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  #341  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2017, 6:57 PM
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Population figures 2016:


Queens: 	----------------2,333,054
Staten Island: ------------- 476,015
Brooklyn:	-------------     2,629,150
Bronx:  -------------          1,455,720
Manhattan:	--------------     1,643,734

Total:  ----------------          8,537,673
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  #342  
Old Posted Mar 25, 2017, 9:42 PM
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How long before Bronx overtakes Manhattan?
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  #343  
Old Posted Mar 26, 2017, 3:22 AM
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i dk but not long at the rate its going. it is surpassing its own historic high this year. there are thousands of apts on the way or in the pipeline.

http://www.welcome2thebronx.com/word...residents/amp/
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  #344  
Old Posted Mar 26, 2017, 5:38 AM
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When The Bronx passes Suffolk County, the four dense boroughs will be the four most populous counties in the entire CSA.

If The Bronx can catch Middlesex County, Massachusetts and Philadelphia, the four dense boroughs will be the four most populous counties in the entire Northeast.
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  #345  
Old Posted Mar 26, 2017, 2:52 PM
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New thread title: NEW YORK | 2010 Census data | 8,175,133 City (8,537,673 - 2016)
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  #346  
Old Posted Mar 27, 2017, 3:47 PM
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Always thought NYC would regret demolishing the Third Avenue El back in the 70's ( i'm old enough to remember it). Now as the Bronx is skyrocketing to a new population high the existing lines are all strained to capacity. Could really used that line now; just an overall lack in foresight.
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  #347  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2018, 3:17 AM
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NYC population estimates for 2017 will be released by the Census Bureau next month.

8.6 million should be a safe bet... an addition of 63,000 residents since last year.
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  #348  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2018, 3:49 AM
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The US Census numbers for county populations have been released to the media but is currently under embargo, as is the norm, until Thursday. There is always a media company that will accidently or intentionally break the embargo, so be on the look out.

8.6 million for NYC
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  #349  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2018, 5:10 AM
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I'm trying to imagine the justification for not releasing this at the same time to everybody. For one, why not. Two, this method creates the opportunity for foul play for real estate or anything else, just like similar information can't be used by stock holders or sports bettors.
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  #350  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2018, 11:54 AM
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Originally Posted by mhays View Post
I'm trying to imagine the justification for not releasing this at the same time to everybody.
I think they do it so that approved media can prepare articles. In my job, we have a list of preapproved media contacts that receive embargoed press releases.

Not really arguing for or against, but I assume that's the justification. If the media didn't get embargoed info, there would be a short delay in public reporting.
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  #351  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2018, 7:20 PM
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No. The actual source info would get out immediately. They could simply send a release on all channels with a link.

The benefit of articles is context and summarization. That can happen second.
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  #352  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 4:08 AM
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Looks like the embargo survived.

The data isn't online yet but the Bureau posted a handful of tables, including a most populous county table.

Brooklyn dropped (2017 number, 2016 number, numerical change, percentage change):

2,648,771.....2,650,859.......-2,088........-0.1

Not a good sign.
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  #353  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 4:33 AM
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Why can't we hear leaks from the White House on the Census population estimate embargos

Bronx at 1,417,160
Brooklyn at 2,648,711
Queens at 2,358,582
Manhattan at 1,664,727
Staten Island 479,458

Total: 8,568,638

I can't find data on the honorary sixth borough
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  #354  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 4:39 AM
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New thread title:

NEW YORK | 2010 Census data | 8,175,133 City (8,568,638 - 2017)


Outward migration is up. Brooklyn actually lost residents.
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  #355  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 5:08 AM
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More info at: https://www.census.gov/newsroom/pres...ro-county.html

Code:
Top 10 Most Populous Metropolitan Areas: 2017
2017 Rank	
2016 Rank

Metropolitan Area

2017 Population

2016 Population

1

1

New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ-PA

20,320,876

20,275,179

2

2

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA

13,353,907

13,328,261

3

3

Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, IL-IN-WI

9,533,040

9,546,326

4

4

Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX

7,399,662

7,253,424

5

5

Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX

6,892,427

6,798,010

6

6

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV

6,216,589

6,150,681

7

7

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, FL

6,158,824

6,107,433

8

8

Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD

6,096,120

6,077,152

9

9

Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA

5,884,736

5,795,723

10

10

Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH

4,836,531

4,805,942





Top 10 Largest-Gaining Metropolitan Areas (Numeric Increase): 2016-2017
2017 Rank	
2016 Rank

Metropolitan Area

2017 Population

2016 Population

Numeric Change

1

1

Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX

7,399,662

7,253,424

146,238

2

2

Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX

6,892,427

6,798,010

94,417

3

3

Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA

5,884,736

5,795,723

89,013

4

4

Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale, AZ

4,737,270

4,648,498

88,772

5

11

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV

6,216,589

6,150,681

65,908

6

6

Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA

3,867,046

3,802,660

64,386

7

13

Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA

4,580,670

4,523,653

57,017

8

8

Orlando-Kissimmee-Sanford, FL

2,509,831

2,453,333

56,498

9

9

Austin-Round Rock, TX

2,115,827

2,060,558

55,269

10

7

Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, FL

3,091,399

3,036,525

54,874
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  #356  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 3:06 PM
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Hudson County, NJ at 691,643

13,660 (2 percent) more than 2016 and 57,369 (9 percent) more than the 2010 census.
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  #357  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 3:20 PM
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Why is Brooklyn seeing a small drop? Families being priced out?
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  #358  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 7:03 PM
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NYC's 2017 population is 8,622,690.
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  #359  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 7:06 PM
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^ Yup, 8,622,698. The story just posted to the Times.

New York City’s Population Hits a Record 8.6 Million
By JAMES BARRONMARCH 22, 2018


New York City’s population reached a record high last year of over 8.6 million and has climbed 5.5 percent since 2010, according to a Department of City Planning analysis of new Census Bureau population estimates.

There were 8,622,698 people in the city last year, 447,565 more than were counted in the 2010 census.

City demographers said the new total was the culmination of an average annual gain not seen since the first half of the 20th century, when the city became dominant in everything from finance to culture and communications — and also had strong manufacturing and shipping sectors with thousands of jobs.

Joseph J. Salvo, the chief demographer at the planning agency, said that, in effect, New York City added as many people as in all of New Rochelle, a city in Westchester County, each year from 2010 to 2017. The 2010 census put New Rochelle’s total at just over 77,000. He attributed some of the city’s jump to housing units planned before the 2010 census that were deferred in the recession and have been completed in the last few years.

“It’s a remarkable growth story,” Dr. Salvo said.

From 2010 to 2017, New York City led the rest of the state in population growth, with the Bronx emerging as the fastest-growing county in the state. The Bronx surged 6.21 percent, with 86,052 new residents.

But Brooklyn, with a population of 2,648,771, took in more people — 144,071 — to achieve the highest growth of any county in the state by absolute numbers. Its 5.75 percent jump from 2010 to 2017 was second as a percentage gain.

The population in Queens climbed 127,860, or 5.73 percent, to 2,358,582, making it second among counties in the state in terms of growth by numbers and third in percentage gains. Manhattan was fourth in the number of newcomers, with 78,854, a 4.97 percent expansion that ranked fifth in percentage terms (behind Rockland County, which grew 5.51 percent with an increase of 17,181 people).

Staten Island added a more modest 10,728 people, a 2.29 percent gain to 479,458.

The city accounted for 95 percent of the state’s population growth between 2010 and 2017. City demographers noted that the city’s share of the state’s population had edged up 1.2 percentage points, to 43.4 percent last year from 42.2 percent in 2010.

The demographers say the new figure is an indication of what the next census could find in 2020 and could have ramifications in Albany when legislative districts are redrawn after that. Many parts of upstate New York, particularly urban areas, have been a chronic state of economic distress as the manufacturing sector has eroded.

By contrast, 45 of the state’s 62 counties lost population between 2010 and 2017. Three counties upstate — Chenango, Delaware and Hamilton — lost more than 5 percent of their population from 2010 to 2017. Another five counties lost more than 4 percent.

But Dr. Salvo is concerned that the Trump administration’s approach to immigration could hurt the city in the 2020 census. Of the 4.4 million foreign-born residents in New York State, 3.3 million live in the city, he said. If they are undercounted, he said, “New York City will be hurt relative to the rest of the state.”

“The problem with the current environment is it affects more than just the undocumented,” he said, “because undocumented immigrants are often in families with legal permanent residents, they’re in families with U.S. citizens and they’re not distinguishing each other by their legal status. What they all have in common is fear. They’re afraid for their relatives, and that might cause people not to respond to the census.”

A federal law protects the confidentiality of the census, stipulating that census responses can be used only for statistical computations by the Census Bureau. An accurate account is vital because, among other factors, it determines how much federal aid flows to local communities.

The boom in the Bronx lifted the borough’s population to 1,471,160, so the Bronx has climbed to within a few hundred people of its largest-ever total, 1,471,701 in the 1970 census.

That head count was taken seven years before “ladies and gentleman, the Bronx is burning” became a catchphrase for the borough’s slide into urban despair. Lloyd Ultan, the longtime Bronx borough historian, said “the final nail in the coffin” was the 1981 film “Fort Apache the Bronx.”

“The Bronx gained a reputation as a place with feral people living in rubble and ready to pounce on anybody passing by,” he said. “It’s easy to get a bad reputation. It’s much more difficult to recover from it, but finally, people are discovering what they should have known all along: the desirability of living in the Bronx.”

Now people in some neighborhoods of the Bronx worry that gentrification is pushing people out, even as the de Blasio administration presses for affordable housing, especially in the Jerome Avenue corridor. But there have also been chilling reminders of violence, as on the night last summer when a man fired a .38-caliber revolver into a police command post two miles from Yankee Stadium, killing an officer inside. The gunman’s aunt said he had been released from a hospital a week earlier, after a breakdown.

“We’ve always said the Bronx had the ability to bounce back, given its available land and zoning,” Dr. Salvo said.

But he added: “I’m quite biased.” He lives in the northeast Bronx.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/22/n...av=bottom-well
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  #360  
Old Posted Mar 22, 2018, 8:09 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tdawg View Post
^ Yup, 8,622,698. The story just posted to the Times.

New York City’s Population Hits a Record 8.6 Million
By JAMES BARRONMARCH 22, 2018


New York City’s population reached a record high last year of over 8.6 million and has climbed 5.5 percent since 2010, according to a Department of City Planning analysis of new Census Bureau population estimates.

There were 8,622,698 people in the city last year, 447,565 more than were counted in the 2010 census.

City demographers said the new total was the culmination of an average annual gain not seen since the first half of the 20th century, when the city became dominant in everything from finance to culture and communications — and also had strong manufacturing and shipping sectors with thousands of jobs.

Joseph J. Salvo, the chief demographer at the planning agency, said that, in effect, New York City added as many people as in all of New Rochelle, a city in Westchester County, each year from 2010 to 2017. The 2010 census put New Rochelle’s total at just over 77,000. He attributed some of the city’s jump to housing units planned before the 2010 census that were deferred in the recession and have been completed in the last few years.

“It’s a remarkable growth story,” Dr. Salvo said.

From 2010 to 2017, New York City led the rest of the state in population growth, with the Bronx emerging as the fastest-growing county in the state. The Bronx surged 6.21 percent, with 86,052 new residents.

But Brooklyn, with a population of 2,648,771, took in more people — 144,071 — to achieve the highest growth of any county in the state by absolute numbers. Its 5.75 percent jump from 2010 to 2017 was second as a percentage gain.

The population in Queens climbed 127,860, or 5.73 percent, to 2,358,582, making it second among counties in the state in terms of growth by numbers and third in percentage gains. Manhattan was fourth in the number of newcomers, with 78,854, a 4.97 percent expansion that ranked fifth in percentage terms (behind Rockland County, which grew 5.51 percent with an increase of 17,181 people).

Staten Island added a more modest 10,728 people, a 2.29 percent gain to 479,458.

The city accounted for 95 percent of the state’s population growth between 2010 and 2017. City demographers noted that the city’s share of the state’s population had edged up 1.2 percentage points, to 43.4 percent last year from 42.2 percent in 2010.

The demographers say the new figure is an indication of what the next census could find in 2020 and could have ramifications in Albany when legislative districts are redrawn after that. Many parts of upstate New York, particularly urban areas, have been a chronic state of economic distress as the manufacturing sector has eroded.

By contrast, 45 of the state’s 62 counties lost population between 2010 and 2017. Three counties upstate — Chenango, Delaware and Hamilton — lost more than 5 percent of their population from 2010 to 2017. Another five counties lost more than 4 percent.

But Dr. Salvo is concerned that the Trump administration’s approach to immigration could hurt the city in the 2020 census. Of the 4.4 million foreign-born residents in New York State, 3.3 million live in the city, he said. If they are undercounted, he said, “New York City will be hurt relative to the rest of the state.”

“The problem with the current environment is it affects more than just the undocumented,” he said, “because undocumented immigrants are often in families with legal permanent residents, they’re in families with U.S. citizens and they’re not distinguishing each other by their legal status. What they all have in common is fear. They’re afraid for their relatives, and that might cause people not to respond to the census.”

A federal law protects the confidentiality of the census, stipulating that census responses can be used only for statistical computations by the Census Bureau. An accurate account is vital because, among other factors, it determines how much federal aid flows to local communities.

The boom in the Bronx lifted the borough’s population to 1,471,160, so the Bronx has climbed to within a few hundred people of its largest-ever total, 1,471,701 in the 1970 census.

That head count was taken seven years before “ladies and gentleman, the Bronx is burning” became a catchphrase for the borough’s slide into urban despair. Lloyd Ultan, the longtime Bronx borough historian, said “the final nail in the coffin” was the 1981 film “Fort Apache the Bronx.”

“The Bronx gained a reputation as a place with feral people living in rubble and ready to pounce on anybody passing by,” he said. “It’s easy to get a bad reputation. It’s much more difficult to recover from it, but finally, people are discovering what they should have known all along: the desirability of living in the Bronx.”

Now people in some neighborhoods of the Bronx worry that gentrification is pushing people out, even as the de Blasio administration presses for affordable housing, especially in the Jerome Avenue corridor. But there have also been chilling reminders of violence, as on the night last summer when a man fired a .38-caliber revolver into a police command post two miles from Yankee Stadium, killing an officer inside. The gunman’s aunt said he had been released from a hospital a week earlier, after a breakdown.

“We’ve always said the Bronx had the ability to bounce back, given its available land and zoning,” Dr. Salvo said.

But he added: “I’m quite biased.” He lives in the northeast Bronx.

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/22/n...av=bottom-well
Hahaha! It looks like I transposed the numbers for The Bronx. Glad to see the city is still growing quickly!

Last edited by C.; Mar 22, 2018 at 8:24 PM.
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