

Here's a DATA POINT they are currently having an organsm over:
"The hot St. Croix market took the biggest hit with home sales dropping 22 percent in the fourth quarter of 2005 over the same period in 2004."
This is a data point, not a trend. Of course their entire political worldview depends on such data points to justify their worldview. Any astute statistician knows it takes a series of data points to make a statistic and/or forecast a trend.
Here's another DATA POINT:
"St. Croix County got a double dose of bad news in the report. Not only were home sales down, but the median sales price dropped by 6.2 percent to $194,300."
Lets see what the next few quarters bring. If I see any decline in growth in my next of the valley it's that it's that it only could three houses under construction which ever way I choose to drive three miles from my house. It used to be five. Ten years ago, it was one a summer. This is just another example of using statistics to lie and -- at OTBL -- that is status quo.
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Western Wisconsin is featured in a current story in the Milwaukee Journal Online discussing the grow of this area. Here are a few statistics -- not data points -- that contradict the OTBL post:

"Of course, growth presents challenges - providing more classrooms for children, dealing with a rise in crime, stresses on water and sewage as homes replace farms."
"What lures people here? More house for the money, when compared with Minnesota real estate. Last year, 3,740 homes were sold in St. Croix County at an average price of $195,213. There's a trade-off, though: Wisconsin's property taxes are higher."
Read the whole story: JS Online
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