Chicago Census Recount: Lawmakers Want New Tally As City Suffered Stark Population Losses
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/0..._n_849412.html
With the 2010 Census showing Chicago suffering steep losses in population, some city leaders are moving to seek a recount, a move that could have ramifications for the city and for national politics as well.
The census showed that Chicago lost around 200,000 people in the years between 2000 and 2010, which will mean a significant drop in federal funding for the city.
"It translates into hundreds of millions of dollars over a ten-year period that will affect the city of Chicago," 2nd Ward Alderman Bob Fioretti said, according to WBEZ. "It will impact on everything we do - from roads, new construction. So if we can find the numbers, we ought to have a recount."
Forty-four other alderman signed on to a resolution urging the Census Bureau to re-figure the city's numbers. The city would have to pay for such a count, but even a small increase in population would make up for the cost in grant monies.
And Fioretti and others have reason to believe that the Census figures might be low.
The American Community Survey for 2009, an annual project that tracks population trends in years between the decennial census, pegged the population loss at only around 70,000 since the year 2000, although that is more of an estimate than a hard count.