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Friday, March 9, 2012

Cities: Healthcare, County Character & Sustainability

I'm approaching the end of my research.  In fact, I'd say all of my internet-based research is complete, I just need a bit more time to polish it up and post it.  Then I'll write a few posts to review each city, both for my own mind and for your reading pleasure.  (It IS a pleasure, right?  RIGHT?!)

Kind of like when I undertake to clean my home, I've gotten all of the obvious things put away, and now I'm left with those hodge podge items that don't really have a place (like wrapping paper -- where the hell does it go?).  In the case of my research, the hodge podge items are the quality of healthcare in each city, what I call "county character" and how well equipped each city is to sustain itself and its people.  I'll explain each of these chunks of research below.

Health Care.  At the suggestion of my dad, I researched the state of health care in each community.  I found a fair amount of very basic information at the state level, but finding information about each city or metropolitan area was hard.  The best I came up with were some studies of hospitals, which, from what I've seen, are often the flagship medical facility in town, and the quality of all other healthcare (prevention, wellness programs, etc.) correlates to the quality of the hospital.  So I'm trusting -- without knowing -- that a city with an esteemed hospital or hospitals will have pretty good healthcare in doctors' offices, urgent care centers, etc.  So...
I didn't have a photo of a hospital, so here is a photo of a mental patient.

In 2011, HealthGrades.com studied all 5,000 hospitals in the country across 26 different medical procedures and diagnoses and ranked the top 50 cities for quality hospital care.  Each city on the list with a rank for good hospital care is a city that made the top 50 for hospital care.  

Separately, US News & World Report reviewed and ranked specific hospitals for overall quality, and for highest quality in a particular field.  I listed those specific hospitals, too, if they are in one of the cities on my list.

Los Angeles: #36 in good hospital care. UCLA Medical Center = #5 hospital in the country, #2 for geriatrics. 
Chicago: #16 in good hospital care. Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago = #1 in rehabilitation.
Philadelphia: U Penn = #10 hospital in the country. Wills Eye Hospital = #3 for ophthalmology.  
Columbus: #43 in good hospital care.
DC:
Denver: #35 in good hospital care.
Portland:
Raleigh: Duke U (in Durham) = #9 hospital in the country.
Cleveland: #13 in good hospital care.  Cleveland Clinic = #4 hospital in the country, #1 in cardiology & heart surgery, #2 in gastroenterology, # 2 in nephrology, #3 in pulmonology, #3 in rheumatology, #2 in urology.  This is where you want to be if you get really sick.
Des Moines: #38 in good hospital care.
Asheville:  

County Character:  As I was trying to research health care, and having little luck, I stumbled across an unusual demographics website called Patchwork Nation, which presents demographic data in ways I haven't found elsewhere.  It breaks down the U.S. by county and by congressional district, and classifies each county and district by a mix of demographics including income, race, education, political leanings, etc.  It's a more detailed look at America than a state-by-state assessment, especially when comparing two different categories of data, like voting habits and how they align with income, etc.

While the following information isn't the same kind of hard data as most of my research, I felt it worth noting the community types of each county on my list.  The website included a general breakdown of major religions in each county, too, so I took note of the predominant religion or religions.
An old church in Philadelphia.
The lingo:
Industrial Metropolis: Densely populated, highly diverse urban centers; incomes trend higher than the national average and voters lean Democratic.
Service Worker Center: Midsize and small towns with economies fueled by hotels, stores and restaurants and lower-than-average median household income by county.
Boom Town: Fast growing communities with rapidly diversifying populations.
Evangelical Epicenter: Communities with a high proportion of evangelical Christians, found mostly in small towns and suburbs; slightly older than the U.S. average; loyal Republican voters.
Monied 'Burb: Wealthier, highly educated communities with a median household income of $15,000 above the national county average.

The counties:
Los Angeles County: Industrial Metropolis (40% Catholic)
Chicago/Cook County: Industrial Metropolis (40% Catholic)
Philadelphia County: Industrial Metropolis (35% Catholic)
Columbus/Franklin County: Industrial Metropolis (13% Catholic then Mainline Protestant, Evangelical)
DC (only): Industrial Metropolis (35% Catholic, then Mainline Protestant, Muslim, Evangelical)
Denver County: Industrial Metropolis (35% Catholic)
Portland/Multnomah County: Monied 'Burb (25% Catholic, then Evangelical, Mainline Protestant)
Raleigh/Wake County: Boom Town (22% Evangelical, then Mainline Protestant, Catholic)
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County: Industrial Metropolis (40% Catholic)
Des Moines County: Service Worker Center (25% Mainline Protestant, then Catholic, Evangelical, Lutheran)
Asheville/Buncombe County: Evangelical Epicenter (40% Evangelical) Um.

Did you notice that every Industrial Metropolis on my list has more Catholics than any other religion, and every city that is something else has a different dominant religion?

Sustainability:  And finally (for today), while researching both pollution and natural disasters (the subjects of a future post), I stumbled across information about city sustainability.  For those of you who aren't familiar with all this entails, you should check out SustainLane.com for a much more detailed explanation, but basically, sustainability means a location's ability to weather economic and environmental problems, as well as quality-of-life factors such as ease of commutes, low pollution, good tap water, etc.  
Day laborers at a local DC farm.
I decided to look into this further because it wasn't even an area I knew about before.  And because it's related to something I am aware of -- the increasing needs for fresh water around the globe.  Places that don't have their own water, or not enough of it, worry me.  A lot of these sustainability factors are similar to a city running out of water:  They measure things that, if something fails, could be catastrophic to a location.

SustainLane assessed only the 50 largest metropolitan areas (which is too bad; I wanted to see more info!) so sadly, Raleigh, Des Moines and Asheville weren't reviewed.  One mitigating factor in not having information about those three cities is, because they are all smaller, they are not as susceptible to problems that larger cities could face, such as having to import water, traffic congestion, not having a place to bury their garbage, etc.

The 8 cities were all ranked in every sustainability factor, but I only made note when a city made the top 10 or bottom 10.
Buy your locally grown food and see a play in Greenbelt, Maryland.
The Lingo:
City innovation means government incentives & programs for sustainable living.
Green economy means LEED buildings, farmers' markets, clean public-private partnerships, etc.
Housing affordability means people can live close to the city center, which reduces sprawl and saves local farmland.
Knowledge base measures a city's planning and coordination with federal govt, etc.
Transit ridership is miles traveled and square miles of system.
Natural disasters: hurricanes, major flooding, catastrophic hail, tornado super-outbreaks and earthquakes, taking into consideration potential frequency of disaster as well as the extent of damage.
Planning includes parks, limiting sprawl, bike and pedestrian plans, mass transit, regional plans.
Waste diversion means garbage is recycled or composted instead of going in a landfill.
Water supply includes distance in miles from primary source of untreated drinking water, dependence of water on snowpack, level of drought or other conflict, population growth rate and gallons of water consumed per person per day.
A Portland car charging station.  Do these even exist in other cities?
The cities -- high ranks:
LA: #6 in city innovation, #4 in knowledge base, #4 in transit ridership, #4 in waste diversion
Chicago: #4 in overall sustainability, #7 in commuting, #1 in city innovation, #2 in transit ridership, #10 in waste diversion, #1 in water supply
Philadelphia: #8 in overall sustainability, #5 in commuting, #7 in local food, #9 in transit ridership, #8 low natural disaster risk
Columbus: #10 in green economy, #4 in knowledge base
DC: #1 in commuting, #2 in green building, #5 in local food, #7 in transit ridership
Denver: #6 in energy use, #5 in green building, #4 in knowledge base, #8 in planning
Portland: #1 in overall sustainability, #2 air quality, #1 in city innovation, #1 in energy use, #1 in green building, #1 in green economy, #1 in knowledge base, #8 in local food, #3 in planning, #2 in tap water quality [My friend Kristian agrees:The tap water is the best I've found.”], #7 in waste diversion.  By almost all accounts, Portland is the most sustainable city.
Cleveland: #8 in green economy, #2 in local food, #1 in low street congestion, #3 low natural disaster risk, #1 in water supply
"Portland Composts!"
The cities -- low ranks:
LA: #49 air quality, #49 in housing affordability, #43 in local food, #49 in low street congestion, #43 low natural disaster risk, #46 in tap water quality, #46 in water supply.  While LA ranks really high in a number of factors, it ranks really low in some of the most basic human needs, like access to fresh water and local food.  Sounds dangerous.
Chicago: #43 air quality
Philadelphia:
Columbus: #43 in tap water quality
DC: #45 in low street congestion, #40 in tap water quality
Denver: #43 in waste diversion
Portland:
Cleveland: #43 in planning

[Update:  What's up with the weird font problems?!  Ignore the different colored text and fonts; it doesn't mean anything, although I like how it makes Kristian's quote stand out so much.]

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Cities: Education

This was a hard category to research.  I'm glad I'm not a parent trying to find a good school system for my kids.  Maybe it's easier when one knows the exact schools their kids might attend, instead of trying to learn about a whole county.  I opted to research the entire county (when I could), knowing that inner cities often aren't the best measure for the educational opportunities and attitudes of a whole region.  My data notes where I have only city info.
Little Rock's Central High School
Anyway, I added this broad category of things to research not because I'm planning to return to school or send kids of my own to school, but because I value education and would prefer to live in a community where other people value education too.  Turned out to be really hard to measure how much everyone in a county values education.  So I turned to some statistics that I hope reveal both how educated the populace is, and how much support there is for education generally.

High School Graduation Rate by County: County data from Patchworknation.org (2000). USA Today/EPE Research Center for primary city only (2006).

LA County: 69.90%. LA only: 44.2%.  This is low.
Chicago/Cook County: 77.70%. Chicago only: 52.2%
Philadelphia County: 71.20%. Philly only: 55.5%
Columbus/Franklin County: 85.70%
DC only: 77.80%. (Montgomery County: 81.5%. Fairfax County: 82.5%. PG County: 67.3%.)
Denver County: 78.90%. Denver only: 46.8%.  Low.
Portland/Multnomah County: 85.60%
Raleigh/Wake County: 89.30%. 82.2%.
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County: 81.60%. Cleveland only: 43.8%.  Low.
Des Moines County: 85.80%
Asheville/Buncombe County: 81.90%

Annual Public Education Spending City Only: (Bestplaces.net)  I have no idea if there is a correlation between spending per student and the quality of the education.

Chicago: $4,528 per student  Surprisingly low considering Chicago's generally high cost of living.
Philadelphia: $4,897 per student
Cleveland: $8,393 per student  Surprisingly high considering Cleveland's general low cost of living.
Des Moines: $5,007 per student
Asheville: $5,558 per student
One-room schoolhouse, Fredericksburg, Iowa
Number of Students per Teacher in Public Schools City Only: (Bestplaces.net)

LA: 21.6 students per teacher.  Is that a lot?
Chicago: 20.2 students per teacher.  Ditto?
DC: 12.1 students per teacher.  Sounds low.
Cleveland: 12.2 students per teacher  I suppose when 56% of the students drop out, that leaves a good student/teacher ratio behind.

So all of that was about K-12 education.  I also researched post-high school graduation information.  I started with looking at how many colleges were in each metropolitan area.
Hendrix College, Arkansas
Colleges:  I couldn't be bothered writing down every single college in town; just some flagship schools an

LA: At least 6, including USC & UCLA.
Chicago: At least 12 in the area, including Chicago & Northwestern.
Philadelphia: A whole bunch, including UPenn, Temple & St. Joe's.
Columbus: Ohio State, plus others.
DC: At least 6, more in suburbs. Including my alma mater American U.
Denver: Several. Colorado U is 45 minutes away in Boulder.
Portland: A bunch, including Reed & Portland State.
Raleigh: NC State, others nearby like UNC & Duke, my other alma mater.
Cleveland: Cleveland State, CWRU.
Des Moines: Drake & Grand View. Iowa State in Ames is 45 minutes away.
Asheville: Several, including UNC Asheville & Western Carolina.

Percentage of elitist and indoctrinated snobs.  Oh wait, that's what the pompous and anti-intellectual blowhard Rick Santorum calls them.  I call them people age 25 and over with bachelor's degree or higher.  Data from US Census, Patchworknation.org.

Los Angeles County: 29%, 25%
Chicago/Cook County: 33.2%, 28%
Philadelphia County: 22.2%, 18%  This is low.
Columbus/Franklin County: 35%, 32%
DC: 49%, 39%  This is high.
Denver County: 40%, 35%
Portland/Multnomah County: 37.5%, 31%
Raleigh/Wake County: 47.4%, 44%  This is high.
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County: 28.2%, 25%
Des Moines County: 32.8%, 16%  I'm not sure why those two numbers are so different.
Asheville/Buncombe County: 31.2%, 25%


Adult Illiteracy Rate Per County (2003): Patchworknation.org

Los Angeles County: 33.5%  Ouch.  Due to large number of immigrants??
Chicago/Cook County: 19.2%
Philadelphia County: 22%
Columbus/Franklin County: 12.8%
DC: 19.1%
Denver County: 15.5%
Portland/Multnomah County: 10.7%
Raleigh/Wake County: 11.2%
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County: 9.3%
Des Moines County: 7.5%  That's very good.
Asheville/Buncombe County: 10.2%

OK OK, this is a bookstore, not a library.
And finally, I looked into the quality of public libraries in all of these places, believing that people who value education in youth also value life-long learning, and free and easy access to knowledge.  Plus, I really like libraries.

Quality of Public Libraries: Ranked by Hennen's American Public Library Ratings 2010 (haplr-index.com), which reviewed 7,930 public library systems in the U.S.

LA County Public Library: 9th percentile of libraries serving over 500,000 people.  That's bad.
Chicago:  No data.
Philadelphia Public Library: 33rd percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people.
Columbus Metropolitan Library: 96th percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people. Rank #2.  Wow.
DC:  No data.
Denver Public Library: 96th percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people.  Rank #4!
Portland/Multnomah County Public Library: 97th percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people.  Rank #3!
Raleigh/Wake County Public Library: 64th percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people.  I used to be a page at one of the Wake County libraries.  Libraries are great places to meet other people.
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County Public Library: 100th percentile of libraries for communities over 500,000 people.  Rank #1!  Wow!!  (My hometown's Lakewood Public Library is in the 98th percentile for communities between 50-100,000 people.  Rank #10.)
Des Moines Public Library: 77th percentile for communities between 100-250,000 people.
Asheville/Buncombe County Public Library: 64th percentile for communities between 100-250,000 people.

I was delighted to see that Cleveland, Columbus, Portland and Denver were the top 4 public libraries in the country!
Inside Evanston, Illinois's public library.

Cities: Education

This was a hard category to research.  I'm glad I'm not a parent trying to find a good school system for my kids.  Maybe it's easier when one knows the exact schools their kids might attend, instead of trying to learn about a whole county.  I opted to research the entire county (when I could), knowing that inner cities often aren't the best measure for the educational opportunities and attidudes of the whole region.  My data notes where I have county info or only city info.

Anyway, I added this broad category of things to research not because I'm planning to return to school or send kids of my own to school, but because I value education and would prefer to live in a community where most other people value education too.  Turned out to be really hard to measure how much everyone in a county values education.  So I turned to some statistics that I hope reveal both how educated the populace is, and how much support there is for education generally.

High School Graduation Rate by County & City: County data from Patchworknation.org (2000). USA Today/EPE Research Center for primary city only (2006).

LA County: 69.90%. LA only: 44.2%. Lowest county rate.
Chicago/Cook County: 77.70%. Chicago only: 52.2%
Philadelphia County: 71.20%. Philly only: 55.5%
Columbus/Franklin County: 85.70%
DC only: 77.80%. Montgomery County: 81.5%. Fairfax County: 82.5%. PG County: 67.3%.
Denver County: 78.90%. Denver only: 46.8%
Portland/Multnomah County: 85.60%
Raleigh/Wake County: 89.30%. 82.2%.
Cleveland/Cuyahoga County: 81.60%. Cleveland only: 43.8%. Lowest city rate.
Des Moines County: 85.80%
Asheville/Buncombe County: 81.90%

Annual Public Education Spending City Only: (Bestplaces.net)  I have no idea if there is a correlation between spending per student and the quality of the education.

Chicago: $4,528 per student  Surprisingly low considering Chicago's generally high cost of living.
Philadelphia: $4,897 per student
Cleveland: $8,393 per student  Surprisingly high considering Cleveland's general low cost of living.
Des Moines: $5,007 per student
Asheville: $5,558 per student

Number of Students per Teacher in Public Schools City Only: (Bestplaces.net)

Cleveland: 12.2 students per teacher  I suppose when 56% of the students drop out, that leaves a good student/teacher ratio behind.

So all of that was about K-12 education.  I also researched post-high school graduation information.  I started with looking at how many colleges were in each metropolitan area.

Colleges:  I couldn't be bothered writing down every single college in town; just some flagship schools an

LA: At least 6, including USC & UCLA.
Chicago: At least 12 in the area, including Chicago & Northwestern.
Philadelphia: A whole bunch, including UPenn, Temple & St. Joe's.
Columbus: Ohio State, plus others.
DC: At least 6, more in suburbs. Including my alma mater.
Denver: Several. Colorado U is 45 minutes away in Boulder.
Portland: A bunch, including Reed & Portland State.
Raleigh: NC State, others nearby like UNC & Duke, my other alma mater.
Cleveland: Cleveland State, CWRU.
Des Moines: Drake & Grand View. Iowa State in Ames is 45 minutes away.
Asheville: Several, including UNC Asheville & Western Carolina.

Percentage of elitist and indoctrinated snobs in the county age 25.  Oh wait, that's what the pompous and anti-intellectual blowhard Rick Santorum calls them.  I call them people age 25 and over with bachelor's degree or higher (US Census, Patchworknation.org).

LA: 29%, 25%
Chicago: 33.2%, 28%
Philadelphia: 22.2%, 18%. The lowest.
Columbus: 35%, 32%
DC: 49% (DC only), 39%
Denver: 40%, 35%
Portland: 37.5%, 31%
Raleigh: 47.4%, 44%
Cleveland: 28.2%, 25%
Des Moines: 32.8%, 16%
Asheville: 31.2%, 25%

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Cities: Dining, Entertainment & Sports

I titled this entry in the order of the things most important to me.  Most of my "fun money" is spent dining out.  Next is spent on things like the theater, live music, enrichment programs, museums, and stuff like that.  I attend sporting events only rarely, but they are a fun treat, and a lot of my friends like them, so it's something to do.  Plus, I get to sample the cuisine at sports arenas!
Dining and night life at the Modern Hotel in Boise.
In the end, not all of this research will be of equal importance to my decision-making,  But I'm posting it along with everything else for the most complete picture possible of the cities I'm researching.  Enjoy!

Dining:  A Sample
I did something different while researching dining options.  First, of course, I went out to eat in all of the cities on my list.  Some places I know more than others either because I lived there or I've been there more than once.  But dining out is important to me, so I made sure to try different things everywhere I went, despite the dent it put in my travel budget.

Second, looking up and documenting every single restaurant in a city would have taken forever and been very dull.  So instead I looked up a few of my favorite cuisines to discover if the places I'm looking at have those restaurants.  In some cases I needn't have bothered (every place has thai, and these days every place of at least moderate size has sushi).  But there was a bit of variety among the other categories.
Third:  One note about the vegetarian column.  Most cities had a few vegetarian or vegan-only restaurants.  But a few cities had a lot, so I marked those cities with extra check-marks.


√ means the city has that cuisine; X means it does not.


Indonesia Seafood Sri Lanka Sushi Thai Turkish Veggie
LA √√√
Chicago X X √√√
Philly X √√
Columbus X grocery
DC X √√
Denver X X
Portland foodcart X √√√
Raleigh X X X
Cleveland X X
Des Moines X X X X
Asheville X X

Los Angeles is the clear winner in this category, having both an Indonesian and a Sri Lankan restaurant!  Des Moines, sad to say, comes in last in terms of variety.  Although I did eat out several times while there, so I know that Des Moines is not a complete culinary waste land.  And it has at least one classy bar that knows how to keep its mixed drinks cold:
Attractions:
In researching stuff to do in every city, I again relied on some not-very-scientific methods.  Namely, to find out what there is to do in each city and what it's nightlife has to offer, I relied on my absolute favorite travel website, Trip Advisor.  I used this site everywhere when I travel overseas, and many places in North America, and it never steered me wrong.  If a "thing to do" appeared near the top of the reviewers' marks, it always turned out to be worth the stop.  So I used it to get a sense, if not a complete survey of, the entertainment options in each city.
This is Asheville's idea of fun!  And pest control.
I listed the two most popular attractions per city, and a short list of the most common things to do in each.

Los Angeles: 343 total. #1 The Getty, #2 Griffith Observatory. Theaters, museums, movies, parks, sports.
Chicago: 313 total. #1 Shakespeare Theater, #2 Art Institute. Outdoors & neighborhoods, shopping, theater, architecture, music, sports venues.
Philadelphia: 252 total, #1 Museum of Art, #2 the football stadium. Historical sites, museums, music.
Columbus: 61 total, #1 OSU Stadium, #2 is a mall. Parks, theater, shopping, museums, arenas.
DC: 210 total, #1 National Gallery of Art, #2 Smithsonian. Memorials, museums, open spaces, historic sites, neighborhoods, theater.
Denver: 117 total, #1 is a mountain, #2 is a road. Museums, theater, sports venues.
Portland: 293 total, #1 is the Gorge drive, #2 is a rose garden. Lots of parks, gardens and breweries. Museums, theaters.  There's a lot to do, relative to the size of the city.
Raleigh: 42 total, #1 Museum of Art, #2 Kids Museum. Lots of parks, museums, historical sites, an arena.
Cleveland: 92 total, #1 Cleveland Art Museum, #2 Cleveland Orchestra. Parks, museums, theaters, concert venues, sports.
Des Moines: 37 total, #1 State Fairgrounds, #2 Capitol Building. Parks, museums, golf.  So Brian will come to visit.
Asheville: 66 total, #1 Blue Ridge Parkway, #2 an arthouse movie theater. Mix of art centers, community theater, outdoors, small museums, spiritual arts, one ballpark.
The world's smallest park (really) in Portland, Oregon.
Nightlife:
I'm not a big "nightlife" person, unless you count things like dining out, the theater, the orchestra and the ballet.  Which Trip Advisor does.  So I researched this category too, and list the most common types of nightlife.

Los Angeles: 126 total, theater, concerts, music, movies, bars.
Chicago: 184 total, theater, music, comedy, blues clubs.
Philadelphia: 73 total, performing arts, music, bars, theater.
Columbus: 19 total, mostly theaters and bars/clubs.
DC: 69 total, theaters, music, music bars.
Denver: 35 total, theater, performing arts centers, bars.
Portland: 50 total, lots of theater, bars, comedy, drag bars.  [And rumor is, one of Portland's most popular nightlife options is a passel of non-sleazy strip clubs.]
Raleigh: 6 total, mostly bars, theater, symphony.
Cleveland: 21 total, mostly music and theater, some bars and clubs.
Des Moines: 4 total, bars, symphony, theater, the High Life Lounge.  Home of the world-famous Asserole.
Asheville: 15 total, mostly bars & theaters.

Des Moines might be short on nightlife, but they sure know how to sing the blues.
Sports Teams:
As noted above, sports are not super important to me, but it's nice to know what the options are.  And it could be fun living in a college town during football season, and joining other fans at a bar or something.

Los Angeles: Baseball, basketball, soccer. Other smaller teams. USC, UCLA & other colleges for college sports.
Chicago: Baseball, football, basketball, hockey. Minor league baseballs, several other small teams. Northwestern football & other colleges for other sports.
Philadelphia: Baseball, basketball, football, hockey, soccer. Other smaller teams. Colleges for sports, including football & basketball.
Columbus: Hockey, soccer. Minor league baseball. Ohio State in all sports.
DC: Baseball, basketball, football, hockey, soccer. Several colleges for college sports.
Denver: Baseball, basketball, football, soccer, hockey. Other smaller sports. U of Denver for college sports. CU nearby for college football.
Portland: Basketball, soccer, hockey. Minor league baseball. Colleges for college sports.
Raleigh: Hockey. 3 minor league baseball teams in the area. NC State, other colleges for sports.
Cleveland: Baseball, basketball, football, hockey. Cleveland State for college sports.
Des Moines: Minor league baseball teams, some smaller sports. Drake U for college sports.  Iowa State nearby for football.
Asheville: Minor league baseball. UNC Asheville for college sports.
Watch a movie while you get your teeth cleaned in Nebraska!

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Cities: Cost of Living

As several people have pointed out to me, when you move to a place where everything is expensive, salaries tend to be correspondingly high.  And in places where everything is cheap, salaries tend to be low.  So to some degree, knowing the cost of living in the cities I'm researching won't sway my opinion of the cities much.  At least, assuming that if I move to a high-cost city, my salary will be higher, and vice-versa.

But I have a few practical and psychological hurdles when it comes to costs of living.  For one, despite living in the D.C. area for 10 years (more if you count my time in college), I never adjusted to how expensive housing is.  What you can buy for, say, $400,000 in D.C. will buy something vastly different (usually bigger and better) in most other places.  Part of my reluctance to buy a home in D.C. stemmed from how comparatively expensive everything is, regardless of how much I earned.
Cost:  $4,000,000.00 in Washington, $87.50 in Cleveland.
The other hurdle I'll have to deal with when I think about cost of living is how I might use any savings I have left over when I return to work.  In some of the cities I might move to, my savings could make a sizable downpayment on a home.  In other cities, my savings would be a pittance compared to what I'd need to purchase something.  Now, buying a home isn't high on my priority list, but I'd like to have the option, ya know?

In the end, I don't expect either of these considerations to dictate where I'll end up.  Instead, I'll use this research to let me know the income I'll need, and to prepare me for what sort of housing I can expect to get when I first move.


Average Rent:  Based on averaging three different average rents per city provided by Walkscore.com,  Americantowns.com and Bankrate.com.

LA: $1620/month
Chicago: $1320
Philadelphia: $1150
Columbus: $720
DC: $1737  Most expensive.
Denver: $960
Portland: $1000
Raleigh: $785
Cleveland: $760
Des Moines: $675  Least expensive.
Asheville: $745

Median home sale prices:  Based on averaging three median prices provided by Americantowns.com, Bankrate.com and Bestplaces.net.

LA: $448,300
Chicago: $284,300
Philadelphia: $210,000
Columbus: $161,000
DC: $464,000
Denver: $242,000
Portland: $302,000
Raleigh: $217,000
Cleveland: $126,000  Sadly, this is low because a lot of homes in the city are foreclosed.
Des Moines: $165,000
Asheville: $220,000

Not every home in Portland costs $302,000.  These new mini-homes are much less. But no one larger than me would fit inside.
Cost of Living, as compared to U.S. average:  Using Sperling's Bestplaces.net, with special notes from U.S. News & World Report**.

LA: 47.10% Higher than the U.S. average  ** Eight lowest adjusted median income in the U.S.
Chicago: 16.20% Higher than the U.S. average
Philadelphia: 5.70% Higher than the U.S. average
Columbus: 11% Lower than the U.S. average
DC: 34.80% Higher than the U.S. Average  ** Second highest adjusted median income in the U.S.
Denver: 10.10% Higher than the U.S. average
Portland: 18.60% Higher than the U.S. average
Raleigh: 6.40% Higher than the U.S. average  ** Tenth highest adjusted median income in the U.S.
Cleveland: 10% Lower than the U.S. average
Des Moines: 14.90% Lower than the U.S. average  ** Highest adjusted median income in the U.S.
Asheville: 6.80% Higher than the U.S. average