24/7 Wall Street, that research outfit that reports on vehicle resale values, education, oil, infrastructure, state rankings in poverty, wealth, health, obesity, taxes, crime, and anything else that might possibly be of interest, has come up with a survey with a twist: the worst statistic for each state.
Readers of LouisianaVoice are aware that Louisiana has a lot of negatives—and positives—because we’ve been reporting 24/7 Wall Street’s findings for years now.
But to list the single worst negative for each state tells us a lot about not only Louisiana, but our neighbors as well.
Sadly, for Louisiana, it’s our murder rate: 11.4 murders per 100,000 residents, the highest in the nation and in fact, more than double the national homicide rate of 5.0 murders per 100,000, according to FBI figures.
That pretty much goes hand in glove with another statistic that was not mentioned in the latest survey: Louisiana has the highest incarceration rate in the nation, which has the highest incarceration rate in the world, making Louisiana the prison capital of the world.
In fact, a story in the BATON ROUGE ADVOCATE just last week noted that the number of people serving life sentences in Louisiana today—nearly 5,000—is almost three times the total prison population in Louisiana in 1970.
It should come as no surprise that Louisiana imposes life sentences at the highest rate in the nation—another harsh statistic you won’t find on tourist brochures.
But lest one get the impression the grass is always greener, here’s a peek at the most negative factoids about our neighbors:
Mississippi: Highest poverty rate in the nation (a staggering 19.7 percent, 50 percent higher than the national rate of 13.1 percent).
Alabama: The lowest concentration of mental health professionals of any state (91 for every 100,000 people, far behind Massachusetts which ranks first with more than six times that ratio).
Florida: Hit with more tropical storms and hurricanes (229) than another other state since 1851.
Georgia: the lowest immunization rate (65.6 percent) of young children than any other state for diseases like mumps, measles, and tetanus.
Kentucky: The smallest pension funding ratio of any state (33.9 percent).
Missouri: More drug labs (3,022) over the past 20 years than any other state—far exceeding number 2 Oklahoma with 2,357.
North Carolina: “The highest amount spent on out-of-pocket medical expenses (14% of median income) by residents under age 65.”
Oklahoma: Highest uninsured rate among adults age 19 to 64 (20 percent compared to the national uninsured rate of 12 percent).
South Carolina: More driving deaths per capita (20.4 per 100,000 population) than every other state except Mississippi. The national per capita figure is 11.5 per 100,000.
Tennessee: A larger percentage of adults (5.4 percent) have suffered a stroke than in any other state. Nationally, 3.4 percent of American adults have had a stroke.
Texas: A larger share of the Texas population (18.6 percent) lacks health insurance than any other state. Nationally, the uninsured rate is 10 percent.
Virginia: The worst ratio of minimum wage to what is needed to sustain a family of any state (26 percent). The state also has no mandatory paid sick leave or guarantee for paid time off for a pregnancy and child birth.
West Virginia: Perhaps saddest of all, West Virginia has the highest drug overdose death rate in the nation (48.3 per 100,000 population—far more than double the national rate of 19.2 per 100,000.)
It’s worth noting that even Louisiana’s high murder rate is still less than one-fourth West Virginia’s drug overdose death rate.
Apples and oranges? Yes, of course.
But as I wrote in an earlier post, I love our people, our food, our music and our culture.
I’m still stayin’.


