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World In Your Hand


Top States In New England And The Dakotas

Make New England your home and you'll generally enjoy a safer, healthier and more livable environment, compared to the rest of the nation, according to the latest national state-of-the-states survey.

New England is tops when it comes to livability and healthy living. New England states also joined the Dakotas as the safest states in the nation.

Meanwhile, southern states crowded the bottom of the rankings when it came to livability and health and southern states joined a couple from the west, as the most dangerous in the land, according to Morgan Quitno Press, a Lawrence, KS publisher that has been reporting on the best and worst of cities and states since 1989.

Livability

New Hampshire barely dethroned Minnesota as the nation's Most Livable State, ending the Land of 1,000 Lakes' seven-year streak at the top of the heap.

"New Hampshire slipped past Minnesota by the smallest of margins to earn this prestigious honor," said Scott Morgan, President of Morgan Quitno Press.

"The competition was fierce. Both states did well in nearly every category considered for the award. Our award is unique because it does not focus on any one category of data," he added.

To determine a state's livability, Morgan Quitno examined, for each state, 44 factors (25 negative, 19 positive), including everything from crime rates, costs of living, incomes and home ownership rates to low birth weight births, per capita number of books in libraries, sunny days and hazardous waste sites. Other factors included poverty rates, highway fatalities, home ownership rates, and education, among a host of others.

After New Hampshire and Minnesota, at the top of the list were, Vermont, Iowa and New Jersey.

Dead last for the sixth consecutive year was Mississippi, followed by Louisiana, South Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee.

Health

New Hampshire's top-notch livability status stems, in part, from that fact that it is also the nation's Healthiest State, according to Morgan Quitno's rankings.

Again beating a perennial winner, which had the top health spot for the three previous years, New Hampshire pushed ahead of Vermont, followed by by Hawaii, Iowa and Minnesota.

The healthy living award is based on an analysis of 21 factors (3 positive, 18 negative) including access to health care providers, health care affordability, infant mortality rates, teen birth rates, binge drinking rates, sexually transmitted disease rates, hospital beds, suicide, car safety belt use and others.

Mississippi also finished at the bottom in this category for the fifth consecutive year, followed by the other least healthy-living states, New Mexico, Louisiana, Alabama and South Carolina.

"New Hampshire has the nation's lowest teen birth rate, the lowest infant mortality rate, one of the highest childhood immunization rates in the country -- an impressive health care record," said Morgan.

Crime

When Morgan Quitno ranked the states based on how each compared with the national average in six crime categories -- murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, burglary and motor vehicle theft -- North Dakota, Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire and South Dakota, in that order, were the safest states in the nation.

The Most Dangerous states were Nevada, Louisiana, Arizona, Maryland and South Carolina.

"As the nation's fastest growing state, Nevada struggles with crime and other problems that accompany rapid growth. The state's violent crime rate jumped 8.2 percent from 2001 to 2002, while the rate for a nation as a whole dropped 2 percent" Morgan said.

Published: May 6, 2004

Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.




Broderick Perkins parlayed a career in old-school journalism into a contemporary digital news service that really hits home.

The award-winning consumer journalist, originally from Wilmington, DE, is founder, publisher and executive editor of the bootstrap DeadlineNews Group, a Silicon Valley-based editorial content and consulting service specializing in residential real estate, consumer news and related editorial consulting services.

The DeadlineNews Group includes the website, DeadlineNews.com, offering real estate editorial content and consulting services, and its back shop, the Deadline Newsroom, an open house on news that really hits home.

Perkins obtained his formal journalism education from University of Delaware and a journalism boot camp, the Institute of Journalism Education at the University of California-Berkeley. He went on to 20 years of service as a daily newspaper journalist at the Wilmington, DE News Journal and San Jose, CA Mercury News.

Perkins covered housing on the San Jose Mercury News reporting team which earned a General News Reporting Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for coverage of the Loma Prieta earthquake.

He has also produced real estate, consumer and small business content for the Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, RealtyTimes.com, Nolo.com, Better Homes and Gardens, the National Association of Realtors, Homestore/Move and Intuit/Quicken among more than three dozen publications.

In addition to managing the DeadlineNews Group, Perkins most recently served as chief editorial consultant for Nolo's Essential Guide To Buying Your First Home, Nolo, and writes real estate television scripts for RealtyTimes.com.




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