INDIANAPOLIS — Three central Indiana cities have made the list of the “Best Small Cities in America”.
Carmel, Zionsville and Westfield each placed in the top ten of the study from WalletHub that included more than 1,300 cities throughout the country.
While Lancaster, Pennsylvania ranked as the best small city in the United States, central Indiana tallied spots No. 2, No. 7 and No. 10.
Cities with populations between 25,000 to 100,00 qualified.
Cities were graded in five areas: affordability, economic health, education & health, quality of life, and safety.
Carmel ranked as the second-best small city. Among the more than 1,300 cities, Carmel ranked in the top 40 cities in affordability, economic health and safety.
Zionsville was ranked as the seventh best small city in the U.S. While Zionsville only ranked in the top 100 small cities in one key area, the mark was very high.
The Boone County city ranked No. 3 in the country is affordability. They were topped only by Wildwood, Missouri and Madison, Mississippi in affordability.
Zionsville was the highest-ranked Indiana city for education, ranking 177th.
Westfield rounded out the top ten.
Westfield thrived in grading for affordability and safety. They ranked in the top 41 spots in both.
In total, 34 Indiana cities were listed.
Plainfield, Fishers and Noblesville each also placed in the 90th percentile or better among cities in the U.S.
Gary was the lowest ranked city in Indiana, ranking 20th worst. Elkhart, Terre Haute, East Chicago, Hammond, Michigan City and Anderson all ranked in the 10th percentile or worse.
Besemer, Alabama was ranked the worst small city in the country.
-
Rep. Elise Stefanik tapped as Trump's UN ambassador
Rep. Elise Stefanik has been picked by President-elect Trump to be his ambassador to the United Nations when he takes office in 2025.Delphi Murders Trial: Day 21| Jury wrestling with Richard Allen verdict
The jury has worked 14 hours over parts of three days on the Richard Allen case. They still do not have a verdict, as they returned to work Monday.Thought Halloween was over? Not for this Greenwood family business
Some people are debating whether or not it’s time to decorate for Christmas. But for one Greenwood family business, Halloween never ends, even after the big box stores close for the season.Indy non-profit brings resources to veterans struggling with substance use
Overdose lifeline is a local non-profit helping to bring context to the link between addiction and veterans’ mental health challenges.