The Mid-Hudson Bridge in Poughkeepsie.
The Mid-Hudson Bridge in Poughkeepsie. Credit: David Morris Cunningham

An enormous sign with bold red letters reads EMERGENCY, pointing the way to the local ER. A small group of police officers lean on the hood of their vehicle, all staring off in different directions. One officer is either using a walkie-talkie or eating a sandwichโ€”the photo makes it hard to tell. Thereโ€™s an orange traffic cone poking into the foreground. This was the image chosen to represent the city of Poughkeepsie on Forbesโ€™s 2013 list of Americaโ€™s Most Miserable Cities.

The caption reads:

#18
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
Poughkeepsie residents must endure crummy weather and long commutes to work. Their average commute of 31.9 minutes is the sixth highest in the U.S. Property tax rates are also onerous.

While cities like Detroit and Chicago have repeatedly appeared on the Forbes list in previous years, 2013 marked the first year that Poughkeepsie earned the dubious distinction of being recognized as one of Americaโ€™s most miserable metropolitan areas. When the Forbes list and accompanying slideshow went live in late February, town officials were, predictably, peeved.

Dutchess County Executive Mark Molinaro called up the Poughkeepsie Journal to weigh in on the ranking. In an article responding to the Most Miserable list, Molinaro said, “Forbes ought to get its story and act together because the inconsistency at best is ridiculous, and at worst, damages the image of a robust and vibrant community. If there was a methodology, it is severely flawed.โ€

The Forbes list methodology is based on an original Misery Index that economist Arthur Okun developed in the 1960s. While Okun quantified the misery of nations based on unemployment and inflation, Forbesโ€™s own misery-o-meter is based on city-specific economic and social data collected by national and local governments.

Kurt Badenhausen, the Forbes reporter tasked with churning out the annual Most Miserable list, says that the magazineโ€™s preferred misery metrics have evolved consistently over the six years that this list has been published. This year, the rankings were determined based on rates of violent crime, unemployment, foreclosures, property taxes, commute times, and weather. โ€œWeโ€™re looking for data thatโ€™s comparable across cities,โ€ he says. โ€œAnd over the years weโ€™ve changed the metrics to some degree.โ€ Some past metrics, like local sports team performance, were removed for the 2013 rankings; some new metrics, like net migration, were added on. But Badenhausen stressed that the point of the list wasnโ€™t to slam cities ruthlessly. โ€œWeโ€™re trying to create a conversation amongst our readers,โ€ he says.

The list certainly sparked conversations in Poughkeepsie, some of which may have been surprising to the Forbes editors. For instance, regular Forbes readers couldnโ€™t help but notice that even though Poughkeepsie was listed as a miserable city in February 2013, the very same magazine had listed Poughkeepsie as one of the countryโ€™s Best Cities for Raising a Family in April 2012, only a little over a year earlier. For that list, Poughkeepsie is represented by a photo of the gleaming Walkway Over the Hudson, accompanied by the glib, glossy caption โ€œCosts are high, but so are incomes. And the crime rate is one of the countryโ€™s lowest.โ€

People in Poughkeepsie couldnโ€™t help but wonder, what gives?

Badenhausen didnโ€™t seem particularly fazed by the list overlap. It all comes down to the statistics you choose to look at, he explained. โ€œItโ€™s a question of different things being measured,โ€ he said, comparing the metrics used for the Best Cities for Raising a Family and Most Miserable lists. โ€œTheyโ€™re looking at housing affordability, and theyโ€™re looking at commuting too, but theyโ€™re looking at commuting delays. We looked at average commute times.โ€

In other words, both lists took commuting into account as a quality of life metric in some wayโ€”but one painted a positive picture of the average Poughkeepsie commute, while the other was used as an example of the areaโ€™s misery. The average Poughkeepsie residentโ€™s commute time is 31.9 minutes, over five minutes more than the national average of 25.4 minutes. In that sense, Poughkeepsie commuters are plain miserable. But the delays faced by the average Poughkeepsie commuter are low (perhaps because many commuters take the train), which contributed to Poughkeepsieโ€™s positive ranking on the Best Places to Raise a Family list last year. When you create a happiness or misery index for an area, each category of data you consider is going to be multifaceted. Which of those facets you choose to consider can completely transform your results.

In fact, when Leonard Nevarez, a sociology professor at Vassar College in miserable old Poughkeepsie, initially saw the Forbes Most Miserable Cities list, his first thought was that Poughkeepsieโ€™s unfavorable ranking had to do with misconstrued data on commuting. โ€œI read it as, โ€˜Oh this is a function of average commute time,โ€™โ€ said Nevarez. But thereโ€™s a much bigger picture to consider. โ€œMy personal take is that itโ€™s maybe a little unfair, because thatโ€™s clearly influenced by how many people take the trainโ€ฆ I donโ€™t take the train, so I canโ€™t personally speak to how miserable it is, but having lived in LA where I drove for significant amounts of time, I know itโ€™s a different type of commute, perhaps not as strenuous.โ€

Nevarez has spent time studying โ€œbest/worst place to liveโ€ literature in a sociological context, and is familiar with what these lists aspire and sometimes fail to accomplish, as well as the data โ€œcherry-pickingโ€ that can affect results. He sees the value in best/worst city lists, but also stressed that itโ€™s important, as readers, to maintain a healthy skepticism of broad, facile rankings like Forbesโ€™ Best Cities for Raising a Family and Most Miserable Cities lists.

โ€œThese titlesโ€”happiest place, or best place to raise a family or most miserableโ€”theyโ€™re not really scientific. They donโ€™t withhold scrutiny too much,โ€ he said. He explained that as journalism erodes in the new age of the โ€œlisticle,โ€ major publications are often on the lookout for content like best/worst cities lists, which are fast and easy to produce. โ€œThey can be done now from your computer on an Excel spreadsheet. Then you canโ€”on the basis of what is still an objective if not totally valid ranking of particular indicatorsโ€” then you can just go to town in how you choose to write and interpret this data,โ€ he said.

In Poughkeepsie, officials and locals alike had a major gripe about the interpretation and presentation of data on the Most Miserable Cities list: the area that Forbes called โ€œPoughkeepsieโ€ isnโ€™t really Poughkeepsie at all. The geographic region Forbes defines as Poughkeepsie is in fact a patchy mรฉlange of disparate districts. To generate the list, Badenhausen et al use statistics collected for government-defined โ€œmetro statistical areas.โ€ Basically, that means that the broader region technically referred to as the Poughkeepsie-Newburgh-Middletown Metropolitan Statistical Area was simply called Poughkeepsie for the purposes of Badenhausenโ€™s article.

John Davis, a local news and features reporter at the Poughkeepsie Journal, wrote a response piece to the Forbes listโ€”โ€œResidents Outraged by โ€˜Most Miserableโ€™ Rating.โ€ He said that the residents he interviewed were unhappy with the way the data appears lumped together for a sprawling area. โ€œThe identification they were using was really broad,โ€ Davis explained. โ€œNewburgh is a lot worse off than Poughkeepsie in almost every standard of living, and Middletown is a different city tooโ€ฆto classify that whole area as Poughkeepsie is really absurd.โ€ As for the point of his own response article in the Poughkeepsie Journal, Davis said, โ€œI think the whole point was to show how ridiculous that isโ€ฆit was kind of a light-hearted thing to me. It wasnโ€™t anything serious. It was just this magazine making these very subjective judgments, and the criteria were so overly broad that it really does seem unfair to Poughkeepsie.โ€

So, at the end of the day, how credible is a misery index methodology like Forbesโ€™? Is it possible to quantify the misery of a geographic region? Whatโ€™s the point of putting together a Most Miserable Cities list in the first place?

Nevarez has weighed some of these questions in his own research. He said that from the perspective of the magazine these lists are great. In addition to being easy to produce, thereโ€™s a clear public interest in best/worst city lists. Stories like these are compulsively shareable; when your city is ranked as one of the happiest in America, or one of the best places to raise a family, youโ€™re going to want to post it on your Facebook wall. Likewise, Forbesโ€™ Most Miserable Cities list garnered a relatively large amount of attention on social media platforms, with over 2,700 retweets and 21,100 Facebook shares.

Best/worst city lists can also reflect revealingly on a growing phenomenon of โ€œconsuming places.โ€ Like travel channels or regional magazines, Nevarez says that best/worst city lists imply a society with new levels of choice in where to live and travel. โ€œI find it fascinating that people are just consuming all these lists,โ€ said Nevarez. โ€œEveryone is consuming places, trying them on in their imaginationโ€ฆ people used to have less choice in the kinds of places they live in and places they visited; people picked from a smaller array of choices.โ€

Nevarez doesnโ€™t see best/worst places to live as fluffy or useless, though he does take them with a grain of salt. โ€œItโ€™s a valid, useful practice insofar as it conveys a lot of complex information very quickly,โ€ he said. โ€œBut itโ€™s not clear to me that everyone knows how to read them so critically.โ€ Moreover, he said, lists like Forbesโ€™s can begin to shape the discourse about a city, which can be worrisome.

So, how will Poughkeepsie fare in the wake of its takedown on Forbesโ€™s Most Miserable list this year?

โ€œI suspect that Poughkeepsie is gonna live this one down. It has a larger set of issues,โ€ Nevarez said. According to him, the main thing to keep in mind about using a listโ€”Forbesโ€™s or anyoneโ€™sโ€” to determine a regionโ€™s quality of life is that โ€œtheyโ€™re maybe the first wordโ€”not the last word.โ€

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1 Comment

  1. I find it astonishing that the author would shove Poughkeepsie, Middleton and Newburgh together. Did he, in his intense statistical analysis perchance look upon a map, or better yet actually visit these places? Did he somehow miss how the foreclosure numbers and crime rates in Newburgh are worse? Did some special interest group pay this guy off to write this list? Poughkeepsie has so much to offer (I grew up there so am obviously partial). There is access to four different colleges; two major hospitals; lots of culture and a diverse population; lots of beautiful parks and churches; there is a night life and a vast array of bars, restaurants and art galleries to choose from-a lot more than the chain box stores in hundreds of towns throughout the country; centrally located for transport and so easy to visit so much of the Hudson Valley from here. Also, the city of Poughkeepsie is a much better place to sit in the grass than the rest of Dutchess County-with lower rates of lyme disease in the city. Finally, the place has a rich history and a lot more soul than those Posh Westchester cities and places like Greenwich, Connecticut. I would take a genuine smile as I walk along the sidewalk over a sterile uptighty whitey hood anyday.

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