| The 
				report was done by WalletHub and uses 20 key metrics, ranging 
				from the five-year business survival rate to office-space 
				affordability.
 WalletHub analyst Jill Gonzalez explained why Chicago is so low 
				on this list at No. 65.
 
 "Office space affordability is expensive, labor costs are more, 
				and corporate taxes are very high there, all three of those 
				things make it a little bit harder to run a business there," 
				Gonzalez said.
 
 The report is broken down into three different categories: 
				business environment, access to resources, and business costs. 
				Chicago, which is 65th on the list, ranks 59th, 17th, and 79th, 
				respectively, in those three categories.
 
				Chicago also struggled when it was compared to other cities in 
				midwestern states, Gonzalez said.
 "It is not all based on location," Gonzalez said. "Lincoln, 
				Nebraska ranked 25th, Columbus, Ohio ranked at 26, and Omaha 
				finished 29th so there are certainly better options for starting 
				a business in the Midwest."
 
 Gonzalez also said that things like job retention programs could 
				help Chicago improve its ranking.
 
 "I think a job program, especially for those right out of 
				college, could certainly help to make sure that people stay in 
				Chicago so that we have brain gain and not a brain drain, so 
				people want to start their businesses here," Gonzalez said.
 
 St. Louis finished 85th on the list and dead last in the 
				business environment category. Orlando, Florida, finished first 
				on the list with Washington D.C. finishing last.
 
			
			Andrew Hensel has years of experience as a reporter 
			and pre-game host for the Joliet Slammers, and as a producer for the 
			Windy City Bulls. A graduate of Iowa Wesleyan University and 
			Illinois Media School, Andrew lives in the south suburbs of Chicago. 
				 
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