Which U.S. Cities Are the Safest?
When it comes to finding a new city to call home, few considerations are more important than safety — whether it’s from crime, dangerous weather or even a shaky economy.
To find the most and least safe places in the United States, a new study by WalletHub scored 182 cities (including at least two of the largest in each state) across three categories of metrics. The “home and community safety” category examined crime statistics, police and rescue workers per capita, traffic and pedestrian safety, among other data. “Financial safety” scored each city on employment, job security, credit ratings, savings rates and the like. And the “natural disaster” category considered the risk of floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, hail, hurricanes and wildfires.
Drilling down to some individual metrics helps paint a clearer picture. In the home and community safety category, Irvine, Calif., was found to have the fewest assaults per capita, though its heightened risk of natural disasters dropped it to 33rd overall. On the other end of the list, Little Rock, Ark., St. Louis, Detroit, Birmingham, Ala., Kansas City, Mo., and Memphis tied for the most assaults per capita — 86 times higher than in Irvine.
For natural disasters, the capital city of Dover, Del. — near the coast but tucked inland — had the lowest risk, but poor scores in home and financial safety sank it to 81st overall. Two cities in “Tornado Alley,” Oklahoma City and Wichita, Kan., had the highest risks for natural disasters, followed by six cities in California. The good news for Wichita is that its residents were found to have the highest rate of emergency savings.
As for New York City, it finished 137th overall, thanks mostly to its comparative dearth of natural disasters. This week’s chart shows some of the winners and losers, along with the categories that helped or hurt them.
To rank U.S. cities on safety, a study compiled metrics across three categories: home and community, financial, and natural disaster risk. The highest and lowest ranking cities, and the category that most helped or hurt each, are shown.
Most Safe
Least Safe
Nashua, N.H.
Columbia, Md.
South Burlington, Vt.
Gilbert, Ariz.
Warwick, R.I.
Portland, Maine
Casper, Wyo.
Yonkers, N.Y.
Burlington, Vt.
Scottsdale, Ariz.
Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles
Oklahoma City
Memphis
Oakland, Calif.
Detroit
Baton Rouge, La.
San Bernardino, Calif.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
St. Louis
8th for home and community, and financial safety
1st for home and community safety
1st for financial safety
10th for home and community safety
9th for home and community safety
2nd for financial safety
11th for financial safety
4th for home and community safety
10th for financial safety
17th for home and community safety
180th for home and community safety
176th for home and community safety
173rd for natural disaster safety
182nd for financial safety
175th for home and community safety
181st for financial safety
182nd for home and community safety
181st for home and community safety
169th for home and community safety
178th for home and community safety
Most Safe
Nashua, N.H.
Columbia, Md.
South Burlington, Vt.
Gilbert, Ariz.
Warwick, R.I.
Portland, Maine
Casper, Wyo.
Yonkers, N.Y.
Burlington, Vt.
Scottsdale, Ariz.
8th for home and community, and financial safety
1st for home and community safety
1st for financial safety
10th for home and community safety
9th for home and community safety
2nd for financial safety
11th for financial safety
4th for home and community safety
10th for financial safety
17th for home and community safety
Least Safe
Washington D.C.
Los Angeles
Oklahoma City
Memphis
Oakland, Calif.
Detroit
Baton Rouge, La.
San Bernardino, Calif.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
St. Louis
180th for home and community safety
176th for home and community safety
173rd for natural disaster safety
182nd for financial safety
175th for home and community safety
181st for financial safety
182nd for home and community safety
181st for home and community safety
169th for home and community safety
178th for home and community safety
Source: WalletHub
By The New York Times
For weekly email updates on residential real estate news, sign up here.
……Read full article on The New York Times-Real Estate
Other
Comments
Leave a comment in Nestia App