Oregon
Related: About this forumWhat it like living in Eugene?
I'm flying out for a job interview and I really don't know much about the livability of the city. I have a wife and 10-year old so I'll need decent public schools.
I'm moving from a small southern city where one's dollar goes far. Cost of living set Eugene at 35% more than where I currently live but housing seems off the chart even for I would consider low end starter homes.
I really like the idea of living in more liberal city and state.
jalan48
(14,394 posts)The schools are ok. Unfortunately, citizens don't vote for the school levies like they should. Eugene is a very liberal/progressive town which I like. It's a clean town with good water and ok air-it's in a valley which can get kinda smoggy in the summer but nothing like LA, Seattle, etc. I think it's a great place for kids, lots to do with the U of O here. I hope you enjoy your stay.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)I'm staying at a hotel on the western edge of the university area. Is that walking distance to interesting downtown venues?
How is mass transportation within the city? Out to the burbs? The business is near the university.
Shrike47
(6,913 posts)Remember, no sales tax. That helps but yes, housing is expensive. Oregon has strict laws about development, which is one reason it's so beautiful, but it does drive up the cost of living.
May here is the most beautiful thing... I moved here in the 70's and never wanted to leave.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)might price me out.
I just don't want my family to feel like their standard of living is going down while I make a career move.
WheelWalker
(9,200 posts)You'll be welcome
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)Thank you.
DreamGypsy
(2,252 posts)We moved from the Palo Alto California area in 1991 to a 60 acre parcel about 5 miles east of Springfield that included a 350 sq ft cottage (1920's vintage). We lived in the cottage for about 18 months while designing and building a house. No kids. Both my wife and I were able to commute (Colorado and California) and telecommute for our jobs. We planted blueberries as a commercial crop on 30 acres (~42,000 bushes). We are both semi-retired now.
Eugene and Springfield are, for most intents and purposes, one town. Lane County Transit District provides reasonable bus service in and between the two towns, and to outlying towns to the north, south, east, and west. Springfield is viewed a bit as the working class cousin of Eugene, the university town, but neither stereotype really holds up. Median house value in Eugene (from Zillow) is $237,300, expected to rise 3.1% within the next year; value for Springfield (from Zillow) is $188,100, rising 3.3% in a year. Median sale prices are $243,302 (Eugene) and $204,465 (Springfield). I can't give you a comparison of school quality, but I am sure you can find some info online. Good restaurants and brew pubs galore in the two towns.
Easy access to the coast and to the mountains. If you miss the 'big city', Portland is only 2 hours away.
Good luck with your job opportunity and your prospective move.
- DG
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)I'm very impresssed.
Thank you for the helpful information.
marble falls
(62,063 posts)so we'll be moving to Springfield, more of a blue collar hippy town. We were pretty impressed with Oregon, there ARE pockets of RW gun crazies, but having been in Texas for the last twenty years, I foresee very little problem living around them.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)Thank you.
marble falls
(62,063 posts)gardens produce so much in quantity and variety. In the whole of Oregon, I've never ever been anywhere else in the US where motorists are so considerate of pedestrians and drivers do not tailgate.
I better stop - I'm starting to gush! I love Oregon.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)I'm sure I will be taken out for drinks and beer will be the drink of choice, but I've always been a low-brow beer drinker. I'm a Miller High Life kind of guy. When I feel like splurging I get Moosehead or maybe a Peroni. Yeah, I'm a lager guy.
Is there a Eugene or Oregon lager that anyone can recommend? I don't want to diss the local beers.
The google provided some useful info:
At least I won't appear as a complete neophyte with these three requests.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)It seems like everyone in Portland wears black. Maybe dark gray for variety.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)The hotel says this is normal winter rainy weather that y'all get from late fall to spring.
Everyone I've met so far has been very nice. Had dinner with a prospective colleague and I'm excited about the all day interview tomorrow (8am to 4 pm).
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)I'm sitting in a tea house nursing a pot of English breakfast tea and feeling really great about this job prospect, the community, the politics, and a bright future (metaphorically speaking of course because it's been a wee bit cloudy and rainy).
I may not get this job, but it's been a nice visit.
You have a great thing in Eugene.
PasadenaTrudy
(3,998 posts)I'm an aging hippie, so I fit in. Housing is so cheap, too, compared to L.A. Not sure if I will retire there, it's a possibility. I'd just rent if I did.
aikoaiko
(34,202 posts)The people I met from California all talked about how cheap housing is in Eugene, but its 35-50% more than where I live.
I just need to factor that in if I move there.