Seattle/ Tacoma moves up from #12 to #11, ahead of Miami/ Fort Lauderdale.
$875,000+ for a 3-bedroom home in north Bothell, in the neighborhood I grew up in. Which was $200,000 20 years ago. Mind you, 1980s-built homes, not a new housing development, which pops up about as often as another rainstorm in Seattle.And the real estate market really shows it.
The Columbia Basin is both cheap to live in and excellent for radio - Moses Lake to Pasco being the best. Kennewick and Richland are meh. Better to live in Pasco or north of Pasco.$875,000+ for a 3-bedroom home in north Bothell, in the neighborhood I grew up in. Which was $200,000 20 years ago. Mind you, 1980s-built homes, not a new housing development, which pops up about as often as another rainstorm in Seattle.
That sums up one of several reasons why I will never return to western Washington. As a teacher, I'll be stuck in apartments at $1800-2000+ a month, and/or living in Gold Bar or Mt. Vernon just to drive into Edmonds / Everett / Northshore / Lake Washington schools. Even with starting salaries at $60K+ in some districts. That same house in West Yakima is $350,000 or less. Why bother, as I could save up for a few years and then buy that house on monthly payments! Lol!!! I'd have to win the Mega Millions or Lotto to buy back my old Bothell home.
Actually, Richland is even cheaper, and the population went up 25% from 2010 to 2020, shows you that many Seattleites and Californians are leaving in droves - and Hispanic immigrants also are continuing to move in/move up. Our own Seatownmedia lives out in Tri-Cities. The growth is enormous. New elementary schools are being built yearly! Too bad radio out there isn't too great (outside of 101.9 Hank FM).
Or south of Kennewick. Anywhere outside the immediate Pasco-Kennewick-Richland area is good for DX. E-skips will wipe out local translators if you get far enough away from Badger Mtn. or Joe Butte.DX has mostly taken a backseat to real life. It's more affordable in eastern WA and north ID. Less traffic in many places, albeit last Friday's jaunt in Wenatchee did not prove that. Yikes, the traffic has gotten crazy in that town! A constant stream of cars on South Wenatchee Ave and along Hwy 28 in East Wenatchee on a Friday afternoon. Almost like Bothell-Everett Hwy!
In terms of school districts, Kennewick and Richland are great for what they are, and the growth is tremendous, leading to more opportunities for me as more elementary schools open. Pasco is OK. If I am begging for a DX-friendly location, I can always commute from Benton City or Mesa.
Yes, huge growth just between the time I moved back here in 2015 to today. I believe it is the fastest growing metro in Washington State. I tend to agree radio is not great here, but atleast there is KONA 610 which makes a good attempt at being local. It kinda ends there however.$875,000+ for a 3-bedroom home in north Bothell, in the neighborhood I grew up in. Which was $200,000 20 years ago. Mind you, 1980s-built homes, not a new housing development, which pops up about as often as another rainstorm in Seattle.
That sums up one of several reasons why I will never return to western Washington. As a teacher, I'll be stuck in apartments at $1800-2000+ a month, and/or living in Gold Bar or Mt. Vernon just to drive into Edmonds / Everett / Northshore / Lake Washington schools. Even with starting salaries at $60K+ in some districts. That same house in West Yakima is $350,000 or less. Why bother, as I could save up for a few years and then buy that house on monthly payments! Lol!!! I'd have to win the Mega Millions or Lotto to buy back my old Bothell home.
Actually, Richland is even cheaper, and the population went up 25% from 2010 to 2020, shows you that many Seattleites and Californians are leaving in droves - and Hispanic immigrants also are continuing to move in/move up. Our own Seatownmedia lives out in Tri-Cities. The growth is enormous. New elementary schools are being built yearly! Too bad radio out there isn't too great (outside of 101.9 Hank FM).
That, and percentages can be deceiving. If you have ten people living in a town, and ten new move in?You are missing metro populations.
That's when I would begin planning the metropolitan subway system.That, and percentages can be deceiving. If you have ten people living in a town, and ten new move in?