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100 best towns to raise a family
Robert J. Bruss
June, 13
 If you can move any place in the United States to raise your
family, first read "Best Places to Raise Your Family," by Bert
Sperling and Peter Sander. This unique book reveals the top 100 best towns for
families, based primarily on standard of living, education, lifestyle, and
health and safety considerations.
However, if you think you will find the perfect place for
families, you will be disappointed. Even Sperling and Sander admit, "There
is no perfect place," that appeals to everyone. As their profiles of 100
towns explain in great detail, every place has its pros and cons.
Purchase Bob Bruss reports online.
Although there are many authors' opinions throughout the 100
reports on the best U.S. family-friendly towns, most of the best places are
based on facts and lots of statistics. Subjective evaluations are extremely
difficult, even for the expert authors. For example, I grew up in Edina, Minn.,
so I was especially interested in the authors' recommendations for that state.
Their first choice was Rochester, Minn., primarily for its superb Mayo Clinic
medical facility and the excellent public schools. I agree. But their second
Minnesota choice was Lakeville, a distant Minneapolis suburb. With that
selection, I respectfully disagree because there are far better located, better
quality of life, and more affordable towns (such as Edina!) close to employment
centers.
This is a fantastic book to read when you want to dream
about where you would like to live. If you are self-employed, and can live
anyplace, this is the perfect book for you. Or if you are an employee being
transferred, this is a great book to determine which is the best town near your
new employment location to select.
For statistic-minded individuals, especially engineers, this
book is a dream come true. It is filled with tables, maps, statistical charts,
and just about every way to analyze a town for prospective relocation. If the
book has a fault, it is information overload with too many statistics and not
enough subjective opinions about what it is like to live in a specific
recommended town.
As I poured through all the information, I was impressed
with the many towns that are "near" a big city and its special
attractions. Of the list of ideal places to raise your family, shockingly there
are no large cities. I suspect the reason is most big cities have poor-quality
public schools, which is a major disqualifier.
Even if you are not considering moving, this new book is a
great book to read for possible future relocation. But remember the emphasis is
on the best places to raise a family, not the best places to retire, find a
job, or anything else.
Surprisingly, some states have no recommended places to
raise a family. Those few states are Montana, Wyoming, Arizona, Mississippi,
Louisiana, and Maine. Many states have only one "best place" for
families.
Others have several towns, many of which are relatively
unknown. To illustrate, have you ever heard of Getzville or Pittsford, N.Y? Me
neither, but they are on the top 100 list.
Although I am familiar with many of the towns recommended by
Sperling and Sander, I wonder if they thoroughly investigated all their
suggestions. For example, where I live in northern California, the authors
recommend living in Winters and Folsom, Calif. I've been to both places. I'm
sure the residents are happy there, but from the descriptions, they seem like
boring places without much to do.
Where do these expert authors live? Based on the vast
statistical information they produced for this outstanding book, you would
think they live someplace exotic, with near-perfect weather, affordable, with
excellent educational and medical facilities, in a top employment center.
Wrong. Co-author Peter Sander lives in Granite Bay, Calif., while co-author
Bert Sperling resides in Depoe Bay, Ore.
Chapter topics include: "Finding Your Best Place";
"Today's Families and Trends"; "What Makes the Best Place
Best?" "A Closer Look at the Facts"; and "Neighborhood
Profiles of the Top 100 Places."
Just in case you absolutely must know the top 10 best places
for families to live, as selected by Sperling and Sander, they are Louisville,
Colo.; Gaithersburg, Md.; Roswell, Ga.; Lakeville, Minn.; Flower Mound, Texas;
Fort Collins, Colo.; Cary, N.C.; Sugar Land, Texas; Columbia, Md.; and
Noblesville, Ind.
Creating a great book like this is a monumental achievement.
But it is based mostly on statistics, not the reality of families who live in
the recommended towns. Interviews with local residents would have added realism
to reveal what they like best and least about their towns.
Obviously, none of the 100 recommended places are bad
locations to raise a family. But statistics alone can be very misleading. On my
scale of one to 10, this unique book rates an eight because it is more like a
dull textbook rather than a resource with subjective opinions from trusted
advisers.
"Best Places to Raise Your Family," by Bert
Sperling and Peter Sander (Wiley Publishing, Inc., Hoboken, NJ, 2006, $24.99,
414 pages; available in stock or by special order at local bookstores, public
libraries and www.amazon.com.
(For more information on Bob Bruss publications, visit his
Real Estate Center).
Copyright 2006 Inman News
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