| Population shifts make only temporary census |
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North Carolina is the sixth fastest growing state in the land. Its wide-ranging array of golf courses includes some outstanding and reasonably priced daily fee options, like Tanglewood Park near Winston-Salem.
According to Census Bureau projections , Nevada will be the fastest growing state between now and 2030, up a whopping 114%, albeit on a relatively small population base. Since these projections were made before flipping condos in Las Vegas supplanted gambling and prostitution as the most attractive money-making deals -- at least for about a nanosecond -- we wonder what effect all those empty condos will have on the growth numbers. Arizona takes second prize in the growth wars with a predicted increase of 109% and just over 5.5 million new residents. You have to wonder how that prediction might change if, say, a build-the-fence-high new U.S. President is elected. Also, Presidential candidate and Arizona senator John McCain, who seems to have the most compassionate plan regarding immigration, is not so sanguine when it comes to water. He has accused California of stealing some of his own state's water supply. Although California will grow only 37% in the 30 years time frame, that still represents an additional 12.5 million thirsty people. What effect Will the pugilistic senator from Arizona and The Terminator of California go to war over water? Sometime in the next few years, Florida will finally supplant New York as the third most populous state, the Census Bureau indicates, assuming no catastrophic hurricanes, no catastrophically higher premiums on catastrophe insurance, no catastrophic car jams on the state's under-built roadways, and no catastrophic flight to the Carolinas by fed-up retirees. You might detect a certain theme here. You can't beat the weather in Florida, except perhaps in July and August, but is the quality of weather more important than the quality of life? Do you really want to be forced to endure the 4:30 p.m. early-bird special at the local smorgasbord just to avoid stop-and-go traffic during the normal dinner time and rush hour?
And speaking of water, when I traveled to the state in 1980, I recall that my brother, then an employee with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, warned me not to drink the water in Panama City and a host of other cities in Florida. In short, the Sunshine State has grown way too quickly for its overwhelmed local officials to accommodate the demands of three generations of retirees from New York and elsewhere. Note to officials in Asheville and Myrtle Beach: Get ready because many of the so-called disillusioned "halfbacks" are heading your way ("halfbacks" as in New Yorkers who moved to Florida and are now bouncing halfway back).
North Carolina cities like Winston-Salem are making their downtown areas more attractive to the thousands of people moving to the state.
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| Saturday, 29 December 2007 05:43 | |||
| Last Updated on Sunday, 30 December 2007 07:24 |
