If you think it's great to live in Minnesota now, just wait a couple of decades.
The West North Central region (Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Kansas) are projected to be the No. 1 place to live in 2032, according to a recent Gallup analysis.
The study ranked areas by 13 metrics, including economic, workplace and community factors as well as personal choices.
Access to clean, safe water is one category where we rated highest (along with full-time employment and economic confidence).
St. Paul futurist Joel Barker, who was not associated with the study, said that water access should carry even more weight in ranking, rather than being one of the 13 equally weighted categories. "The water issue should be looked at much more carefully," said Barker, author of "Paradigms: The Business of Discovering the Future." "Keep in mind: Nothing else happens if you don't have water," he said.
The strong showing for this neck of the woods did not surprise Dan Witters, research director for the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.
Based on "what we already knew about the well-being of individual states, Minnesota, Nebraska and North Dakota are frequently at the top and considered elite well-being states," he said.
He agreed with Barker that water availability has become an increasingly important factor.