Community Corner

1 MA Town Among Money’s 50 Best Places To Live

There is a college in this Massachusetts community, but locals will surely tell you it's more than just a college town.

The report is based on data on such things as the health of the job market, average housing costs, the percentage of residents living in poverty and the quality of public schools, as well as reader polls.
The report is based on data on such things as the health of the job market, average housing costs, the percentage of residents living in poverty and the quality of public schools, as well as reader polls. (Christine Charnosky/Patch)

NORTHAMPTON, MA — One Massachusetts town is among the 50 Best Places to Live in America, according to a recent report from Money.

Money said the 50 places on the list, released earlier this month, offer affordability, good schools and strong job markets, and are places with “a palpable spirit, nurtured and sustained by engaged citizens and receptive public officials.”

In a departure from previous years, Money did not rank the places but instead grouped them into five categories highlighting their strengths: suburbs with soul, best-kept secrets, new boomtowns, not just college towns, and culture hubs.

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In Massachusetts, Northampton was recognized as more than just a college town. As locals already know, Money said the vibrant art scene, beautiful scenery and copious activities, coupled with the college atmosphere, make Northampton a great place to call home for more than four years.

Collectively, the cities and towns on the list are a “blueprint for the future,” Money said.

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The report is based on data on such things as the health of the job market, average housing costs, the percentage of residents living in poverty and the quality of public schools, as well as reader polls. But, the editors acknowledged, things that make a town or a city worth living in can’t always be quantified.

To expand the report, Money also considered a breadth of research from public policy and advocacy groups, such as the American Planning Association, Brookings, Main Street America and the Project for Public Spaces, supplemented by data from Moody’s Analytics, SchoolDigger, Realtor.com, the St. Louis Federal Reserve, the U.S. Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and others.

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