Blue Mountain
Resident Skeptical Hobbit
I'm talking about nationally, across the board. The median household income is around $45,000, and has been for several years.
Where I live, people who work in some of these towns can't actually afford to live in them, so they have to drive 20-40 miles one way to work. Gas costs are a pretty big deal when you're spending up to $12 a day in gas. Add to that the fact that the yearly cost of living raises barely cover inflation plus the extra you have to pay into the insurance plan every week, and it is pretty obvious why a lot of people are living pretty close to the edge.
I was about to ask why people were driving 20-40 miles to work, until I noticed your comment about not being able to afford to live in the city in which they worked.
Now here's a strange thing. I have a brother living in Vancouver, which is not a cheap place to live. He's worked a series of odd jobs in the years since the steady job he had disappeared along with the company that provided it. But he's still living in Vancouver and doesn't even own a vehicle, relying instead on public transit to get around.
It it possible the people who are living 40 miles out of town are doing so because they don't want to lower their standard of living? Because they're so caught up in the "I must have a house and back yard" mentality that they can't think of any other way to live?
Part of my reason for asking is because I consider myself to be fortunate. I make better money than the median, live in Winnipeg (which is inexpensive) and have been able to find jobs that are within three kilometres of where I live. In the summer I ride a bicycle to work; in the winter I take transit or walk. So it's really outside of my experience to have to drive an hour or more to get to work. I can walk it in 40 minutes.