Moving to Las Vegas

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People still want to move to Las Vegas despite housing prices that have nearly doubled in just three years. People also claim they can’t find affordable apartments, and long commutes are becoming the rule.

Read Wild Bill's latest column by going to the RX home page at www.therx.com

Charlie
 

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Wild Bill is moving from Reno to Las Vegas, so I think he just wanted to share his experiences with the posters about what was happening in the Las Vegas area.


Charlie
 

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Just got back from Vegas. First thing I heard was the Crime rate has grown greatly, even rating LV as #1.
 

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My former house in Vegas that I sold as nearly doubled in value since I sold it three years ago.

It was the best money I ever blew!!

:howdy: .......so long Vegas!
 

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Dante said:
I love las vegas....Wish I could move there
Sure you feel that way, you have never spent any long extended period of time there.

As they say, great great place to visit, terrible place to live..........nothing could be more true to this observer.
 

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Bought a modest 3 bedroom, 2.5 bathroom home in Green Valley in 1989 for $90,000. Current market value is well over $400,000. At that time approximately 3/4 million people lived in the Las Vegas valley with approximately 6000 people per month moving there, with 80% of those being Californians liquidating their own properties at much higher prices and buying property either outright or with little down as the loans were so small. Today, over 2 million people live in the valley and I'm told expectations are that it may reach 3 million as 8000 to 10,000 people per month are still moving in. Every time I visit, Las Vegas looks more and more like an extension of Los Angeles. Smog, water shortage, crime. Everything one would expect from a major city with a population of this size. Think long and hard before moving there for any long term basis.
 

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Ted,


I also live in the Green Valley area (right by Green Valey Ranch casino) and I like it a lot (except the three association fees).

I bought a house here in 1999 for $119,000 and it has more than doubled in value.

Do you still live in this area? If you would like to e-mail me at editor@therx.com maybe we can get together for a drink.

Charlie
 

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Charlie Maxwell said:
Ted,


I also live in the Green Valley area (right by Green Valey Ranch casino) and I like it a lot (except the three association fees).

I bought a house here in 1999 for $119,000 and it has more than doubled in value.

Do you still live in this area? If you would like to e-mail me at editor@therx.com maybe we can get together for a drink.

Charlie
be careful here Charile is a ladies man so any ladies that email him Be very careful of his moves I have seen this guy in action...women hanging all over him
 
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Dante,


That is especially true when I go to the Crazy Horse with a stack of $20's

Charlie
 

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Charlie Maxwell said:
Dante,


That is especially true when I go to the Crazy Horse with a stack of $20's

Charlie
:biglaugh: charlie at the next RX bash 05 in ..im going with you this time :think:
 

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Charlie:

I no longer live in the Las Vegas area as I returned to the SF Bay Area where I was born and raised and finished my career and retired 6 years ago. I do visit once or twice a year to check on my properties and could get together with you on my next visit. Nothing is planned at the moment. Considering this November and if not sometime in the spring, like March or April. I try to avoid the heat of the summer between June through September.
 

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Fishhead said:
Sure you feel that way, you have never spent any long extended period of time there.

As they say, great great place to visit, terrible place to live..........nothing could be more true to this observer.
I lived in Las Vegas for two years. I loved it. I thought the people were friendly and my wife and I made a lot of friends there. We lived in a very average neighborhood but had some of the best neighbors in any city I've lived in.

I also loved the fact that I could eat at a buffet every night for about the same as it would cost me in groceries. We ate out often. And not for the all you can eat, gorge yourself, reasons. I loved being able to eat healthy with lots of fruit and vegetables every meal - something that I lack when I fix my own meals. And having a baby, it is incredibly easier to eat out with lots of variety (for the picky eater) and let them clean up the mess.

I loved the station properties and had almost a free standing comped movie pass at Sunset whenever I wanted. (I paid for that through the years however).

I loved going out to the clubs. We had a lot of fun. Everyone there had a vacation attitude (obviously) and wanted to enjoy themselves, as opposed to seeing the same people every night out elsewhere.

The weather was fantastic for the most part. Sure a couple months are unbearable, but they make for the most perfect nights - and it beats living in the snow and cold.

I admit we stayed mostly off the strip, but it was great when you wanted a night out to have so many options. I've seen almost every show on the strip. Barley's was a great local place to hang out - some good pizza, nice people, and great beer. Lots of good microbreweries.

I loved the football contests, the nice 24 hour gym by my house, grocery shopping at 2am when I wasn't squeezing down aisles and bumping into people like 5pm in other cities. The airport was close by, family and friends always wanted to visit, there are some great parks, a good jogging trail by the house, a nice dogpark, and plenty more.

We were a hop and jump from Red Rock Canyon and it's great hiking and scenery. We spent many days at Lake Mead renting a boat and exploring the miles of shoreline. And when we tired of all that, we headed to Mt. Charleston and went skiing or just hiking and more beatiful scenery. We were 5 hours from Phoenix, LA, and the Grand Canyon.

A job too good to pass up brought me reluctantly to Phoenix, but I still get up there on the occasional weekend. I will eventually retire there as long as I can afford a good condo.

Oh, and I didn't even mention the great golf. I wish I had made more opportunity of the courses there.

To each his own I guess. I have only fond memories.
 

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this is my second go round here in las vegas and i will never leave again....born and raised in kansas,lived in texas for 19 years, here for 3 and north carolina for 3 and was never so happy to get back here in my life....bought a house 2 years ago when the market started to get out of control, for 170,000 with 3 car garage swimming pool and jacuzzi in the back yard,1800 square ft. 3 bed 2 bath modest home....was offered 350,000 about a month ago....can't replace it for that....so just sitting on the equity...my wife and i both have good jobs...go out about 1 or 2 a week and have fun with the friends etc....belong to a group on friday nites play cards and eat and drink...bet on sports at the drive thru sports book....what else is there in life......remember it doesn't matter where you live...it's what you make out of where you live.....long live friends and happiness....come to vegas and enjoy all the fun there is to had....thanks for your time...jeffksu....keep it real....:heh:
 

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I don't buy many of the points made in the original article.

Traffic? I have lived in or made numerous visits to Chicago, New York and LA. No way Vegas is in the same league in terms of bad traffic. Cleveland and Boston are also much worse. Been here 24 years now, before the 95 went further southeast than Eastern, and the major traffic improvements made in these 24 years have kept up with much of the increased traffic - the spaghetti bowl improvements, extension and improvements of 95, the new 215, the DI arterial, the pedestrian walkovers on the major strip intersections. It takes me the same time to get to work from SE Vegas (near green valley) to West of the Strip now as it did 24 years ago. Don't have to wait for trains on Spring Mountain anymore, either. Some good shortcuts available if you use the New Frank Sinatra drive, Industrial, and other off strip N-S roads.

Both my kids grew up and went to school here, k-12. Nevada does not rank in the top half of national education surveys, but believe me, in comparing what most of my friends and relatives have gone through, Vegas education is average at worst. And with a little creativity with zone variances, you can do very well here in the public school system. Both my kids got into their first choice of colleges - ASU and USC.

The kids did scouts, little league, dancing classes, community theater, ice/roller skating, camping (at Mt Charleston and other sites within 60 to 90 minutes), visits to the Lake (Meade), attented religious services and programs, just like any other community. When they were younger, we had three parks within 10 minutes drive, two playgrounds within walking distance, and lots of free/cheap activities at both City and County Centers plus UNLV and the community college.
There are a couple of regular posters who are always badmouthing Vegas on this site. And they make broad statements about crime rates. Yes, Vegas does very poorly on some of these rankings, but when you look deeper into the stats, they often are skewed by the high number of tourists and transients that reside here. The worst of the transients are in a few bad areas of town (yes, we have them) and the tourists really should be added to our overall population base, and when they are counted in that way, Vegas rankings are not as bad.

This place is not perfect and is not for everybody. But most of the broad negative statements made by other posters are addressing the worst parts of town or are way more negative than reality.
 

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Bromo- I REALLY miss those things about Vegas...........really.

I went to Red Rock or Mt. Charleston once a week on average..............the food at Stations for free is great........Barleys is terriffic............the football contests were great.

You definetly knew the good side of Vegas.........and actually, I miss it alot.
 

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It's refreshing to see some positive feedback about life in Las Vegas. I lived in San Diego for 28 years so this place has been especially hard to swallow. My wife likes it here and that's all that really matters in my life.

and ...


It's finally cooling off.
 

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