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Recent Associated Press Article On Diversity
Updated: 7:44 p.m. ET Aug 15, 2006
WASHINGTON–America’s
growing diversity has reached nearly every state. From South
Carolina’s budding immigrant population to the fast-rising
number of Hispanics in Arkansas,
minority groups make up an increasing share of the population
in every state but one,
according figures from the Census Bureau.
“This is just an extraordinary explosion of diversity all
across the United States,” said William
Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, a Washington
think tank. “It’s diversity and
immigration going hand in hand.” West Virginia is the exception,
with its struggling economy
and little history of attracting immigrants. Frey said states
that attract large numbers of
immigrants can consider it a “badge of economic success.” There
have, however, been
backlashes. “In some places it will be awhile before they
are accepted by the locals,” Frey
said. “All we have to do is look at this immigration debate.”
This Year's Issue.
Immigration policy is a big issue in this year’s midterm
congressional elections, and the new
data help explain why. Immigrants–legal and illegal–make
up a growing portion of the
population in 46 states and the District of Columbia. Nationally,
they went from 11.1 percent
of the population in 2000 to 12.4 percent last year.
The 2005 figures are from the Census Bureau’s American
Community Survey, which is
replacing the “long form” on the 10-year census.
Starting this year, the annual survey of
about 3 million households provides yearly data on communities
of 65,000 or larger. By
2010, it will provide annual multiyear averages for the smallest
neighborhoods covered by
the 10-year census.
The data released Tuesday cover, race, immigration, education
and age characteristics.
Economic and housing data will be released in the coming weeks.
The survey, which cost
$170 million in 2005, has limitations. For example, only people
living in households were
surveyed. That excludes the 3 percent of people who live in nursing
homes, hospitals, college
dormitories, military barracks, prisons and other dwellings known
as group quarters.
Also, the numbers for Gulf Coast states do not
reflect the effects of Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita, which scattered hundreds of thousands of people last year.
Education, Age, Labels.
Among the findings:
- Education levels increased in every state from
2000 to 2005. Nationally, the share of adults
25 and older with at least a high school diploma increased
from 80 percent to 84 percent. The
share of adults with at least a bachelor’s degree increased
from 24 percent to 27 percent.
- Every state is getting older. Nationally, the
median age–the
one at which half the
population is older and half is younger–went from 35.3
in 2000 to 36.4 last year.
- Hispanics increased their hold as the country’s
largest minority group, at 14.5 percent of
the population, compared with 12.8 percent for blacks.
- Hispanic is a term for people with ethnic backgrounds
in Spanish- speaking countries.
Hispanics can be of any race, and most in the U.S. are white.
When demographers talk about
the shrinking percentage of white people in America, generally
they are talking about whites
who are not Hispanic.
- Such whites are a minority in four states–Hawaii,
New Mexico, California and Texas–and
the District of Columbia. The share of white people fell below
60 percent in three other states –Maryland, Georgia
and Nevada. Nationally, non-Hispanic whites make up about
67 percent of the population, down from 70 percent at the
start of the decade.
California, New York, Texas and Florida have the
nation’s
largest immigrant populations. The
new data show that immigrants will travel beyond those states
if there are jobs available.
South Carolina: Growth center No. 1.
South Carolina’s immigrant population grew by 47 percent
since 2000, more than any other
state. Hispanics grew by 48 percent in Arkansas, the most of
any state. Michael MacFarlane,
South Carolina’s state demographer, said immigrants and
Hispanics were attracted by a
healthy economy that offered jobs requiring few skills. “They
are in all sorts of construction,
food processing, service jobs, the whole spectrum, where they
used to be primarily in
agriculture,” MacFarlane said. West Virginia, meanwhile,
was one of only two states in
which the percentage of white people grew. The other was Hawaii,
where whites are an
increasing minority. |