Sacramento@California
Sacramento, California was once for many just a cow town. Then it was a near-metropolis, especially, for some reason, for incoming hordes of Indians (Hindus, not Native Americans, that is). Now it is a booming potential of promise and industry and progress.
Sacramento, California was already a popular city, having a profound history and being the capital of the state. But with the Bay Area being the fourth-richest area in the nation, the cost of living and especially of housing sent people caravanning further east. In the ten-year period of 1990 and 2000, for example, the immigration from Bay Area residents and Asians, Central Americans, Fijians, Indians, and Ukrainians—passing word that affordable housing could be had there, as well as jobs—the population sprouted by 14.7 percent.
In 1996, for example, the cost of a one-family unit was only 85,000. By 2005, though the price increased to about 125k, the cost of home-buying was still relatively cheaper. As well, the employment was growing in industries such as education, health, and social services, public administration, and professional, scientific, and management fields as well as retail, all of which employ sixty percent of the population (of almost a half a million people) who live and work in the city of Sacramento, California. Of the other forty percent, about eight percent are unemployed and the rest work outside of Sacramento, California, commuting short distances of an average of no more than twenty-four minutes.
The crime is not absurdly high, but it is comparatively existent, yet the racial disharmony of many cities is reputedly low and of comparatively lower incidence. And the weather is on the higher/hotter ends, as opposed to the ever-popular temperate Bay Area weather. But the activities, the events, and the sites and environment, also affordable, make Sacramento, California a lovely place for families on the weekends and even tourists and visitors year-round: people can visit and tour everything from the Old Sacramento Railroad Museum(s) to the Sacramento Convention Center; and, as is typically of any burgeoning city, can sample cuisines of multiple tastes, shop in many stores, malls, and discount outlets, and play or watch sports of modest renown.
And with a reputation for being home base for the founding of such monoliths as the Central Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroads or being birthplace of or home to such greats as Mark Twain (who wrote for the paper way back when), Joan Didion, Stephen Robinson, Brie Larson, and Sam Elliott, Sacramento continues to be the epicenter of politics, engaging activity, and affordable living.
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