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Originally Posted by reggiewuf
Not sure were you get your false info but the Fayetteville metro is Cumberland, Harnett and Hoke counties with Harnett county being the only county added recently. That's what heavily skews the growth numbers of the metro area. Northern Harnett county is influenced by Raleigh not Fayetteville but who cares. Your numbers are so far off base it not even funny. I'm not going to argue with someone who disagrees with fact based numbers and acts like off the wall numbers out of somebodies head are the gospel. BTW, Raleigh's metro is growing so fast Harnett county will be made up in no time and hardly made a difference anyway.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fayett...ropolitan_area
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Good morning Reginald,
I'll go ahead and give you a few lessons for todays class on the difference between a metropolitan statistical area and combined statistical area and how it relates to Fayetteville and the rest of North Carolina.
Fayetteville's MSA consists of Harnett, Hoke, and Cumberland counties
No, Harnett County in its entirety severely leans towards Fayetteville, which is the reason for the change. There is much more growth in southern Harnett than northern Harnett, hence there are more schools in southern Harnett, including a three new ones recently constructed.
Fayetteville's CSA consists of Cumberland, Harnett, Hoke, Moore, Lee, Robeson, and Scotland counties.
Previously, Moore, Lee, and Harnett were all a part of either the Raleigh MSA or the Raleigh-Durham CSA, also known as the Research Triangle. Now they are not, due to those counties having a higher economic drawl and larger number of commuters into the CSA's major principle city, which is Fayetteville.
I'm going out for coffee with a few friends on this beautiful Pittsburgh day (low 50's), and I'd hope you do the same, although I'd recommend a good lunch for you, maybe that's the reason you're so angry and bitter.
With love.