I just moved from Kentucky to Minnesota after spend three years there. Prior to Kentucky I lived in Ames, IA; Chicago south suburbs; Michigan and some time in Ohio.
I remember an newpaper article from Fall 2000 where a referendum was on the ballot to raise property taxes and average of $30/year in order to fund the County's (eastern KY) first public library. Yes, the COUNTY'S FIRST library. It failed. see:
http://www.oakridger.com/stories/112400/stt_1124000020.htmlAs many as 44% of Kentuckians are functionally illiterate.
On the radio one day, I heard an ad for a local gun event. The style was similar to what hear for monster truck races and wrestling events. Anyway, they were touting all the special weapons you can try at their ranges (uzi, grenades, other explosives ("make little mushroom clouds"). I guess it was the whole "fun for whole family, bring the kids" that bothered me.
The main industries in Kentucky are:
1)Coal - with deregulation, more power plants are being built at the site of coal mines with little environmental regulation. A friend worked at the state EPA (writing permits) and many companies went over her head to get special permits. Mountains are being levelled and mining waste is constantly leaking into the waterways. (The Ohio River has a nice brown color to it.)
2) Tobacco - With budget deficits and inadequate spending on social services, God forbid the state raise taxes on tobacco (Currently, $0.03 per pack of cigarette and zero taxes on chewing tobacco). Also, 21% of middle school students smoke.
3) Bourbon and Horse Racing - nothing really wrong here except that an economy based on consumers drinking a lot and blowing money on gambling does not seem very healthy.
Another personal experience was with the eduacational system. We sent our daughter to a Catholic School for kindergarten. Two reason: 1) the private schools are much better than the public schools. My wife has a degree in early childhood education so I trust her judgement. 2) Thought not strict Catholics, many of our ethnic traditions are centered around Catholicism and we wanted out children to appreciate that. That being said, we spent $4000 for one year of Kindergarten and my wife still had to supplement more than she thought she should. When we knew we were moving to Minnesota. My wife and I made a trip to check out schools so that we would know where to move. The Catholic schools in were just as good as in KY but tuition was about half. The public schools were amazing, though. We felt that we would have to supplement over the summer so that our daughter would not be that far behind. Needless to say, we are going with public schools and supplementing the religious education.
Overall, the "individuals" I met in Kentucky were wonderful but I was left with the impression that the population as a whole was not really interested in bettering themselves. I don't have any regrets about leaving. I even took a cut in pay to do so. Maybe another KY DUer that has lived there longer can give a better perspective.
-Greg