Alaska leads states in well-being

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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When it comes to well-being, Alaskans nabbed the top spot in the United States, according to an annual ranking.

West Virginia, however, came in dead last for the sixth time in six years, according to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.

Hawaii and South Dakota followed Alaska in spots two and three. And Kentucky stayed in the 49th spot, where it's been for a number of years.

The 2014 rankings, released Thursday, are based on over 176,000 phone interviews with people in all 50 states. The Index measures how people feel about and experience their daily lives, and looks at their health across five categories: purpose, social, financial, community and physical.

Over the past seven years, Alaska has ranked in the top 10 four times. And Alaskans are having a good year for a reason, according to Dan Witters, research director of the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.

"They do a lot of the blocking and tackling, as far as taking care of themselves and making good choices, but also demonstrating good holistic well-being in ways that extend beyond the conventional physical wellness," Witters said.

Interestingly, states with an overall low sense of well-being may not rank poorly in all five of the categories. For example, Louisiana (No. 40) ranked on the lowest end in social, financial, community and physical elements, but sense of purpose was comparable to states in the top 10.

"If you're an advocacy group, you're looking at areas where you can improve," says Ayman El-Mohandes, dean of the CUNY School of Public Health. "So you look at the overall ranking and the areas that stand out as worse than others (and) those are the areas that you focus your energies on."

While West Virginia remained stagnant, there were some shakeups in the rankings. North Dakota dropped from the first spot in 2013 to the 23rd spot in this year's list. Hawaii and Colorado are the only states that have placed in the top 10 every year since 2008.

El-Mohandes cautions that there's a lag between improvements made in the state and the perceptions of people who live there.

"If there is a general malaise about the economy in Kentucky or West Virginia, even if there are new projects and new investments, by the time those change the overall perception in the state, it might take a while," El-Mohandes says.

Top 10 states ranked highest for overall well-being:

1. Alaska
2. Hawaii
3. South Dakota
4. Wyoming
5. Montana
6. Colorado
7. Nebraska
8. Utah
9. New Mexico
10. Texas

The 10 states ranked lowest for overall well-being:

41. Missouri
42. Michigan
43. Arkansas
44. Tennessee
45. Alabama
46. Mississippi
47. Ohio
48. Indiana
49. Kentucky
50. West Virginia


Alaska leads states in well-being; West Virginia comes in last
 

Sal

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Sep 29, 2007
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Probably because all their industry has left taking all the good paying non government jobs with it.
ah, okay that would do it...thanks Tax...kind of like Ontario, although we are beginning to get our mojo back
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Vancouver Island
ah, okay that would do it...thanks Tax...kind of like Ontario, although we are beginning to get our mojo back

Most people don't like change. Especially when it is forced on them and it is not for the better. Very few people feel trapped or stuck in Alaska, they either like it there or leave. From what I have seen from the cutbacks if forestry in BC it takes about a generation before the majority become happy with the way things now are.
 

tay

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May 20, 2012
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Maybe it's also because Alaskans are Socialists preying on the Oil Industry..........








Nearly every Alaska resident will soon be $1,884 richer, thanks to an annual payout from an oil wealth trust fund that has been credited with keeping many low-income families out of poverty, state officials said on Wednesday.


More than 640,000 Alaska residents will receive the payment from The Alaska Permanent Fund next month, which Department of Revenue Commissioner Angela Rodell says is the third largest since the state began paying such sums in 1982 with a $1,000 check.
The sum is more than twice the $900 paid to each Alaska resident last year and more than the collective payments from each of the last two years. But it is still off from a high of $2,069 paid in 2008.


Alaska's Permanent Fund was established by a constitutional amendment passed by voters in 1976 requiring a portion of state oil revenues be put into a savings account to be available for the distant future, when North Slope oil fields are tapped out.


The annual direct payout to citizens, derived from a formula averaging the Permanent Fund earnings over a five-year period, is unique to Alaska, even though other jurisdictions have resource wealth funds.


This year's boost comes in part from dropping the dismal recession-driven 2009 figures from payment calculations. That fiscal year, the fund closed with a $29.9 billion balance, compared to $51.2 billion on June 30 of this year.






Alaska residents to get $1,884 payout from oil royalty fund | Reuters