suggests moving to Bloomington, Indiana, where 58.2% of the population is unattached. There were nine other American towns in which more than half the residents were single, including New Brunswick, New Jersey (54.6%); College Station, Texas (54.3%); Ames (52.5%) and Iowa City (52%), Iowa; Cambridge (52%), Somerville (51.3%), and Boston (50.4%), Massachusetts; Berkeley, California (50.3%); and Champaign, Illinois (50.2%).
If you're thinking about relocating, there are many factors to consider. Explore your options and make your own list of priorities.
Copyright ? 2006 Jeanette J. Fisher
Find out why your home selection--including your community--makes such a difference in your quality of life and happiness. Free Power of Home report ebook at http://www.jeanettefisher.com/powerofhome.htm
Jeanette Fisher teaches interior design psychology and real estate investing.
No comments:
Post a Comment