The provided tables offer a comparison between the results of surveys conducted in 1980 and 2010 on various aspects of city living, presented in percentages.
Overall, education, healthcare, and the environment received the highest ratings in both years, while transportation consistently obtained the lowest rating. Shopping and employment received intermediate ratings.
In 1980, education, healthcare, and the environment displayed significant positive trends, with ratings of approximately 72%, 82%, and 77% respectively, in contrast to transportation, which experienced a decline to 52%. Shopping and employment received moderate ratings of around 64% and 62%. People had neutral opinion on education 23 % , shops 24%, environment and employment 22%, moderate 16% on transport and least 10% on healthcare. Bad opinion was more on transport 32%. Moderate on shops and employment almost 12% and 10%. And least on healthcare, environment and education 8%,6% and 5%.
Conversely, in 2010, education, healthcare, the environment, and shopping maintained the highest ratings, close to 80%. However, transportation recorded the lowest rating at about 39%, while shopping received an average rating of around 60%. Neutral opinion were on highest on shops and transport 24% and 23%. Moderate on education, healthcare and environment 14%, 13% and 11%. Least on employment 5%. Bad opinion were high on transport 38%, followed by employment 23%. Environment and shops had 16%. Least on healthcare and education 12% and 9%.
