The Mercury News

In quality of life, study calls us Worst Coast

- By Karen D’Souza kdsouza@bayareanew­sgroup.com

California dreamin’? Flying in the face of traditiona­l wisdom that we live on the best coast comes a stinging new U.S. News & World Report study that says we have the worst quality of life in the nation.

The coveted Best States ranking is part of an annual study that scores all 50 states in eight categories — health care, education, economy, opportunit­y, infrastruc­ture, crime and correction­s, fiscal stability and most important of all for most of us, quality of life.

Sadly, California­ns are in the pits by this metric, with the Golden State taking last place at No. 50. North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, New Hampshire and South Dakota all kicked our butt

in that category, according to the study.

So what constitute­s quality of life if it’s not about access to majestic redwoods, sparkling purple sand beaches and an endless coastline? Don’t sunny skies count for anything anymore? Apparently sucking down acai and doing yoga no longer cuts it.

“In addition to a healthy environmen­t, a person’s quality of life is largely a result of their interactio­ns with those around them,” as the U.S. News & World Report editors put it. “Studies show that when people feel socially supported, they experience greater happiness, as well as physical and mental health.”

In case it makes you feel any better, California didn’t rank dead last in the overall rankings. We came in at No. 32 overall, although that’s well behind New Jersey (No. 19), Florida (No. 15) and Nebraska (No. 7). Ouch.

The bottom line? The state performed well in terms of its economy, coming in at No. 4 (hello, high-tech boom), but it fared terribly in categories such as citizen opportunit­y (No. 46) and fiscal stability (No. 43) in addition to the dreaded quality-of-life assessment (that scarring No. 50). Of course, as anyone who has tried to buy a house in the Bay Area knows, fiscal instabilit­y is basically our motto at this point.

And the winner of the best quality of life in the nation goes to — wait for it — Iowa. Give it up for the Hawkeye State. As USA Today noted, Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds had this to say on “CBS This Morning”: “Iowa truly is a place where if you work hard, dream big, anything is possible.”

Certainly that used to be how California­ns felt about the left coast, at least once upon a time.

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