NEW YORK | 2020 Census data | 8,804,190
ALBANY -- The U.S. Census Bureau will release 2010 Census data for New York state Thursday afternoon.
The information to be used for redistricting was sent Wednesday to Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the state Legislature leadership. The Times Union will report on the findings when they become available Thursday. The newspaper also will report on additional information as it is released in the coming months. New York and Maine are the last states to receive the data... Read more: http://www.timesunion.com/local/arti...#ixzz1HWklmSQV ****************************** Adding 2020 numbers. https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/08...s-results-data New York City adds 629,000 people, defying predictions of its decline. — Annie Correal Quote:
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I've been waiting on this one for a very long time. Any predictions on New York City's population.
My guesstimate: 8,440,000 |
Census 2000 population (for comparison): 8,008,288
I'm going to go out on a limb and say that I don't think NYC gained 400k. Especially considering how much the Census undercounted other cities. How many significant residential structures were built, created over the past 10 years? Since there's so little greenfield to develop, there would have to be lots of conversions to warrant a 400k gain. Also the truth of the matter is that in order for all of these conversions to occur, poor families would have been priced out of the city into other areas of the metro. my guess: 8,199,000 |
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Philadelphia's black population actually bucked the trend among major urban areas of the northeast and Midwest, and I wonder if that is in part due to people fleeing New York. |
can't wait to see Elmira
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I don't really see gentrification spreading any further to North Philly (other than Templetown, Brewerytown, and Strawberry Mansion), West Philly up to 52nd St, and South Philly up to Washington Ave, especially since condo towers are being built or is being planned to be built (Mandeville???) As a black man, it's really no surprise why hundreds of thousands of blacks are moving out of places like NYC, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, and even Philadelphia. However, as a black man of Trinidadian descent, I can't really understand why many African Americans would simply abandon Northern cities for the South, which is the cheapest place in America. Se of the reasons make sense (family, retirement, slower pace of life, lower quality of life, etc.), but you would think that w/ the amount of political power in NYC, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Detroit, that the African American political leaders would do something to stop what might be a black brain drain to cities like Dallas, Houston, Charlotte, and worse, Atlanta. Especially since the North and the West still commands a higher salary in comparison to the South. |
Can't wait! Go NYC! Even a 2% gain would be a great gain for a massively built out city that is already at its historic peak.
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Expect state numbers to be between 19-20 million. The last estimates for the City were well above 8 million...
http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=169130 Quote:
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Bloomberg says census figures shortchange NYC
BY Adam Lisberg DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF Thursday, March 24th 2011, 1:20 PM We wuz robbed! New census figures claim there are fewer than 8.2 million New Yorkers in the city - which Mayor Bloomberg says is way too low. "We don't quite understand the numbers," he said Thursday. "It just doesn't make any sense at all." He said the Census Bureau counted 8.175 million New Yorkers in its once-in-a-decade count last year - which he estimates is 225,000 too low. Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/...#ixzz1HXWrcCPL |
^ at least it went up, and by ~167,000 people. that's still pretty good, even if short of the bureau estimates (which seem to have been overinflated for nearly all central cities).
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^ or severely undercounted.
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About what I expected for NYC.
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These numbers are always adjusted later...
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-relea...118591539.html Quote:
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http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/c...Yg4DVSAmat8HdK
City to census: Where’d all the people go? By DAVID SEIFMAN and BOB FREDERICKS March 24, 2011 Quote:
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I had census workers come to my building at least three times and ask me questions about my neighbors because they failed to turn in their forms. I suspect a LOT of people just didn't bother to be counted.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/25/ny...nsus.html?_r=1
City Population Barely Grew in the ’00s, Census Finds By SAM ROBERTS March 24, 2011 Quote:
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