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Jun 03 2023
News
A quarter of all children in the U.S. are Latino, U.S. census study finds
A recent data analysis of the 2020 census shows the number of Latino children in the U.S. grew by more than 1 million in a 10-year period.
The analysis, conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau, offers additional insight into the U.S. population and the ways it has changed since the previous census in 2010. Researchers found that 25.7% (18.8 million) of all U.S. children under 18 were of
NBC News (Online)Mar 25 2024
News
Greater Nashville Music City Census lacking young industry respondents, in final stretches
The Greater Nashville Music City Census, a project aiming to collect data on Nashville's music industry professionals, is in its home stretch. It has extended its deadline for entries to April 1 in the midst of a distinct lack of participation from young musicians. Since its launch on March 1, Nashville has joined the ranks of a national cohort of 20 cities hoping to find data-driven solutions
The TennesseanMar 14 2024
News
Cook County lost 24,000 residents last year in latest census survey
Despite an influx of international immigrants, Cook County bucked a broader post-pandemic trend and continued to lose population last year, according to U.S. Census Bureau data released Thursday. The Vintage 2023 estimates show Cook County remains the second largest county in the U.S. at nearly 5.1 million residents, but its population fell by more than 24,000 last year, the fourth largest
Chicago TribuneMar 14 2024
News
Pennsylvania’s population is stagnant, but these counties saw gains and losses in latest Census report
Morning CallMar 14 2024
News
Latest census numbers show which NC counties grew and which shrank since the pandemic
North Carolina’s two largest counties are still attracting lots of new residents, accounting for more than a quarter of the state’s population growth since 2020, according to the latest estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau. But the pace of growth continues to be highest in coastal and suburban counties, which have grown by 10% or more in three years. Meanwhile, during that time, nearly one in
The News & ObserverOct 03 2023
News
The growing racial gap in U.S. census results is raising an expert panel's concerns
The widening racial and ethnic gaps in how accurately different populations are counted in the U.S. census threatens the equitable distribution of political representation and federal funding, warns a new report by an expert panel who reviewed the 2020 national head count.
Most notably, the estimated net undercount rate at which Latinos were left out of the 2020 census was more than
NPR (Online News)Apr 15 2024
News
US business inventories pick up in February
WASHINGTON, April 15 (Reuters) - U.S. business inventories rose in February amid strong gains at retailers and wholesalers, suggesting that inventory investment could contribute to economic growth in the first quarter. Inventories increased 0.4% after being unchanged in January, the Commerce Department's Census Bureau on Monday. The pick up in inventories, a key component of gross domestic
ReutersApr 10 2024
News
Map shows US states with highest, lowest rent
The vertigo-inducing growth of home rent prices during the pandemic has finally lost pace but, as Newsweek's map of state highs and lows shows (below), the cost remains generally much higher than in 2019. The median gross rent in the country according to the U.S. Census Bureau 2022 data was $1,300, with a margin of error of about $3. In 2019 it was $1,097, according to the Census ACS survey.
NewsweekDec 07 2023
News
This is the ‘center’ of Arkansas, according to Census population data
(NEXSTAR) — If you had to point to the “heart” of Arkansas on a map, where would it be? You might default to Little Rock, which serves as both the state capital and a near geographical center point. The U.S. Census Bureau has been calculating the “center of population” in the country since conducting the first census in 1790. This is a point where an imaginary, flat, weightless, and rigid map
KNWAJan 03 2024
News
Several Illinois Towns To Be Counted Again in Special Census
Four years after the last census, almost a dozen small communities in the Midwest are going to be counted again in hopes of getting a new grocery store or more state funding to build roads, fire stations and parks. Eleven small cities in Illinois and Iowa are the only municipalities so far to have signed agreements with the U.S. Census Bureau for a second count of their residents in 2024 and
WTTW