From Deseret News archives:
Quit sniping at suburbanites improve Salt Lake City
I wish I had the same affection for the neighborhood. There were two homicides on our street while we lived there. One night, there was a crack bust in the rental units across the street. A few times, we found drug paraphernalia on our lawn, and once our house was burglarized.
When we bought the house, we understood that the neighborhood was a mixed bag. As first homes go, there are few homes I've visited since that had as much charm. It produced a healthy windfall when we decided to sell it and move outside the city. The good outweighed the bad, by far.
As much as my husband and I enjoyed living so close to work, we knew as soon as our first child neared school age that we wouldn't be in our starter home for the long haul. It's one thing to handle the challenges of urban living as an adult, but we couldn't ask the same of our children. With a child about to enter kindergarten and another on the way, we decided we had to move. The decision was largely driven by the quality of the public schools in our area.
We landed in the suburbs where there are excellent schools and we could buy a lot more house for the money. Most important, our neighborhood is safe.
The trade-off has been giving up a five-minute commute for a 20-minute drive each way. It wouldn't have been my first choice, but when we made the decision to move, the pieces didn't fall together as we had envisioned. The good schools that happened to be in a neighborhood we could afford weren't in Salt Lake City proper.
So I've become one of the "unwashed heathens" I've heard talk of in recent weeks. The difference is, I commute into the city from the south instead of the north. Like my friends from Davis County, I'm using city resources while I work, although some of that is offset by the sales tax I pay when I shop or eat here.
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