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New York County, NY
Kings County, NY
Queens County, NY
Bronx County, NY
Philadelphia County, PA
That adds about 385 square miles and 9.6 million people to the state. The total would be 18.5 million people in 7,700 sq miles, or 2400 people per sq mile.
Morgantown, WV is actually growing and so too in Mon County. Morgantown has had a +15.9% increase in population since 2000, and Mon County at +25% growth since 2000. Both are expected to continue to grow over the next 20 years due to growth at WVU/education, healthcare, technology, and pharmaceutical sectors. Morgantown is considered one of the premier growing small cities in the country.
Camden, NJ is a war zone that rivals Syria or Yemen!
Dude, you can't say west Virginia is going well economically in good conscious. WVU is expanding sure, but Monongalia county has so few people outside of Morgantown and it's a large county. If 3,000 people move to Morgantown it can easily sway the numbers to make it look like the whole area is doing well. I'm rooting for it, Morgantown is the bright spot in WV - but I just wouldn't add it to PA, sorry maybe if I had 10 choices but just not 5.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mutiny77
He's right about Youngstown though.
Clearly there's a serious crime problem there, but there are also some good things happening there as well. It's only a matter of time before it turns around...it's inevitable. It has too many built-in advantages.
Youngstown is (per cap) nearly as bad as Detroit economically, if not worse. I was there last week. It's sad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by cpomp
I would take New Castle County DE over Camden County. Mercer would be also be a much better choice. Most of SJ is already a drag on the Philadelphia area.
I would take New Castle County DE over Camden County. Mercer would be also be a much better choice. Most of SJ is already a drag on the Philadelphia area.
More so than Fayette, Lawrence, and Armstrong are on Pittsburgh? Lol. And they are in PA. I should start a thread "which counties would you shed from your state?"
Location: Watching half my country turn into Gilead
3,530 posts, read 4,177,862 times
Reputation: 2925
Quote:
Originally Posted by lammius
For New Jersey, I'd say:
New York County, NY
Kings County, NY
Queens County, NY
Bronx County, NY
Philadelphia County, PA
That adds about 385 square miles and 9.6 million people to the state. The total would be 18.5 million people in 7,700 sq miles, or 2400 people per sq mile.
Why would you exclude Staten Island? That's probably the most Jersey-like borough of New York.
Dude, you can't say west Virginia is going well economically in good conscious. WVU is expanding sure, but Monongalia county has so few people outside of Morgantown and it's a large county. If 3,000 people move to Morgantown it can easily sway the numbers to make it look like the whole area is doing well. I'm rooting for it, Morgantown is the bright spot in WV - but I just wouldn't add it to PA, sorry
My hunch is that you haven't witnessed Morgantown's growth over the last decade. It is not anything to sneeze at for a city its size. In fact, there is currently talks of a Fortune 500 company locating a regional HQ there. WVU has invested over a billion dollars into its facilities, and Mylan Pharmaceuticals continues to prosper in the area. Ruby Mermorial partnered with WVU Medicine is quickly becoming one of the best hospitals. Plus The I-79 Tech corridor along with WVU have attracted some big operations by the FBI, NIOSH, NASA, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin. The Natural gas industry is also huge in Mon county. Just saying!
But why one earth would WV ever give up one of its better performing counties?
Leon County, FL - Home of Tallahassee, a beautiful Southern city with more amenities than it should have for its size due to being fairly far from large Metro's. Being the Capital of Florida and home to FSU and Florida A&M, it's pretty progressive politically and growth-wise and has been blue for decades.
Hamilton County, TN - Home of Chattanooga, enough said.
Macon County, NC - Home of Franklin & Highlands. This is one of the nicest Counties in the Southern Appalachians, with Highlands being one of the most desirable and affluent resort towns in the Southeast. Drop-dead gorgeous location, with average elevations above 4,000 feet and average Summer temps in the 70's.
Beaufort County, SC - This gorgeous Low Country County home to Beaufort & Hilton Head Island is directly across the Savannah River from Downtown Savannah, and is a natural extension of their Metro. Even though they share an Airport, of course the Census Bureau considers them as separate entities. The Great Santini & The Prince of Tides were largely filmed around Beaufort, giving a glimpse of the beauty there. Hilton Head is a well known second home, retirement & tourism hub.
Nassau County, FL - Home of Amelia Island and Fernandina Beach. This gorgeous island and very cool town is part of Metro Jacksonville, but feels like an extension of Georgia's coastal barrier islands more so than anything to its south within Florida.
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Originally Posted by LovinDecatur
Great list, JM. I might add Aiken County, SC as well; having beautiful Aiken, SC within our borders would be another feather in our cap.
And unfortunately, you would have to get through the oddly gerrymandered Jasper County, SC to stake your claim on Beaufort.
Yes, to all of these. Plus, Duval County, FL...home of Jacksonville, "The Capital of South Georgia."
Also, Lee County, AL (along with a sliver of Russell County to get all of Phenix City).
We would get Auburn U. and help out Metro Columbus.
Last edited by aries4118; 07-22-2017 at 12:41 PM..
St. Louis City, Missouri
St. Louis County, Missouri
St. Charles County, Missouri
Jefferson County, Missouri
Lake County, Indiana
I'm adding the majority of metro St. Louis to Illinois for a few reasons. First, St. Louis would likely see better policies under Illinois than Missouri. For all of Illinois' financial woes, its politicians are more so focused on cities rather than rural areas. St. Louis has been suffering for ages with Missouri's rural interest dominated legislature. Second, bringing St. Louis over to Illinois would unify the split metro area, as the Mississippi is currently serving as the state line. Third, metro St. Louis would be able to help serve as a counterweight to Chicago's dominance. St. Louis is obviously far smaller than Chicago, but there's no other metro region in Illinois that can compete with St. Louis' size, let alone Chicago's. It would do a far better job than what Illinois' cities have been able to do thus far.
As for Lake County, Indiana, I decided bringing it in so it could help better unify Chicagoland. It's not the most desirable area, but it could help bring additional focus to northwest Indiana that's currently sparse. When Chicagoans talk about their suburbs, Indiana, which actually borders the South Side, is almost never mentioned.
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