labbadabba
Pattern Altitude
If you don't like humidity, most anywhere east of the Rockies is a no-go for summer time. Cities in the Southwest are a total sprawl and have terrible traffic. So you have to decide which you hate more, traffic or humidity.
I would not recommend NC as it has both terrible traffic and terrible humidity. NC is so full of New Yorkers these days anyway that I don't think you'll find much of a change in attitude at least within the cities, plus the schools are crap.
If you want good schools, the northern plains states are usually a good bet. Wisconsin and Minnesota have long held reputations for excellent public schools.
I work for a largish regional bank as a BA here in KC and used to work as a risk analyst for Morgan Stanley. There are a number of financial firms based here, Commerce, UMB, American Century, Wadell & Reed, DST, and BATS off the top of my head. Sprint (don't work for Sprint if you can avoid it), Cerner, AMC and a few others have a large presence in KC and of course Garmin. But I rarely see any BA gigs at Garmin which I find odd. KC has a strong Agile community as well if that's your gig, my experience with the big NY firms is that they aren't Agile (yet). Winters in KC are colder for sure than NYC but we don't get nearly the snow. Usually less than a foot the whole winter and a big snow here is 4 inches, we do get ice storms which are a hoot. Summers get hot and humid, less humid in July and August when it's just plain hot but it's never a dry heat.
The Northern suburbs on the Missouri side are growing the fastest but the Kansas suburbs are more established. KOJC and KIXD both have active flying clubs. To give you an idea what rental rates are here, check out NCAS at KIXD.
http://newcenturyairservice.com/aircraft-rental/
C172 $110 wet
C177RG $135 wet
PA32 $175 wet
PA34 $235 wet
Pretty tough to beat that for a wet rate and no monthly fee.
I would not recommend NC as it has both terrible traffic and terrible humidity. NC is so full of New Yorkers these days anyway that I don't think you'll find much of a change in attitude at least within the cities, plus the schools are crap.
If you want good schools, the northern plains states are usually a good bet. Wisconsin and Minnesota have long held reputations for excellent public schools.
I work for a largish regional bank as a BA here in KC and used to work as a risk analyst for Morgan Stanley. There are a number of financial firms based here, Commerce, UMB, American Century, Wadell & Reed, DST, and BATS off the top of my head. Sprint (don't work for Sprint if you can avoid it), Cerner, AMC and a few others have a large presence in KC and of course Garmin. But I rarely see any BA gigs at Garmin which I find odd. KC has a strong Agile community as well if that's your gig, my experience with the big NY firms is that they aren't Agile (yet). Winters in KC are colder for sure than NYC but we don't get nearly the snow. Usually less than a foot the whole winter and a big snow here is 4 inches, we do get ice storms which are a hoot. Summers get hot and humid, less humid in July and August when it's just plain hot but it's never a dry heat.
The Northern suburbs on the Missouri side are growing the fastest but the Kansas suburbs are more established. KOJC and KIXD both have active flying clubs. To give you an idea what rental rates are here, check out NCAS at KIXD.
http://newcenturyairservice.com/aircraft-rental/
C172 $110 wet
C177RG $135 wet
PA32 $175 wet
PA34 $235 wet
Pretty tough to beat that for a wet rate and no monthly fee.