Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Ha! I'm from Western NY and am more bothered by places like Poughkeepsie being referred to as "upstate."
Westchester and above is "upstate".
No, it is not. Places where people regularly commute to NYC are not “upstate”.
- Rockland native.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Ha! I'm from Western NY and am more bothered by places like Poughkeepsie being referred to as "upstate."
Westchester and above is "upstate".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Ha! I'm from Western NY and am more bothered by places like Poughkeepsie being referred to as "upstate."
Westchester and above is "upstate".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Ha! I'm from Western NY and am more bothered by places like Poughkeepsie being referred to as "upstate."
Westchester and above is "upstate".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
And don't even get them started on places like Binghamton, which is technically Western NY.![]()
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Binghamton is the Southern Tier.
- former Central New York resident
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Ha! I'm from Western NY and am more bothered by places like Poughkeepsie being referred to as "upstate."
Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.
And don't even get them started on places like Binghamton, which is technically Western NY.![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Ouch! Lived in Syracuse for 9 years and believe it or not loved it but that is not untrue.
On another note, people who live in northern New York get a little sensitive about calling places like Syracuse (Central New York) and Buffalo (Western New York) upstate New York.