Big Easy Fastest Growing Major U.S. City
But Population Still Only About Half What It Was Before Katrina; Cleveland Has Fastest Shrinking Population
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Photo
A float rolls down Napoleon Avenue during the Krewe of Orpheus Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans, Feb. 4, 2008. The U.S. Census reports New Orleans is the fastest growing large city in America. (AP Photo/Ann Heisenfelt)
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Interactive
After The Storm
The road to recovery for the people and places along the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast.
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Interactive
Rebuilding New Orleans
The latest as the Crescent City works to rise from Hurricane Katrina's floodwaters
Between July 1, 2006, and July 1, 2007, its population jumped 13.8 percent to 239,124, according to the bureau's latest statistics on cities with populations of at least 100,000.
That's just more than half the 453,726 people living there about two months before Katrina devastated the city and led to a near-total evacuation in August 2005.
The size of New Orleans' population has been debated since post-storm recovery began.
The Census Bureau estimated New Orleans' population by looking at its available housing units, along with building permits, construction without building permits and mobile home shipments. The data don't differentiate temporary laborers and others involved in recovery efforts who might not stay there.
Demographer Greg Rigamer said he believes the city currently has 315,000 to 320,000 residents, estimated by utility and water hookups, mail delivery and other public service accounts.
But Rigamer said the population report doesn't make New Orleans a boom town.
"We aren't fast-growing," he said. "We're recovering. It's good people are coming back, but you can't put us in with Houston. Come on."
Because of a year's delay on the figures, the population effects of current economic trends - like the real estate slowdown and high gas prices - aren't yet known, said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution.
"The fast-growing parts of the country are still fast-growing, but it's slowing down," Frey said. "It's evident all over Florida. Miami, Orlando and Tampa have shown significant slowdowns in the growth. Phoenix and several Texas cities have shown a slowdown."
At the same time, the credit crunch - making it more difficult to buy homes in the suburbs - may be responsible for year-to-year population gains in such cities as Chicago, Boston and Los Angeles, Frey said.
The Census report also found:
Texas cities showed rapid growth: Houston added the most people, with 38,932 new residents; San Antonio, Fort Worth and Austin were among the top 10 in numerical increases; and McKinney, Denton and Killeen were among the top 10 in percentage increases.
The consolidated metropolitan area of Nashville-Davidson County, Tenn., became the 25th largest city with 590,807 residents. Washington, D.C. fell out of the top 25.
Cleveland had the largest numerical decline in population over the latest year, losing 5,067 residents, followed by Columbus, Ga.; Baton Rouge, La.; Philadelphia and Baltimore. Cleveland also had the second greatest rate of loss over seven years, losing 8.3 percent of its population to stand at 438,042.
In 2007, New York remained the largest city with 8.3 million residents, followed by Los Angeles with 3.8 million and Chicago with 2.8 million.
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Mayor Ray Nagin did not take care of his people, period. Why he got elected again, I have no idea.
I with you on that. Well said
Posted by OneWorldUSA
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I ceased to care what happens to New Orleans when they re-elected Nagin for Mayor. He certainly wasn''t re-elected on merit so it must have been that he was a black man running against a white man. No matter what the reason, Nagin did nothing to save his people and he let the police run wild looting, beating and killing. He is a dangerous loser.
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For starters, I would have mobilized all those school busses the day before.
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Posted by OneWorldUSA
So, I guess you don''t have any sympathy for the people of Florida who make the same decision to go back and have their homes rebuilt when they get hit several times a year, every year; or the folks in California who have their homes rebuilt after the mud slides or the fires? Oh, and what about the people in the current flood ravaged areas? Maybe we should just level those areas too. Would that work for you?
Posted by crazycwp at 09:29 AM : Jul 10, 2008
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My freakin DOG could have done a better job then Ray Nagin!! Christ, he had a whole fleet of school buses sitting there from the start. What in Christ do you think a Mayor is supposed be prepared for...just Mardi Gras?
LOL
NO itself is an inverted soup bowl. History has taught us that the next hurricane will most likely be another Katrina like situation. Will we have to spend billions to bail these folks out again?
And the sheeple will believe it.
Wouldn''t live there if you gave me $100,000.
Eeeeeeeeeeeeeewwwwwwwwwwwwwww.
Lots of homicide by...young black men. Go figure.
People with money & brains are getting the heck out of Dodge ASAP.
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by keithle1
July 11, 2008 9:50 AM EDT
- Not sure why CBS NEWS website is being targetted by dating site spammers. They must cease & desist! You have to use a dating site to meet people? Get a life.
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See all 24 CommentsWho want to see pics of your rolls of fat, Porky Pig?
Nothing is going to save Cleveland. People will continue to leave that city. There is nothing going on. No hope. No future. No jobs. No development.
Re New Orleans, why live in a city where you''re nervously watching the weather every hurricane season? Are there jobs for the people of the Big Easy? Are companies moving there? I don''t see the appeal. Nice place to party, show your b r e a s t s,
eat good food & hear great music. But apart from that, what is there? Why would you want to live there if you can afford to live somewhere else? I know New Orleans has a very high population of poor people.