Census population estimates 2011-2019 (user search)
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  Census population estimates 2011-2019 (search mode)
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Author Topic: Census population estimates 2011-2019  (Read 181532 times)
Storr
Junior Chimp
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Posts: 7,237
Moldova, Republic of


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« on: October 25, 2018, 06:24:46 PM »

For reference, this is my state by state population projection:

CA   40402290
TX   29502646
FL   21811223
NY   20028164
PA   12844485
IL   12790817
OH   11704839
GA   10710330
NC   10553235
MI   09991966
NJ   09086699
VA   08647908
WA   07664128
AZ   07252945
MA   06978168
TN   06856211
IN   06736115
MO   06160797
MD   06157766
WI   05836522
CO   05826331
MN   05680037
SC   05175709
AL   04910634
LA   04741554
KY   04497752
OR   04261009
OK   03998861
CT   03593521
UT   03230019
IA   03183203
NV   03110826
AR   03037752
MS   02990168
KS   02935879
NM   02099018
NE   01955636
WV   01801766
ID   01773571
HI   01453042
NH   01352784
ME   01338769
MT   01073661
RI   01062178
DE   00986216
SD   00890706
ND   00786803
AK   00751002
VT   00622867
WY   00585213


Delaware is getting oh so close to 1,000,000!
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Storr
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 7,237
Moldova, Republic of


WWW
« Reply #1 on: March 30, 2020, 10:42:04 AM »
« Edited: March 30, 2020, 10:49:23 AM by Storr »

Florida might not gain it's second seat,  and Texas might not get it's third.




Ohio might not lose a seat? Now that's interesting. (Texas not getting a third, Florida not getting a second, and CA-53 for MT-2 area all intriguing, of course. But, Ohio has lost at least one seat after every census from 1970 on.)

Edit: Furthermore, after checking to see what other seats have changed since I last looked at a possible reapportionment map (late 2019), the Alabama GOP must be quite relieved if this holds and they don't lose a seat.
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Storr
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 7,237
Moldova, Republic of


WWW
« Reply #2 on: May 21, 2020, 07:16:48 PM »

Quickly looking through the population maps, the big cities (100k+) with declines in population since 2010 seem to all be rust belt cities (Chicago, Detroit, Buffalo, Milwaukee, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, Toledo, Dayton, Paterson, Rochester NY, Syracuse, Springfield IL, Peoria, while Flint has gone below 100k), smaller Southern cities that have long been on a slow decline (Jackson, Mobile, Birmingham, Montgomery, Memphis, Beaumont, Norfolk, Shreveport), or inner ring Los Angeles County suburbs (Downey, Inglewood, West Covina, Torrance, Norwalk, Burbank) .

Just for fun, it looks like Loving County Texas grew by 106.1%.....from 82 to 169 residents. lol
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Storr
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 7,237
Moldova, Republic of


WWW
« Reply #3 on: May 22, 2020, 03:31:10 PM »

According to the new 2019 estimates, the states that have lost population since 2010 are: Connecticut,  Illinois, Vermont, and West Virginia.

The one that's most concerning is Illinois. All other Rust Belt states are at least barely growing in population, even Michigan which lost population from 2000-2010!
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