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by stevenwoo 2219 days ago
At least on the coast in California, the climate is much milder than anywhere else in the USA, and it's easier to have enough clothes for the cold (for the area) spells even when rough sleeping in a cardboard box or your vehicle. I live 50 miles south of San Francisco and do not have air conditioning or use the heater in the winter - most places I have visited or lived in the central USA require both to make it liveable in a house.
1 comments

That seems kinda obvious for coastal California.

But why NYC?

A lot of low income people in NYC are immigrants; for many groups of immigrants, NYC is one of if not the largest concentration of their ethnic group in the country. Being around people from your homeland gives you familiarity and comfort, access to cultural items that may not be readily available elsewhere, and a social support network. One example of this is that New York's Chinatown has developed a completely independent farm network to grow Asian vegetables that are not available normally: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7591/j.ctt20d89sd

An immigrant leaving New York for a cheaper COL metro is leaving all this behind for the great unknown.

One other important factor is that in New York City it is very easy to live without a car. For poor people, a car is easily an expense just as large as housing. New York City has housing cost of $1.6K a month but transportation cost of $6k a year [0]; St Louis has housing cost of $960 a month but transportation cost of $11k a year.[1]

[0] https://htaindex.cnt.org/fact-sheets/#?focus=place&gid=16861 [1]https://htaindex.cnt.org/fact-sheets/?focus=place&gid=14098

> but transportation cost of $6k a month

Per year, as per your link.

whoops, my bad. I blame a lack of morning coffee.