Posted on 03/09/2006 6:48:25 AM PST by Huck
Who's laughing now?
New Jersey, the state that spawned a thousand wise-guy bumper stickers and became the butt of a million late-night jokes, is actually a nice place to live.
The research group Morgan Quitno crunched the numbers this year and yesterday ranked New Jersey the fifth-most-livable state.
As for its neighbors?
Pennsylvania finished 30th, New York 32d.
"The people we talk to say they wouldn't live anywhere else, and I have to go along with that," said Mark Moran, a Bloomfield resident and one of the editors of Weird New Jersey magazine. "Whether it grows on you or people just don't know any better, I don't know."
New Jersey has long had a tragically poor reputation, earned by corrupt politicians, homicidal mobsters (real and fictional), surreal traffic patterns (who invented the jughandle, anyway?), toxic waste, and big hair.
The state's image has been so bad that even then-acting Gov. Richard Codey took the time last year to rollick in some of the more humorous entries in his public slogan contest.
Among the favorites: "New Jersey: You got a problem with that?" and "New Jersey: Most of our elected officials have not been indicted."
Morgan Quitno, a Kansas-based publisher of statistical data, based its rankings on 44 factors, and New Jersey shined in many.
The state moved up from eighth place a year ago. New Hampshire was judged the most livable state for the third year in a row.
The study determined that New Jersey has excellent schools; an educated, wealthy population; and relatively low rates of crime and poverty.
"We don't claim to be finding the most exciting place or the best place to take a vacation," said Scott Morgan, president of Morgan Quitno. "It's just looking at very basic things. Other people can choose to look at other factors."
In other words, the things that make Jersey so Jersey didn't count against it. (Except for the toxic waste: Morgan found New Jersey had the most "hazardous waste sites on the National Priority List per 10,000 square miles.")
Moran also noted that if auto insurance and property tax rates had been considered, New Jersey's ranking would have sunk like a stone.
But in Morgan Quitno's world, livability is measured by factors such as student-teacher ratios and per-capita spending on the arts, and New Jersey excelled in both.
For Moran, there is no conflict in a state's combining livability with a tradition for the weird and absurd.
"You've got to take the good with the bad," he said. "The fact that it's such an odd and unique place... certainly makes it more livable for me."
Morgan visited the state last year and made a swing through Camden, the city his publishing company has famously labeled the most dangerous the last two years.
"We didn't advertise who we were," he said.
That would be it. The story is, they try to paint over the blood from when she got hit by the car, and it keeps coming through the cement. FTR, I did see it, when i was about 17 years old driving around probably with too many of my friends piled in the car with me, doing something I shouldn't have been doing.
You all of people, should have known, i know you've read Weird NJ. See my previous post. I can't recall the location of the road, somewhere in surburban Passaic county.
I heard the stories; but I've never been to that spot.
>>> with too many of my friends piled in the car with me, doing something I shouldn't have been doing.<<<
Yeah, I've done that too :P
:)
the only annie i know of is annie oakley who lived in nutty, i mean nutley.
haha, very funny. silly me, it's totowa. Go into directly into the weirdnj.com website, right there as one of the first stories.
Ok, now that you mention it, i think i remember that story.
Very true. My dad had many meetings in places like Parsippany and Newark whereby he did the Southern State to Belt to SI Expressway to Goethals or via the Lincoln Tunnel, to say nothing of visiting his mom in Jersey on a regular basis. It is a PITA to get to if you are not on the LIRR from the city.
Let's see:
1. State Liquor Stores. My aunt drives two miles into Delaware to get a drinkable bottle of Chianti.
2. ZERO lighting on main roads. They claim its to "retain the country feel", even in North Philly.
3. When the roads get icy, they STAY icy until the spring.
4. If you live in PA for at least three months, you WILL hit a deer. The rats with antlers are EVERYWHERE at all times, not just in the rutting season like they are here in Central NJ.
5. You want garbage collection? Once a week, if you're lucky.
6. No beaches, unless you count the shores of the Delaware.
7. Much of the central part of the state is as dry as much of the bible belt. Lots of scary Deliverance types there are well.
8. The diners s-ck.
9. You have to pump your own gas, and its more expensive to boot.
10. Too much of the electorate is made up of retired steel workers and coal miners. Don't let the American flags on the porches of their shotgun houses fool you: they are paleosocialists.
PA has its finer points, and I have lots of family living there (who did the Jersey City-North Bergen-Wyckoff-Chester County, PA thing). Nevertheless, I am much happier on this side of the Delaware. Remember, General Washington crossed into NJ to get AWAY from PA on the first leg of his victory tour, not the other way around.
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