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  #1481  
Old Posted Apr 4, 2012, 8:14 PM
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Race in LA: See How We've Grown


4/1/2012

http://www.lamag.com/features/Story....412infographic

Quote:
Imagine Pittsburgh moving into L.A.—that’s how much our city’s population has swelled in two decades. The central city is far denser today, and of course the composition has changed, too, with the number of Latinos and Asians increasing while the proportion of blacks and whites has decreased. Based on census data (each dot represents 25 people), our maps tell the tale of an evolving metropolis.



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  #1482  
Old Posted Apr 12, 2012, 5:00 PM
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US Metro Population Growth Slows


April 12th, 2012

Read More: http://www.urbanophile.com/2012/04/1...-growth-slows/

Quote:
.....

Someone once said to me about Chicago’s Mayor Daley that if he did something you liked, he was a visionary genius leader, but if he did something you hated, he was a corrupt machine dictator. That seems to be how too many urbanists view the Census Bureau. Back in the 90s when the Census estimates showed cities growing more slowly than boosters believed, they pressured the Census Bureau into adjusting the estimates to provide higher values. As it turned out, in most cases even the original estimates for cities proved inflated. In fact, the 90s were actually better for a lot of major cities than the 2000s were (e.g, New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago). This led to a new narrative that the Census had undercounted cities somehow.

- Now this new data shows slowing exurban growth. All of a sudden, the Census Bureau has become once more a source of Gospel Truth, and I’ve seen many articles suggesting that the exurbs are dead, killed by rising gas prices and new Millennial preferences. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves here. Yes, exurban growth slowed recently. While cities on the whole fared more poorly than expected in the last census, we did see strong growth in downtowns and adjacent areas. I myself wrote about improving migration trends for core cities. That’s good news worth celebrating for cities. But don’t overstate the case. I have a different though admittedly speculative take on the exurbs. I think a chunk of the fringe migration was from very low end home builders skipping out beyond established jurisdictions into unincorporated territory with few buildings restrictions.

.....



Map of metro area growth last year:






County map:

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  #1483  
Old Posted May 5, 2012, 5:24 PM
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Is Negative Population Growth Upon Us? Deaths Exceed Births in One Third of U.S. Counties


05/05/2012

By Ron McChesney and Greg Overberg

Read More: http://www.newgeography.com/content/...bout+places%29

Quote:
Population change has short run and long run effects. Short run effects include changes in fertility rates that can result from economic fluctuations. For example, during a recession, couples may delay having children until economic conditions improve. Once job growth has begun and expectations rise, birthrates can increase The correlation is not perfect and other demographic factors could come into play.

- With the expectation that the world’s population will stabilize mid-century, eventually every country’s population – with few exceptions in Africa and elsewhere – will stop increasing. Deaths will exceed births in most countries, and future growth may become more a function of shifting migration patterns. This reality can already be seen in parts of the United States. In one third of the 3,141 counties deaths now exceed births. In the next nine years, the number of counties in this category will expand, which could result in a markedly lower population count in the 2020 census.

- The top 159 counties received a net of 1,000 domestic migrants or more, and these areas include Florida, the Front Range Counties of Colorado, and the major metropolitan counties of Texas. Overall, 1,229 counties had positive domestic migration, while 1,914 counties had negative domestic migration. Hillsborough, Florida (Tampa area), had the highest positive migration with 22,963 net movers, while Los Angeles County, California had the greatest number of net leavers with a total of 55,146 net departing residents.

- International migration is most visible in California, Arizona and Nevada, and in a number of metropolitan areas including the Northeast and the Chicago area. One-hundred and thirty- two counties experienced more than 1,000 immigrant arrivals, and these counties received 74 percent of immigrants, indicating that immigration is concentrated. On the other hand, immigration is also widespread, as all but 520 counties received one or more immigrants during the year. The top county for international immigration was Los Angeles, California, with a total of 42,413 immigrants. The next four counties were Miami-Dade, Florida, with 19,996; Harris, Texas (Houston), with 19,558, Cook, Illinois (Chicago) with 17,208 and Queens, New York with 15,949 immigrants.

.....
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  #1484  
Old Posted May 5, 2012, 5:40 PM
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Interesting. Looks like the north and central are shrinking and the south is gaining. (Wayne Cty. is the biggest loser and Dade the biggest winner). But the factor is somewhat less people moving to the South and somewhat more net deaths over births. (Admitedly, this is a very broad summary.)
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  #1485  
Old Posted May 18, 2012, 4:37 AM
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Here are the Estimates of the Resident Population by Race and Hispanic Origin for the United States and States: July 1, 2011.

Source: US Census

**FYI: Each race category includes people of Hispanic or Latino origin**

Alabama
White: 3,368,118 70.1%
Black or African American: 1,271,695 26.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 33,298 0.7%
Asian: 57,155 1.2%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 5,227 0.1%
Two or More Races: 67,247 1.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 193,868 4.0%
Total Population: 4,802,740

Alaska
White: 490,374 67.9%
Black or African American: 25,886 3.6%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 107,494 14.9%
Asian: 40,327 5.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 7,875 1.1%
Two or More Races: 50,762 7.0%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 42,113 5.8%
Total Population: 722,718

Arizona
White: 5,481,131 84.6%
Black or African American: 290,162 4.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 339,580 5.2%
Asian: 194,900 3.0%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 16,603 0.3%
Two or More Races: 160,129 2.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 1,949,294 30.1%
Total Population: 6,482,505

Arkansas
White: 2,354,196 80.1%
Black or African American: 457,736 15.6%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 27,581 0.9%
Asian: 39,525 1.3%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 6,853 0.2%
Two or More Races: 52,088 1.8%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 195,075 6.6%
Total Population: 2,937,979

California
White: 27,883,136 74.0%
Black or African American: 2,504,790 6.6%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 636,860 1.7%
Asian: 5,142,382 13.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 185,415 0.5%
Two or More Races: 1,339,329 3.6%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 14,359,500 38.1%
Total Population: 37,691,912

Colorado
White: 4,516,283 88.3%
Black or African American: 221,500 4.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 80,670 1.6%
Asian: 149,929 2.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 8,854 0.2%
Two or More Races: 139,560 2.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 1,070,566 20.9%
Total Population: 5,116,796

Connecticut
White: 2,946,740 82.3%
Black or African American: 396,060 11.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 17,093 0.5%
Asian: 144,446 4.0%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,549 0.1%
Two or More Races: 72,821 2.0%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 494,290 13.8%
Total Population: 3,580,709

Delaware
White: 650,660 71.7%
Black or African American: 198,709 21.9%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 6,063 0.7%
Asian: 30,466 3.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 713 0.1%
Two or More Races: 20,524 2.3%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 76,153 8.4%
Total Population: 907,135

Florida
White: 14,959,040 78.5%
Black or African American: 3,141,840 16.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 93,330 0.5%
Asian: 493,873 2.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 19,853 0.1%
Two or More Races: 349,606 1.8%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 4,355,525 22.9%
Total Population: 19,057,542

Georgia
White: 6,198,354 63.2%
Black or African American: 3,044,658 31.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 50,113 0.5%
Asian: 334,856 3.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 11,164 0.1%
Two or More Races: 176,065 1.8%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 892,010 9.1%
Total Population: 9,815,210

Hawaii
White: 357,861 26.0%
Black or African American: 27,443 2.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 5,835 0.4%
Asian: 529,944 38.5%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 138,310 10.1%
Two or More Races: 315,417 22.9%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 126,418 9.2%
Total Population: 1,374,810

Idaho
White: 1,488,442 93.9%
Black or African American: 12,143 0.8%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 26,463 1.7%
Asian: 21,006 1.3%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,901 0.2%
Two or More Races: 34,030 2.1%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 182,080 11.5%
Total Population: 1,584,985

Illinois
White: 10,042,286 78.0%
Black or African American: 1,905,730 14.8%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 75,130 0.6%
Asian: 618,691 4.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 7,808 0.1%
Two or More Races: 219,612 1.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 2,079,697 16.2%
Total Population: 12,869,257

Indiana
White: 5,655,830 86.8%
Black or African American: 610,595 9.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 24,942 0.4%
Asian: 110,157 1.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,655 0.1%
Two or More Races: 111,743 1.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 403,796 6.2%
Total Population: 6,516,922

Iowa
White: 2,847,701 93.0%
Black or African American: 94,028 3.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 14,043 0.5%
Asian: 56,855 1.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,526 0.1%
Two or More Races: 47,156 1.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 158,014 5.2%
Total Population: 3,062,309

Kansas
White: 2,510,254 87.4%
Black or African American: 176,225 6.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 33,785 1.2%
Asian: 71,898 2.5%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,889 0.1%
Two or More Races: 76,187 2.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 309,914 10.8%
Total Population: 2,871,238

Kentucky
White: 3,882,296 88.9%
Black or African American: 349,682 8.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 12,553 0.3%
Asian: 52,201 1.2%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,333 0.1%
Two or More Races: 69,291 1.6%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 138,563 3.2%
Total Population: 4,369,356

Louisiana
White: 2,918,181 63.8%
Black or African American: 1,482,004 32.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 33,634 0.7%
Asian: 74,720 1.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,658 0.1%
Two or More Races: 63,639 1.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 202,233 4.4%
Total Population: 4,574,836

Maine
White: 1,267,747 95.4%
Black or African American: 16,804 1.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 8,869 0.7%
Asian: 14,256 1.1%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 415 0.0%
Two or More Races: 20,097 1.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 17,958 1.4%
Total Population: 1,328,188

Maryland
White: 3,561,383 61.1%
Black or African American: 1,749,143 30.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 31,454 0.5%
Asian: 337,586 5.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 5,660 0.1%
Two or More Races: 143,063 2.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 490,716 8.4%
Total Population: 5,828,289
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  #1486  
Old Posted May 18, 2012, 4:38 AM
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Massachusetts
White: 5,538,825 84.1%
Black or African American: 512,134 7.8%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 30,462 0.5%
Asian: 371,141 5.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 6,257 0.1%
Two or More Races: 128,717 2.0%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 650,621 9.9%
Total Population: 6,587,536

Michigan
White: 7,925,094 80.2%
Black or African American: 1,417,079 14.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 68,870 0.7%
Asian: 251,121 2.5%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,719 0.0%
Two or More Races: 210,304 2.1%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 447,917 4.5%
Total Population: 9,876,187

Minnesota
White: 4,645,546 86.9%
Black or African American: 286,301 5.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 68,412 1.3%
Asian: 225,307 4.2%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,199 0.1%
Two or More Races: 116,096 2.2%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 259,297 4.9%
Total Population: 5,344,861

Mississippi
White: 1,787,924 60.0%
Black or African American: 1,111,856 37.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 17,237 0.6%
Asian: 27,875 0.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 1,781 0.1%
Two or More Races: 31,839 1.1%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 85,631 2.9%
Total Population: 2,978,512

Missouri
White: 5,048,422 84.0%
Black or African American: 703,954 11.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 31,273 0.5%
Asian: 103,105 1.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 7,322 0.1%
Two or More Races: 116,612 1.9%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 221,155 3.7%
Total Population: 6,010,688

Montana
White: 896,925 89.9%
Black or African American: 5,401 0.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 64,070 6.4%
Asian: 6,871 0.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 780 0.1%
Two or More Races: 24,152 2.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 30,502 3.1%
Total Population: 998,199

Nebraska
White: 1,660,697 90.1%
Black or African American: 87,124 4.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 23,864 1.3%
Asian: 34,716 1.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,213 0.1%
Two or More Races: 34,027 1.8%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 174,516 9.5%
Total Population: 1,842,641

Nevada
White: 2,115,946 77.7%
Black or African American: 233,955 8.6%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 44,162 1.6%
Asian: 208,527 7.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 19,644 0.7%
Two or More Races: 101,088 3.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 737,221 27.1%
Total Population: 2,723,322

New Hampshire
White: 1,247,382 94.6%
Black or African American: 17,256 1.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 3,668 0.3%
Asian: 29,811 2.3%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 572 0.0%
Two or More Races: 19,505 1.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 38,560 2.9%
Total Population: 1,318,194

New Jersey
White: 6,539,664 74.1%
Black or African American: 1,289,292 14.6%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 51,048 0.6%
Asian: 766,130 8.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 8,128 0.1%
Two or More Races: 166,893 1.9%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 1,600,690 18.1%
Total Population: 8,821,155

New Mexico
White: 1,735,602 83.4%
Black or African American: 51,844 2.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 210,499 10.1%
Asian: 32,426 1.6%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 3,275 0.2%
Two or More Races: 48,578 2.3%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 973,050 46.7%
Total Population: 2,082,224

New York
White: 13,910,374 71.5%
Black or African American: 3,400,757 17.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 185,174 1.0%
Asian: 1,517,556 7.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 24,765 0.1%
Two or More Races: 426,571 2.2%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 3,495,138 18.0%
Total Population: 19,465,197

North Carolina
White: 6,966,432 72.1%
Black or African American: 2,121,228 22.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 149,520 1.5%
Asian: 225,631 2.3%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 10,670 0.1%
Two or More Races: 182,920 1.9%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 832,405 8.6%
Total Population: 9,656,401

North Dakota
White: 617,951 90.4%
Black or African American: 9,097 1.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 37,531 5.5%
Asian: 7,366 1.1%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 387 0.1%
Two or More Races: 11,600 1.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 15,318 2.2%
Total Population: 683,932

Ohio
White: 9,653,887 83.6%
Black or African American: 1,432,940 12.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 30,269 0.3%
Asian: 201,988 1.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 5,511 0.0%
Two or More Races: 220,356 1.9%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 367,116 3.2%
Total Population: 11,544,951

Oklahoma
White: 2,873,019 75.8%
Black or African American: 290,106 7.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 338,069 8.9%
Asian: 69,820 1.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 5,659 0.1%
Two or More Races: 214,835 5.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 347,620 9.2%
Total Population: 3,791,508

Oregon
White: 3,428,804 88.6%
Black or African American: 76,371 2.0%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 68,455 1.8%
Asian: 150,227 3.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 15,141 0.4%
Two or More Races: 132,861 3.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 466,069 12.0%
Total Population: 3,871,859

Pennsylvania
White: 10,673,040 83.8%
Black or African American: 1,443,659 11.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 40,421 0.3%
Asian: 368,649 2.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 7,344 0.1%
Two or More Races: 209,773 1.6%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 750,431 5.9%
Total Population: 12,742,886

Rhode Island
White: 907,145 86.3%
Black or African American: 75,560 7.2%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 9,223 0.9%
Asian: 32,388 3.1%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 1,652 0.2%
Two or More Races: 25,334 2.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 134,714 12.8%
Total Population: 1,051,302

South Carolina
White: 3,198,737 68.4%
Black or African American: 1,315,076 28.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 24,959 0.5%
Asian: 64,334 1.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 4,000 0.1%
Two or More Races: 72,124 1.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 245,660 5.3%
Total Population: 4,679,230
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  #1487  
Old Posted May 18, 2012, 4:40 AM
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South Dakota
White: 713,633 86.6%
Black or African American: 11,523 1.4%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 73,285 8.9%
Asian: 8,318 1.0%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 582 0.1%
Two or More Races: 16,741 2.0%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 24,020 2.9%
Total Population: 824,082

Tennessee
White: 5,090,235 79.5%
Black or African American: 1,082,904 16.9%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 26,819 0.4%
Asian: 97,458 1.5%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 5,646 0.1%
Two or More Races: 100,291 1.6%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 303,119 4.7%
Total Population: 6,403,353

Texas
White: 20,769,382 80.9%
Black or African American: 3,138,725 12.2%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 263,309 1.0%
Asian: 1,039,470 4.0%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 33,043 0.1%
Two or More Races: 430,752 1.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 9,791,582 38.1%
Total Population: 25,674,681

Utah
White: 2,589,018 91.9%
Black or African American: 35,678 1.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 42,162 1.5%
Asian: 61,207 2.2%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 26,773 1.0%
Two or More Races: 62,384 2.2%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 372,912 13.2%
Total Population: 2,817,222

Vermont
White: 598,133 95.5%
Black or African American: 6,816 1.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 2,371 0.4%
Asian: 8,480 1.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 191 0.0%
Two or More Races: 10,440 1.7%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 9,767 1.6%
Total Population: 626,431

Virginia
White: 5,772,842 71.3%
Black or African American: 1,599,850 19.8%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 42,593 0.5%
Asian: 466,286 5.8%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 8,651 0.1%
Two or More Races: 206,382 2.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 660,730 8.2%
Total Population: 8,096,604

Washington
White: 5,598,327 82.0%
Black or African American: 262,092 3.8%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 124,880 1.8%
Asian: 508,982 7.5%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 44,424 0.7%
Two or More Races: 291,333 4.3%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 789,060 11.6%
Total Population: 6,830,038

West Virginia
White: 1,745,175 94.1%
Black or African American: 65,825 3.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 4,086 0.2%
Asian: 13,463 0.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 526 0.0%
Two or More Races: 26,289 1.4%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 23,900 1.3%
Total Population: 1,855,364

Wisconsin
White: 5,048,535 88.4%
Black or African American: 370,380 6.5%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 61,117 1.1%
Asian: 136,551 2.4%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 2,586 0.0%
Two or More Races: 92,598 1.6%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 348,269 6.1%
Total Population: 5,711,767

Wyoming
White: 531,484 93.5%
Black or African American: 6,024 1.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 14,774 2.6%
Asian: 4,965 0.9%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 551 0.1%
Two or More Races: 10,360 1.8%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 51,760 9.1%
Total Population: 568,158

District of Columbia
White: 262,304 42.4%
Black or African American: 313,106 50.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 3,400 0.6%
Asian: 23,041 3.7%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 838 0.1%
Two or More Races: 15,307 2.5%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 58,744 9.5%
Total Population: 617,996

United States
White: 243,470,497 78.1%
Black or African American: 40,750,746 13.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native: 3,814,772 1.2%
Asian: 15,578,383 5.0%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander: 692,091 0.2%
Two or More Races: 7,285,428 2.3%
Hispanic or Latino origin (of any race): 52,045,277 16.7%
Total Population: 311,591,917
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  #1488  
Old Posted May 18, 2012, 7:39 PM
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Coeur d'Alene, ID population....56,894
Coeur d'Alene, ID MSA .......185,010
Spokane, WA-Cd'A, ID CSA....785,302
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  #1489  
Old Posted May 22, 2012, 11:13 PM
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U.S. Metros Are Ground Zero for Majority-Minority Populations


May 18, 2012

By Nate Berg

Read More: http://www.theatlanticcities.com/nei...ulations/2043/

Quote:
.....

The most recent data available through the Census Bureau's Population Estimates section are at the county level, with granular figures down to the level of ages 4 and under. Counties are the basis for the Bureau's tabulation of metropolitan-scale populations, so this set of figures can stand in to represent metro-level numbers. To simplify things, single counties were used to determine metro-level rates of minorities in this age bracket.

- Most of the largest metropolitan areas have already passed the minority-majority population threshold for their young populations. Indeed, 36 of the top 50 metros are in this group. Only one of the top 10, Boston, is below that threshold, with just about 34 percent of its under 5 population representing at least one minority. Note how many metros are far beyond the 50 percent mark. Eight metros are above 75 percent. As these demographics continue to shift, it's likely that urban areas will be fueling much of America's future minority-majority.

.....



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  #1490  
Old Posted May 22, 2012, 11:16 PM
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Every Censes U.S. County Percent Change Rankings PDF:

http://www.census.gov/compendia/smadb/TableC-01.pdf
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  #1491  
Old Posted May 23, 2012, 2:32 AM
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From the Governor of Michigan:


http://www.facebook.com/#!/RickForMichigan
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  #1492  
Old Posted May 23, 2012, 3:16 AM
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Originally Posted by jimthemanincda View Post
Yeah for Idaho. The 5th Whitest state in the nation!
Why is that a bad thing? The fact that you think that is the sad part. Tokyo must just be the worst place on the planet... Japanese, Japanese people everywhere.. oh the humanity!!
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  #1493  
Old Posted May 23, 2012, 11:14 AM
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Wowser, Los Angeles with the 83% non-white under 5-year olds. I wonder if that will result in more or less segregation, because there are places in LA where 85%+ of people are white and I don't think that's changing, so when white people are only 17% of the population in greater LA, or less if the trend continues, I wonder if those places will still be as white. If so that's gotta mean greater segregation. Ofc you can't really predict what anything in the world will look like in 30 years. I'm curious to get the number for just the west side though.

And New York with only 63% Kind of shocked to see that, what with the melting pot of the world reputation. I guess being close to the border helps. At least it helps with having a large minority population, which is not the same as having a diverse population, as the vast majority of non-white people in LA are of Mexican descent.
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Old Posted May 23, 2012, 2:10 PM
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I've seen so many different projections for these things (growth%, racial makeup, etc.) that it's hard to believe any one particular source (except I personally believe the decennial Census are about as accurate as can be). Some of the racial projections look low in some places, high in others, and spot on in still other places.

Is there a better way (other than using historical avgs.) to track year to year or even every 5 year changes in demographics?
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  #1495  
Old Posted May 23, 2012, 4:43 PM
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Almost 800,000 Latinos “missing” from latest census


23 May, 2012

Read More: http://nbclatino.tumblr.com/post/236...-latest-census

Quote:
About 775,000, or 1.5 percent of the nation’s Latinos are “missing” from the overall Latino count in the latest 2010 census. This is just a sampling, the numbers could be higher. “I think it is very troubling that you still have that differentiation,” says Angelo Falcón, a member of the Census’ National Advisory Committee for Racial, Ethnic and other Populations and President of the National Institute for Latino Policy.

“After putting so much money and resources to make sure the Latino population is adequately counted, the fact that under-counting is still a problem is troubling,” he adds. Census Director Robert Groves said that “while the overall coverage of the census was exemplary, the traditional hard-to-count groups, like renters, were counted less well.” In addition, Groves added, “because ethnic and racial minorities disproportionately live in hard-to-count circumstances, they too were under-counted relative to the majority population,” he added.

Falcón, a political scientist who chaired the former Census Advising Committee, says the Census has spent a large amount of resources to ensure Hispanics are not undercounted. He says, however, it is a good time now for “lessons learned” to make sure this does not happen again. Some recommendations, Falcón says, include more advertising in local community papers which serve minority populations, as well as better strategies to work with local community groups.

.....
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Old Posted Jun 22, 2012, 3:42 PM
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In a Shift, Biggest Wave of Migrants Is Now Asian


June 18, 2012

By KIRK SEMPLE

Read More: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/19/us...rant-wave.html

Quote:
Asians have surpassed Hispanics as the largest wave of new immigrants to the United States, pushing the population of Asian descent to a record 18.2 million and helping to make Asians the fastest-growing racial group in the country, according to a study released Tuesday by the Pew Research Center.

- About 430,000 Asians — or 36 percent of all new immigrants, legal and illegal — moved to the United States in 2010, compared with 370,000 Hispanics, or 31 percent of all new arrivals, the study said. Just three years earlier, the ratio was reversed: about 390,000 Asians immigrated in 2007, compared with 540,000 Hispanics. “Asians have become the largest stream of new immigrants to the U.S. — and, thus, the latest leading actors in this great American drama” of immigration, Paul Taylor, executive vice president of the Pew Research Center, wrote in the report.

- Immigration scholars have attributed the decrease in Hispanic immigration to a mix of factors, including the economic downturn in the United States, increased deportation and border enforcement by the American authorities, and declining birthrates in Mexico. Tougher enforcement measures have made a greater impact on the Hispanic immigrant population than on the Asian immigrant population because a much higher percentage of Hispanics are in the United States without immigration papers, experts said. About 45 percent of Hispanic immigrants in the United States are here illegally compared with about 13 percent to 15 percent of Asian immigrants, Pew demographers found. Under this pressure, Hispanic immigration dropped 31 percent from 2007 to 2010, while Asian immigration increased about 10 percent.

.....



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Old Posted Jun 22, 2012, 4:05 PM
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ya you guys keep it down below..trying to sleep. Slow down..
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  #1498  
Old Posted Jun 22, 2012, 7:47 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by M II A II R II K View Post
Every Censes U.S. County Percent Change Rankings PDF:

http://www.census.gov/compendia/smadb/TableC-01.pdf

What is this supposed to be? Do you even look at this stuff before posting it?
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  #1499  
Old Posted Jun 24, 2012, 4:39 PM
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Well, I guess that's a victory for immigration policy. Immigration of poor Hispanics is down and immigration of well-to-do Asians is up.

Re the recession and high unemployment: large numbers of people are moving here and finding well-paying work. Makes you wonder whether locals who still can't find work will ever find work.
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Old Posted Sep 25, 2012, 6:05 PM
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Maps Of U.S. Population Change, 2000-2010


U.S. City Graphics: http://www.datapointed.net/2011/04/m...0-2010-census/

Quote:
.....

Nationwide, one feature stands out: the bumper crop of fresh suburbs that ring almost every metropolitan area. Where did all of these people come from? A zoom into the Midwest suggests the answer. The new tract developments appear to be sucking the life out the older neighborhoods, which bear the scarlet tints of waning population.

- Click through and look closely, and at the very center of the biggest cities – within a stone’s throw of downtown – you’ll see a tiny, resurgent dot of blue. Apparently, at some point in recent history, a home address amongst the skyscrapers became desirable again. Even in the City of Detroit, which dropped a full quarter of its citizens in the last decade, downtown is flashing the signs of a comeback.

.....



New Orleans: http://www.datapointed.net/visualiza...ans-louisiana/

Las Vegas: http://www.datapointed.net/visualiza...-vegas-nevada/

More Cities: http://www.datapointed.net/2011/04/g...ings-part-two/
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