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Census: Small US Cities Hit Hard By Recession

BY HOPE YEN and FRANK BASS | 11/16/09 04:06 PM | AP

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Small Us Cities

WASHINGTON — America's small cities are losing some of their traditional appeal to upwardly mobile families seeking wholesome neighborhoods, a stable economy and affordable living.

A review of newly released census data shows, for example, that smaller cities of between 20,000 and 50,000 residents have lagged behind their larger counterparts in attracting higher-educated residents in this decade. The smaller locales include remote towns, inner suburbs, the distant suburbs known as "exurbs" and other distinct areas.

In 2000, the smaller cities ranked at the top in the share of people with college diplomas. They slipped to No. 2 last year with 30 percent holding degrees – in between medium-sized cities, which had 31 percent, and big cities, at 29.8 percent.

Poverty is growing in the small cities, fueled partly by population growth, although average median income of $60,294 in those communities is still higher than other places.

Small cities looking more and more like bigger cities over the decade ranged from places like Hobart, Ind., and Mount Pleasant, Mich., to Anniston, Ala., and Greenville, Miss. Compared with previous years, they had smaller incomes, higher housing costs, longer commutes, more poverty and more single-parent families.

Demographers attributed some of the shifts to the housing downturn and a spike in gasoline prices, which has hit residents in the far-flung exurbs harder. Many families in smaller towns also are looking for jobs in larger cities because of the current recession and are rethinking the wisdom of a lengthy commute to work.

Some small cities may have become victims of their own success. As their local economies boomed mid-decade, many places grew rapidly and attracted lower-income residents needed to build roads, schools and other public works projects. Some of these areas have shot up in size and are now medium-sized communities.

"Small towns have a certain appeal to people, and their quality of life there is backed up by the data," said Mark Mather, associate vice president of the nonprofit Population Reference Bureau. "But as more people move in, small towns start to lose the qualities that attracted people there in the first place."

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The shifts are notable in the ranks of the educated.

According to census data, smaller cities in California, Texas, Florida, Michigan and New York had declines in the share of residents with bachelor's degrees, ranking among the lowest in the nation. They included Bell, Calif.; San Benito, Texas; Jasmine Estates, Fla.; Hamtramck, Mich.; and Newburgh, N.Y.

North Potomac, Md., posted some of the highest shares of college graduates in the nation. Still, its share fell in the last decade, from 75 percent in 2000 to 70 percent. Other highly educated towns or census-designated areas that saw brain drains were East Lansing, Mich., North Druid Hills, Ga., and Greenbelt, Md.

The findings come as President Barack Obama has pledged to upgrade mass transit and other urban priorities in inner cities and their close-in suburbs. That could create additional shifts in residential patterns to larger-populated areas, especially for younger couples and small families who more readily move.

The AP review found both extreme poverty and wealth in smaller-sized cities.

For example:

_ Poverty has risen in small cities, from 10.8 percent in 2000 to 12 percent. In big cities, poverty declined slightly, from 17.7 percent to 17.6 percent.

_ Homeownership costs in small cities are growing less rapidly, partly a reflection of the housing collapse in many exurbs. In 2000, big cities trailed small cities when it came to the share of residents with monthly costs of more than $1,000 – 56 percent to 61 percent. By 2008, 82 percent of big-city residents were paying the high costs, compared with 78 percent for small cities.

_ Carbondale, Ill., had the lowest median income, at $17,508, followed by small cities in New York, Louisiana, Alabama and Ohio. Darien, Conn., topped all other cities with the highest median income, at $188,823.

"There are lots of small towns and rural areas that are struggling," Mather said. "Many were struggling before the current recession, so it might take more than a dose of stimulus funds to put them on the road to recovery."

The data, from the American Community Survey, represent three-year averages covering 2006 through 2008, providing a snapshot of every community with at least 20,000 residents. Medium cities are defined as having 50,001 to 150,000 residents, and big cities have more than 150,000.

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Bass reported from East Dover, Vt.

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On the Net:

Census Bureau: http://www.census.gov

WASHINGTON — America's small cities are losing some of their traditional appeal to upwardly mobile families seeking wholesome neighborhoods, a stable economy and affordable living. A review of ...
WASHINGTON — America's small cities are losing some of their traditional appeal to upwardly mobile families seeking wholesome neighborhoods, a stable economy and affordable living. A review of ...
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- dansup I'm a Fan of dansup 8 fans permalink

Bell California? A sewerpit - anyone who can would flee that place in a heartbeat

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 11/16/2009

Jasmine Estates, FL is NOT a real city. It's a census-designated area of Pasco County. Where's the data on actual cities instead of subdivisions run amok?

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 11/16/2009
- cmvortex I'm a Fan of cmvortex 8 fans permalink

Is any of this really all that surprising? It's like that famous saying: "It's so popular that no one goes there anymore". Unfortunately, the same thing above is true about our most beloved national treasures. Take I-70 through Colorado. One of the most beautiful stretches of highway in the mountains. But it's now been so built up and bastardized that it's sickening. That's what we do in America. Love our stuff to death and suffocation. The small city decline is no different, and very predictable.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 11/16/2009
- eXcommunicate I'm a Fan of eXcommunicate 29 fans permalink
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HuffPo, you really need to fix the way you handle your articles. Where is the link to the "American Community Survey" or it's parent site? Why isn't the map bigger? Why can't we click the pictures in your articles to make them bigger (which is standard for other news sites and blog sites)? Do you have editors? You claim you do.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 11/16/2009
- prettyinpink I'm a Fan of prettyinpink 73 fans permalink
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they are all looking for "bad" words like jeesus, ha.te, and stuopid.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:59 PM on 11/16/2009
- AngusC I'm a Fan of AngusC 35 fans permalink
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I am going to use my super magnification vision to read this map.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 PM on 11/16/2009
- textynn I'm a Fan of textynn 172 fans permalink
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did anyone find the link to the map ??

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:31 PM on 11/16/2009
- Chomot I'm a Fan of Chomot permalink

Carbondale, Ill., had the lowest median income, at $17,508

This comment from the article is misleading. Carbondale is a collage town. SIU (Southern Illinois University) is located there and is basically the jobs driver of that region other than rural farms and some small business etc. So yes thousands of collage kids concentrated into a small area with no income to speak of will drive the medial number lower. Take the transient population out of that number and it should reflect the median of the Sothern Illinois region, although that number is not anything to be excited about income wise either.

I know all this as I graduated from there

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 11/16/2009
- MajorKong I'm a Fan of MajorKong 535 fans permalink
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A lot of smaller cities in Ohio have been hit hard by plant closures over the last decade or so.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 11/16/2009
- AbFabFan I'm a Fan of AbFabFan 2 fans permalink
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Must see Republican/Democrat Medicare For All video
and petition

http://www.peaceteam.net/action/pnum1020.php

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 11/16/2009
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It is tough for small towns as they tend to have one or two major employers other than the town and the local hospital. It is tough to attract businesses as executives don't want to relocate where their spouse can not find a professional position and they will have to move if they leave the job.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 11/16/2009
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Looks like the effect is actually quite well distributed across the country based on population centers. Just compare it to a population density map and it's about the same.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 PM on 11/16/2009
- CaptainFailmore I'm a Fan of CaptainFailmore 25 fans permalink
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Oh boy.

Inadequately cited data, a tiny map that nobody can read, and no links pointing to where we might be able to learn more. This is pretty yellow.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 11/16/2009
- CreekCM I'm a Fan of CreekCM 5 fans permalink
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I was also thinking this as well, lol! "Is your city on the list?" Makes it sound like you can find where your city ranks and I thought if I clicked on the little map it would get bigger, lol.

Anyway, the point being: why are you linking me directly to the census bureau and not to where the info for your story is located? It's a tease, I like to learn about these things but will forget as something else to learn grabs my attention shortly.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 11/16/2009
- CaptainFailmore I'm a Fan of CaptainFailmore 25 fans permalink
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Just within the past two to three months, the whole site has turned a fine shade of canary. I'm very disappointed, and I'm also wondering what's driving the plunge in quality.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:46 PM on 11/16/2009
- Haus I'm a Fan of Haus 22 fans permalink
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Well look at that, all the blue states are the ones that are hit hard.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 11/16/2009
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Hit hard by fewer graduates living in smaller cities? Perhaps the "liberal elite" in "blue states" prefer the art, culture, science, public transportation, and night-life that larger cities have to offer?

Just a thought...

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 11/16/2009
- FoonTheElder I'm a Fan of FoonTheElder 93 fans permalink
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You obviously haven't been to many red states lately. South Carolina, Mississippi, West Virginia, Indiana, Arizona are in bad economic shape.

Most of the red mountain and plains states don't have that many people and are largely dependent on agriculture or mining. With crop and cropland prices dropping, the farmers will be having their own version of the real estate bubble.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 11/16/2009
- Zenith1959 I'm a Fan of Zenith1959 93 fans permalink
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"Blue states" have big cities to move to.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 11/16/2009
- TovSquirrel I'm a Fan of TovSquirrel 41 fans permalink
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LLOYD's PRAYER
(From: http://politicalirony.com/ )

Our Chairman,
Who Art At Goldman,
Blankfein Be Thy Name.
The Rally’s Come. God’s Work Be Done
On Earth As There’s No Fear Of Correction.
Give Us This Day Our Daily Gains,
And Bankrupt Our Competitors
As You Taught Lehman and Bear Their Lessons.
And Bring Us Not Under Indictment.
For Thine Is The Treasury,
The House And The Senate
Forever and Ever.
Goldman.

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 11/16/2009

Obama's job creation programs have been ineffective

hat tip to: http://financeopinionss.blogspot.com

The only beneficiaries of this 'v shaped' recovery are the bankers, fund managers, and rest of the top 1%

    Reply     Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 AM on 11/16/2009
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