I will send you NH real estate listings
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Replying to @MorlockP @squirrelspcsuit
send them to
@selentelechia she's probably the one to influence1 reply 0 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @eigenrobot @selentelechia
Tell me what you want in a house. Close to city? In? Rural? Bedrooms? Fancy kitchen? Other?
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Replying to @MorlockP @selentelechia
probably at least an acre of land, close enough to a city to go shopping 1/week and have some neighbors, probably 5+ bedrooms we could probably build the house if we could find a good open lot i think all of this subject to selene's approval
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Replying to @eigenrobot @MorlockP
within 40 minutes of a moderately-sized city, some amount of land (1+ acres would be nice?) could do small town with a city within an hour, if the place was otherwise excellent same feelings about building a place if there was a decent plot of land in a pleasant location
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Sounds like you want Pittsburgh, and I don't just say that because I'm a native Pittsburgher, and they take your card away if you don't shoehorn a paean to its virtue into every even remotely relevant conversation.
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Replying to @JayGSlater @selentelechia and
If you start in front of the tallest building in the city and drive 40 minutes north, west, or east, you're into farm country. And yet, we punch above our weight in city amenities, because of all the steel baron philanthropy from back in the day.
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Replying to @JayGSlater @selentelechia and
Winters can be cold, but we're too far from Lake Erie to get huge piles of snow. Summers can be moderately hot, but it rarely gets above 90, and every house has AC. Property is cheap. We bought a suburban 4BR house for <$250k a few years ago.
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Replying to @JayGSlater @selentelechia and
Air quality is mostly an expired stereotype, particularly if you're north or west of the city. There are lots of charming small towns around, because Pittsburgh originally grew following the rail commuter model.
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Replying to @JayGSlater @selentelechia and
State governance is a mixed bag, but the legislature has a strong R bias and statewide elections have a slight D bias, so mostly, nothing gets done. That does mean that property tax reform is perpetually stalled, and we still have weird liquor laws, though.
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3% income tax and 7% sales tax Vs 0% and 0% in NH, w basically the same climate Plus NH gov is even more libertarian
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Yes, taxes substantially higher (although 6% sales outside of Allegheny County). 'Basically' is doing a lot of work re: climate there, though. :-P
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Replying to @JayGSlater @MorlockP and
Summers probably very similar, or more mild in NH. Winters probably substantially milder in PA on average.
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End of conversation
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