As state budget problems continue to  get worse, more and more Californians are considering fleeing to a new  state. Below is a snippet from a new article on Yahoo News explaining  the state's problems, and be sure to check out the full text here. 
Since the days of the Gold Rush, California  has represented the Promised Land, an image celebrated in the songs  of the Beach Boys and embodied by Silicon Valley's instant millionaires  and the young men and women who achieve stardom in Hollywood.
 
But for many California families last  year, tomorrow started somewhere else.
The number of people leaving California  for another state outstripped the number moving in from another state  during the year ending on July 1, 2008. California lost a net total  of 144,000 people during that period — more than any other state,  according to census estimates. That is about equal to the population  of Syracuse, N.Y.
The state with the next-highest net loss  through migration between states was New York, which lost just over  126,000 residents.
California's loss is extremely small  in a state of 38 million. And, in fact, the state's population continues  to increase overall because of births and immigration, legal and illegal.  But it is the fourth consecutive year that more residents decamped from  California for other states than arrived here from within the U.S.
 
A losing streak that long hasn't happened  in California since the recession of the early 1990s, when departures  outstripped arrivals from other states by 362,000 in 1994 alone.
 
