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"Clarksville tops Money Magazine's list of 'Best Places to Live in America'"

By: Laken Bowles at News Channel 5 Nashville

"CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. (WTVF) — Clarksville topped Money Magazine’s list of the best places to live in the U.S.

The personal finance magazine compiled a list of 100 cities, towns and neighborhoods of where you “should – and can afford to – settle down.” Clarksville took the top spot on the list because of its economy and cost of living.

“Clarksville, Tennessee might not be on your radar yet, but it should be. To all the millennials moving in, the city of about 160,000 people is a place they can afford to plant down roots,” according to Money Magazine.

Money Magazine also says the average age is 29.

“It’s clear the word is out about Clarksville,” Mayor Joe Pitts said. “This great honor from Money magazine reinforces what we’ve known about our community for a long time. Clarksville is a great place to buy a home, get a job, start a business and send your children to top-rated schools.”

Bellevue also made the list at 31 and Bowling Green came in at 39."

"Where 20-Somethings Actually Buy Homes: The 10 Hottest Cities for Young Millennials"

Downtown Clarksville, TN

DenisTangneyJr/iStock

"3. Clarksville, TN

Median list price: $226,800 Percentage of mortgages issued to buyers aged 20 to 29: 31.8%"

"Clarksville is known for Fort Campbell, an Army base that sits just outside of town. For decades young military families have been the top home buyers in town—but recently they're competing with an influx of 20-somethings priced out of Nashville. Prices have soared in the Music City to $350,000. So Clarksville, about 45 minutes away, has become an appealing alternative. “People can find more affordable housing and a lot more house here,” says local real estate agent Valerie Hunter-Kelly of Keller Williams. "Those younger buyers don’t want to deal with the stress of a competitive market, so they come to Clarksville instead." Younger buyers are usually looking for three-bed, two-bath, newly constructed houses or remodeled bungalows in the $150,000 to $220,000 range, Hunter-Kelly says. On the weekends they go out in Nashville, or stay in town and maybe tour Old Glory Distilling, a whiskey distillery. (G'head, try the Smooth Shine Moonshine. Straight up, please.)"

"Austin Peay unveils vision for new Health Professions Building"

"CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. – Austin Peay State University unveiled its vision for a new Health Professions Building that will one day consolidate the University’s growing healthcare-related programs under one roof. Those programs include the School of Nursing and the departments of allied health sciences, health and human performance, psychological science and counseling and social work. The proposed facility has been in the planning stages for several years, but the project received a boost earlier this fall when the Tennessee Higher Education Commission ranked it as the No. 3 project on the state’s building list. “They (APSU faculty) have done a great job preparing students for these great careers, but campus facilities are really critical in these particular areas,”  said  Alisa White, APSU President. “You don’t want someone graduating with a health degree using old technology…it’s really important that we provide that opportunity for our students.” The 114,600-square-foot, three-story Health Professions Building will be located on Eighth Street, just north of the Maynard Mathematics and Computer Science Building, and it will feature state-of-the-art research labs, active learning classrooms, and collaborative learning spaces. If the state approves this project, construction will likely begin in 2021, with the building opening for classes for the fall 2023 semester. In the last five years, the University has experienced extraordinary growth in the five academic departments that prepare students for healthcare careers, and once these individuals leave campus, they enter one of the best local job markets in the country. In the Nashville area alone, the healthcare industry contributes more than $46 billion and more than 270,000 jobs to the local economy each year. Today, the University’s health professions students are scattered across campus, from the McCord Building to the Clement Building to the Sundquist Build to the Dunn Center, but once they leave campus, they’ll work in a field that is moving more toward interdisciplinary collaboration. The new Health Professions Building will encourage this type of collaborative education. “I would lead with the idea of synergy and the idea that we have all these really strong departments, but we don’t have that synergy where we’re in the same place and we can have these practicum experiences that look like hospital experiences or clinical experiences and those types of things,” Dr. Tucker Brown, dean of the APSU College of Behavioral and Health Sciences, said. Dr. Karen Meisch, interim dean of the APSU College of STEM, said the public will also benefit from this collaboration because many of Austin Peay’s graduates will work as health professionals in Clarksville. “Having everybody in that space to be able to work together and understand everybody’s role is going to be really key for them going out and approaching a patient as a team,” she said.

Austin Peay has the lowest ratio of available square footage to full-time equivalency students in the state. The new building, if approved, will provide much-needed space for classrooms, laboratories and faculty offices, while also allowing these programs to grow. Dr. Chad Brooks, associate provost for research and dean of the APSU College of Graduate Studies, said the new building will allow the University to develop more healthcare-related programs. 

“It’s a very optimistic time for Austin Peay,” he said."

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