Posted on 01/06/2015 12:30:04 PM PST by SeekAndFind
Edited on 01/06/2015 12:33:21 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
Nearly two of every three families making an interstate move involving New Jersey last year were leaving the Garden State, the highest rate in the country.
New Jersey had the greatest percentage of outbound moves of any state nationally last year with almost 65 percent departing,
(Excerpt) Read more at nj.com ...
MORE HERE:
United Van Lines tracking showed the Northeast is the most prominent region on the high-outbound traffic list. In addition to New Jersey, New York (61 percent), Connecticut (59 percent) and Massachusetts (56 percent) are also included.
Where are people moving, according to United? Oregon (61 percent inbound), South Carolina (60 percent) and North Carolina (58 percent).
Is Gov NJFatboy heading to Atlanta with Mercedes? Or to Dallas with Jerry Jones?
You beat me, LOLOL
And aren’t you heavily taxed when you leave? Wow, that’s bad....
With that orange sweater did he think he was going to a Bengals or Denver game?
Moving In
The top inbound states of 2014 were:
Oregon
South Carolina
North Carolina
Vermont
Florida
Nevada
Texas
District of Columbia
Oklahoma
Idaho
______________________________________________
Moving Out
The top outbound states for 2014 were:
New Jersey
New York
Illinois
North Dakota
West Virginia
Ohio
Kansas
New Mexico
Pennsylvania
Connecticut
High outbound from ND?
What happened to the fracking boom?
We fled from NJ 20 years ago. We will flee from PA next.
RE: What happened to the fracking boom?
With the price of oil now in the dumpsters? I guess the bubble is bursting.
RE: We will flee from PA next.
The question is.... WHERE TO?
When you try to leave Kaliphorniastan the state will charge you a departure tax: https://douglasvgibbs.wordpress.com/2008/08/30/want-to-leave-california-pay-your-exit-tax-as-you-leave/
have you ever been to north dakota?
Somewhere with low taxes and warm weather is the choice for many, including our liberal relatives.
**South Carolina (60 percent)**
They will get here and start talking about how they did things back home, which of course costs money. And so the State of South Carolina will spiral out.
Maybe ND has reached a point of Employee Saturation. There may not be many openings at this time unless you have specialized training. If the oil prices remain low, fracking, and all it’s expenses may look less attractive.
One hopes the U.S. will allow it’self to begin exporting fuel around the world. I believe we are foolishly prevented from doing this now.
Maybe turning the Garden State back to a garden when everyone leaves is the best solution.
AND bringing their voting patterns that ruined the state with them.
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