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PostMar 24, 2022#826

I won’t fret over a single year estimate. Almost hit on a 7 leg parlay last weekend so I’m feeling lucky enough to bet that the city will have population growth come 2030.


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PostMar 24, 2022#827

I think the right things are starting to come into place for St. Louis. I really do. 

That doesn't mean that they're falling into place quickly enough to offset the current losses, but I also think that the city and region will show population growth by 2030. 

I just think this city is starting to get a lot better at leveraging its strengths for wins. I believe in Jason Hall. 

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PostMar 24, 2022#828

Many metros have taken a hit, not just STL...
https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time ... areas.html


Here's a county view...

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PostMar 24, 2022#829

Wow, looks like all the pandemic deaths took a toll. 

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PostMar 24, 2022#830

PeterXCV wrote:
Mar 24, 2022
Wow, looks like all the pandemic deaths took a toll. 
Not as much as migration for most markets..

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PostMar 24, 2022#831

Interesting, that makes me skeptical of these numbers, that so many large metros could have people moving out at once. 

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PostMar 24, 2022#832

^^^Roughly how many people in the metro area died from Covid or Covid related complications, on top of the normal annual deaths? While I'm certain our region didn't grow, this could be a factor. If we normally gain a small amount and we saw more deaths than normal, this could surely put us in the negative category. Not to mention, government statistics show that people migrated away from big cities in droves during Covid. This likely had to do with people being able to work remotely anywhere they choose. 

https://fox2now.com/news/national/in-pa ... st-metros/

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PostMar 24, 2022#833

PeterXCV wrote:
Mar 24, 2022
Interesting, that makes me skeptical of these numbers, that so many large metros could have people moving out at once. 
I'm always skeptical of Federal data but decisions are made on their numbers whether we accept them or not.  However there have been other indicators for quite a while showing some of the largest cities have had large outmigrations over the last year+.

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PostMar 25, 2022#834

STL city cannot grow until black families have a reason to stay.

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PostMar 25, 2022#835

^This.

The vast majority of those leaving the metro are black. 

I maintain the belief that the 2020s will be better to St. Louis' black migration numbers than the 2010s were, but we have got to figure this out and foster a better environment for our black citizens.

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PostMar 25, 2022#836

I think the right things are starting to come into place for St. Louis. I really do. 

That doesn't mean that they're falling into place quickly enough to offset the current losses, but I also think that the city and region will show population growth by 2030. 
This is the question - at what point does the population loss stop.....

I'd like to think the same that 2030 will be it (just far enough away to be possible)......  but it is +20% thru this decade and unsure what the city/region are doing that will cause population growth. 

Same thing could've been said in 2002, 2012 with hope for growth at the end of their respective decades.  

Unsure, realistically, how this decade will be any different.



  

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PostMar 25, 2022#837

St. Louis will not grow until there is a total restructuring of how the region does business and administrates services. Until then I will not be hopeful. I think certain areas will make progress, but doubt we will be anything but a slow growth/stagnant region until there is substantial change.

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PostMar 25, 2022#838

This is the question - at what point does the population loss stop....
Like DB said…when black folks have a reason to stay.  In the last Census the Central Corridor grew at a combined 13%, the South Side has stabilized (I think it was around a 2% combined loss) while North St. Louis shedded around 23%. Figure out how to keep them and the city’s population loss reverses immediately.

The overall region also needs to tackle fragmentation as the goat correctly points out.

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PostMar 25, 2022#839

spreadsheetwizard wrote:
Mar 25, 2022
I think the right things are starting to come into place for St. Louis. I really do. 

That doesn't mean that they're falling into place quickly enough to offset the current losses, but I also think that the city and region will show population growth by 2030. 
This is the question - at what point does the population loss stop.....

I'd like to think the same that 2030 will be it (just far enough away to be possible)......  but it is +20% thru this decade and unsure what the city/region are doing that will cause population growth. 

Same thing could've been said in 2002, 2012 with hope for growth at the end of their respective decades.  

Unsure, realistically, how this decade will be any different.



  
I think looking at the overall numbers it can feel like nothing is happening, but if we look at what areas are gaining and what area are losing population it becomes a solvable problem. The south side of the city has been more or less holding steady recently, the central corridor has been growing in population, most if not all of the latest population loss is from the north side. I believe the city has shown that it can create attractive places for people to live, if we want to stem population loss and begin growing we need to invest in providing the development and services to the north side of the city that have helped the central areas become a desirable place to live (of course those that's easier to type than to do, but I do think that at this point growing the city is dependent on growing the north side)

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PostMar 27, 2022#840

I would be pretty suspicious of this year's ACS estimates, they seem to be "adjusting" the actual census figures back towards their busted 2019 figures that way underestimated urban populations.

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PostMar 27, 2022#841

Ebsy wrote:I would be pretty suspicious of this year's ACS estimates, they seem to be "adjusting" the actual census figures back towards their busted 2019 figures that way underestimated urban populations.


Some thoughts on that


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PostMar 27, 2022#842

Ebsy wrote:
Mar 27, 2022
I would be pretty suspicious of this year's ACS estimates, they seem to be "adjusting" the actual census figures back towards their busted 2019 figures that way underestimated urban populations.
Generally agree that's a possibility, but this method is based on change, not a new count. And cities/states were warning before these results that tax filings, change of address, etc indicated significant out-migration from many major cities.  I wouldn't necessarily trust the exact numbers but the trends probably aren't off base.   If cities/counties have significantly different results than what the recent method shows, they'd certainly challenge it.  

PostMar 27, 2022#843

I posted this over on kcrag, which is why it ends to KC counties.  It shows that most of the big metro core counties lost quite a bit.  Even Dallas, Nashville, Atlanta and Orlando.  STL core fared relatively OK even if they are just approximations. 



Outer counties were stripped out among others, here's the full list...
https://www2.census.gov/programs-survey ... 1-pop.xlsx

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PostApr 06, 2022#844

Should STL do the same?

https://apnews.com/article/covid-health ... _medium=AP
Detroit is largest city to challenge 2020 census numbers

 Majority-Black Detroit has become the largest U.S. city to challenge its figures from the 2020 census following a national head count in which the U.S. Census Bureau acknowledges that a higher percentage of African Americans were undercounted than last decade, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Leaders of Michigan’s largest city, which is more than three-quarters Black, had questioned the results of the 2020 census since last December when they released a report suggesting that more than 8% of the occupied homes in 10 Detroit neighborhoods may have been undercounted.

Detroit filed its challenge late last week, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

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PostApr 06, 2022#845

pdm_ad wrote:
Apr 06, 2022
Should STL do the same?

https://apnews.com/article/covid-health ... _medium=AP
Detroit is largest city to challenge 2020 census numbers

 Majority-Black Detroit has become the largest U.S. city to challenge its figures from the 2020 census following a national head count in which the U.S. Census Bureau acknowledges that a higher percentage of African Americans were undercounted than last decade, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Leaders of Michigan’s largest city, which is more than three-quarters Black, had questioned the results of the 2020 census since last December when they released a report suggesting that more than 8% of the occupied homes in 10 Detroit neighborhoods may have been undercounted.

Detroit filed its challenge late last week, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
Doesn’t every large city challenge them?

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PostApr 06, 2022#846

https://www.kmov.com/2022/04/06/thousan ... ses-rises/
Thousands of new apartments being built in St. Louis City as demand for houses rises

Take a drive through the Central Corridor of St. Louis City and you’ll see cranes and buildings rising from the streets as developers are building thousands of new apartments and condos.

Near Forest Park Parkway and DeBaliviere, the skyline is changing as Expo at Forest Park nears completion. It will have 287 market-rate luxury apartments. Across the street is The Hudson which will house 155 units.

In the Central West End, Pier Property Groups is planning 120 units for a project called The Flats at Forest Park at Kingshighway and McPherson. The same developer is adding 105 units in Midtown at Steelcote Flats and 196 units at Edwin on Grand which will be anchored by a Target store.

“I think it’s a really big deal,” Paul Hamilton said. He owns several restaurants in Lafayette Square including Vin De Set, PW Pizza and Hamilton’s Steakhouse.

They’re down the road from the Steelcote properties and across the street from the soon to open Edge District of Lafayette Square. That project includes 128 apartments.

“It’s exciting to see how far things have come, it’s exciting to see what more’s to come,” Hamilton said.

Michael Schwartz with Blackline Construction says the demand continues to grow as excitement over the MLS stadium, growth in Downtown St. Louis and the NGA bring new people into the city of St. Louis.
The latest census data shows St. Louis is losing population and dropping below 300,000. This trend is a bit confusing for some.

“All of the data we see shows we’re losing [people] yet all of these projects are getting filled. For us personally, we try not to do projects that displace residents,” Schwartz said.

PostApr 06, 2022#847

^^ Not sure?

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PostMay 19, 2022#848

Census is out with under and over counts. Missouri no changes but our next door neighbor Illinois got shafted. Undercount by 2%, so they actually over 13,000,000 for first time in state history

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PostMay 19, 2022#849

Is that enough to have impacted their lost congressional seat? 

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PostMay 19, 2022#850

^ yes but in 1999 SCOTUS ruled that under/over counts cannot change the House seats after the fact.

2010- 12,830,632 
2020- original 12,812,508 
2020- 2% undercounted added- 13,068,758

+238,126 since 2010 

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