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what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Topic: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980? (Read 887 times)
freepcrusher
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Posts: 2062
what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
on:
April 01, 2012, 02:02:44 am »
I've just been astonished how you could lose that many seats. No other state has ever come close to losing that many in a single decade. You almost have to try hard to lose that many seats. The governors of that era (Rocky and Carey) were fairly popular.
I can see how areas like Buffalo would lose population since it's frigid and boring but most of the heavy underpopulated seats were in the NYC Metro. In New York City it isn't as cold as other parts of the northeast and there is stuff to do. The only severely underpopulated upstate district was the 37th (Nowak) which had 360,405 people per the 1980 census.
All the other underpopulated districts were in metro NY:
NY 12 (Chisholm) 320,886
NY 14 (Richmond) 364,356
NY 21 (Garcia) 233,787
NY 19 (Rangel) 371,614
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Last Edit: April 01, 2012, 02:12:27 am by Atari Democrat
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jfern
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Reply #1 on:
April 01, 2012, 02:32:02 am »
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Vasall des Midas
Lewis Trondheim
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Reply #2 on:
April 01, 2012, 05:06:14 am »
The 21st was the South Bronx district. What was its population in 1970?
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Antonio V
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #3 on:
April 01, 2012, 06:41:10 am »
The population dropped from 18,236,967 in 1970 to 17,558,072 which means a 3.72% loss. However, as the US population had grown by 11.59% in the meantime, the relative loss was impressive : 13.72%. NY had 39 EVs, and 13.72% of 39 is around 5.
Note it's easy for big States to lose a lot of seats, because even a small % loss results in a high raw loss. Compare with South Dakota, which, despite losing 7.2% of its population in 1940, didn't lose a single seat. Conversely, big States gain far more seats when their population growth is higher than the national gorwth.
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freepcrusher
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Reply #4 on:
April 01, 2012, 04:49:50 pm »
Quote from: Catmuslim on April 01, 2012, 05:06:14 am
The 21st was the South Bronx district. What was its population in 1970?
The 1970 population was 462,073 so the population was basically cut in half during the 1970s.
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Klecly
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Reply #5 on:
April 01, 2012, 05:04:21 pm »
Crime rates in NYC. Mafia crime in NYC.
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Miamiu1027
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
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Reply #6 on:
April 01, 2012, 05:05:39 pm »
Quote from: ○∙◄☻¥tπ[╪AV┼cVê└ on April 01, 2012, 02:32:02 am
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NY Jew
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Posts: 544
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #7 on:
April 01, 2012, 06:42:48 pm »
urban flight
an example of urban areas that lost people
population 1970 1980 loss
Brooklyn 2,602,012 2,231,028 370,984
Bronx 1,471,701 1,168,972 302,729
Manhattan 1,539,233 1,428,285 110,948
Queens 1,986,473 1,891,325 95,148
Nassau Co 1,428,080 1,321,582 106,498
Yonkers 204,297 195,351 8,946
Mount Vernon 72,778 66,713 6,065
New Rochelle 75,385 70,794 4,591
White Plains 50,346 46,999 3,347
Poughkeepsie 32,029 29,757 2,272
Middletown 22,607 21,454 1,153
Kingston 25,544 24,481 1,063
Peekskill 19,283 18,236 1,047
Rye 15,869 15,083 786
Beacon 13,255 12,937 318
Buffalo 462,768 357,870 104,898
Niagara Falls 85,615 71,384 14,231
Lackawanna 28,657 22,701 5,956
Jamestown 39,795 35,775 4,020
Tonawanda 21,898 18,693 3,205
Dunkirk 16,855 15,310 1,545
Lockport 25,399 24,844 555
N Tonawanda 36,012 35,760 252
Rochester 296,233 241,741 54,492
Corning 15,792 12,953 2,839
Hornell 12,144 10,234 1,910
Albany 115,781 101,727 14,054
Schenectady 77,958 67,972 9,986
Troy 62,918 56,638 6,280
Rensselaer 10,136 9,047 1,089
Watervliet 12,404 11,354 1,050
Syracuse 197,297 170,105 27,192
Utica 91,611 75,632 15,979
Binghamton 64,123 55,860 8,263
Rome 50,148 43,826 6,322
Elmira 39,945 35,327 4,618
Watertown 30,787 27,861 2,926
Newburgh 26,219 23,438 2,781
Ogdensburg 14,554 12,375 2,179
Auburn 34,599 32,548 2,051
Oswego 20,913 19,793 1,120
Oneonta 16,030 14,933 1,097
Oneida 11,658 10,810 848
Batavia 17,338 16,703 635
total loss of selected citys 1,318,268
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freepcrusher
YaBB God
Posts: 2062
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #8 on:
April 01, 2012, 07:35:21 pm »
what's interesting is that even Nassau County lost population. Wasn't this an area of the postwar boom in home construction a la Levittown?
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nclib
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Posts: 8493
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #9 on:
April 01, 2012, 08:08:10 pm »
NYC pretty much hit its low in the 70's. My parents left then, and they say it's gotten better since then.
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timothyinMD
Sr. Member
Posts: 441
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #10 on:
April 01, 2012, 08:23:17 pm »
Quote from: Atari Democrat on April 01, 2012, 02:02:44 am
I've just been astonished how you could lose that many seats. No other state has ever come close to losing that many in a single decade. You almost have to try hard to lose that many seats. The governors of that era (Rocky and Carey) were fairly popular.
I can see how areas like Buffalo would lose population since it's frigid and boring but most of the heavy underpopulated seats were in the NYC Metro. In New York City it isn't as cold as other parts of the northeast and there is stuff to do. The only severely underpopulated upstate district was the 37th (Nowak) which had 360,405 people per the 1980 census.
All the other underpopulated districts were in metro NY:
NY 12 (Chisholm) 320,886
NY 14 (Richmond) 364,356
NY 21 (Garcia) 233,787
NY 19 (Rangel) 371,614
Well genius, all you had to do was look at the census and see that NY's population plunged in the 1970s. Not shocking at all
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brittain33
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Posts: 11990
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #11 on:
April 01, 2012, 08:44:47 pm »
Quote from: Atari Democrat on April 01, 2012, 07:35:21 pm
what's interesting is that even Nassau County lost population. Wasn't this an area of the postwar boom in home construction a la Levittown?
Nassau County's land filled up before 1980, and by that year, many of the baby boomers of the large families of the 1950s had grown up and left their parents behind.
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BigSkyBob
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Posts: 2223
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #12 on:
April 01, 2012, 10:32:02 pm »
Rent control? Baby boom kids left the nest?
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Klecly
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Posts: 929
Political Matrix
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #13 on:
April 01, 2012, 10:46:25 pm »
Quote from: timothyinMD on April 01, 2012, 08:23:17 pm
Quote from: Atari Democrat on April 01, 2012, 02:02:44 am
I've just been astonished how you could lose that many seats. No other state has ever come close to losing that many in a single decade. You almost have to try hard to lose that many seats. The governors of that era (Rocky and Carey) were fairly popular.
I can see how areas like Buffalo would lose population since it's frigid and boring but most of the heavy underpopulated seats were in the NYC Metro. In New York City it isn't as cold as other parts of the northeast and there is stuff to do. The only severely underpopulated upstate district was the 37th (Nowak) which had 360,405 people per the 1980 census.
All the other underpopulated districts were in metro NY:
NY 12 (Chisholm) 320,886
NY 14 (Richmond) 364,356
NY 21 (Garcia) 233,787
NY 19 (Rangel) 371,614
Well genius, all you had to do was look at the census and see that NY's population plunged in the 1970s. Not shocking at all
Well genius, all you had to do is realize that he knows that. He wanted to know why. No need to be a a-hole about..
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jimrtex
YaBB God
Posts: 5089
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #14 on:
April 01, 2012, 11:46:16 pm »
Quote from: Atari Democrat on April 01, 2012, 07:35:21 pm
what's interesting is that even Nassau County lost population. Wasn't this an area of the postwar boom in home construction a la Levittown?
You end up with unusual age patterns. From 1960-1970, Suffolk grew by 67%, while Nassau grew 10%. Nassau was getting filled up. Levittown was almost stagnant.
In 1970, Nassau males 45-54 outnumbered males 25-34 by 74%. It was somewhat less pronounced among females 45-54 (48%). Males 55-59 outnumbered females 55-59, by 3%; while in the 25-34 range, females outnumbered males by 21%. So there is probably a combination of effects of different ages between grooms and brides; divorce; second marriages.
By 1980 the lack of persons of child-bearing age plus the baby bust are profound. In Nassau, the ratio of graduating seniors to first graders is around 2 to 1.
Children 5-9 declined by over 40% between 1970 and 1980. The fastest growing population was actually 25-34, as the children of the post-war boom come of age; plus you may have a new generation moving out from Queens and Brooklyn as the first owners of the homes are reaching retirement and downsizing or moving to Florida. But these new homeowners aren't having children at anywhere near the rate of the earlier generation.
There are big drops in the 35-54 age brackets (20%) as the first generation ages, while those 55-64 increase by around 20%.
0-4 29%,30% decline
5-9 41%,43% decline
10-14 32%,33% decline
15-24 5% increase, 3% decline.
25-34 44%, 27% increase.
35-44 20%, 21% decrease.
45-54 22%, 13% decrease.
55-64 30%, 33% increase
65-74 32%, 16% increase
By 1990, you finish up the big drop in children and you're seeing the child-bearing adult group filling up, but not having as many children.
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jimrtex
YaBB God
Posts: 5089
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #15 on:
April 02, 2012, 12:17:00 am »
Quote from: BigSkyBob on April 01, 2012, 10:32:02 pm
Rent control? Baby boom kids left the nest?
You take farm land and build a bunch of houses, and you are going to get a bunch of people in their 20's and early 30's. If they have children, it is a toddler. While an apartment is OK for a baby or toddler, not so much for older children, and you are concerned about the schools.
10 years later, and you have parents in their 30s, and a bunch of grade-school age children. Few of the houses are sold. There are some divorces, and perhaps the largest families with 6 or more children buy a bigger house, but there isn't much opportunity for newly formed families.
20 years later, and you have parents in their 40s, and early 50s and they've finished up having children and the oldest children are going off to college. There isn't a market for apartments.
30 years later and the grade schools are depopulating. Some of the houses are becoming available, as the original owners are retiring and moving to Florida, or moving to condos or townhouses, which may be built as developers start finding smaller areas to build on.
Between 1970 and 1980, Nassau saw massive drops in young children; some drop in late teenagers as the youngest children of the earliest settlers reached high school. There was actually a pretty big increase in persons in their 20s, as all the original owners had aged way past that (in 1970 the largest age cohort was 45-54). So in the 70s, at least some of the children of the settlers were sticking around - but not having as many children, and also having them later.
But there were big drops in the 35-54 population, as the settlers aged, and increases in the older population.
Most of the population drop was due to children not being replaced, while the distribution of the adult population was changing.
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Senator Napoleon
Napoleon
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Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #16 on:
April 02, 2012, 03:09:39 am »
Quote from: Klecly on April 01, 2012, 10:46:25 pm
Quote from: timothyinMD on April 01, 2012, 08:23:17 pm
Well genius, all you had to do was look at the census and see that NY's population plunged in the 1970s. Not shocking at all
Well genius, all you had to do is realize that he knows that. He wanted to know why. No need to be a a-hole about..
Well genius, you aren't allowed to call another poster a genius.
«
Last Edit: April 02, 2012, 03:11:30 am by Governor Napoleon
»
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BigSkyBob
YaBB God
Posts: 2223
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #17 on:
April 02, 2012, 12:04:56 pm »
Quote from: jimrtex on April 02, 2012, 12:17:00 am
Quote from: BigSkyBob on April 01, 2012, 10:32:02 pm
Rent control? Baby boom kids left the nest?
You take farm land and build a bunch of houses, and you are going to get a bunch of people in their 20's and early 30's. If they have children, it is a toddler. While an apartment is OK for a baby or toddler, not so much for older children, and you are concerned about the schools.
10 years later, and you have parents in their 30s, and a bunch of grade-school age children. Few of the houses are sold. There are some divorces, and perhaps the largest families with 6 or more children buy a bigger house, but there isn't much opportunity for newly formed families.
20 years later, and you have parents in their 40s, and early 50s and they've finished up having children and the oldest children are going off to college. There isn't a market for apartments.
30 years later and the grade schools are depopulating. Some of the houses are becoming available, as the original owners are retiring and moving to Florida, or moving to condos or townhouses, which may be built as developers start finding smaller areas to build on.
Between 1970 and 1980, Nassau saw massive drops in young children; some drop in late teenagers as the youngest children of the earliest settlers reached high school. There was actually a pretty big increase in persons in their 20s, as all the original owners had aged way past that (in 1970 the largest age cohort was 45-54). So in the 70s, at least some of the children of the settlers were sticking around - but not having as many children, and also having them later.
But there were big drops in the 35-54 population, as the settlers aged, and increases in the older population.
Most of the population drop was due to children not being replaced, while the distribution of the adult population was changing.
Total population is the number of housing units multiplied by the average number of person per household [plus homeless people.] Nassau suffered the combined effects of the ending of the build out, and the drop of birthrates. But, New York state as a whole suffered a decline in population more than the nation's. Presumably, the New Yorkers in their 20's could have lived in another county, or new housing could have been constructed farther out from Manhattan.
One explanation is the build out started to shift to New Jersey, Connecticut and, even Pennsylvania. Another explanation is that the number of housing units fell into disrepair at a greater rate than they were rehabilitated. A third explanation is that the fertility of recent immigrants fell more than the native population shrinking the average household size in immigrant "gateways" like NYC more than the national average. A fourth explanation is that the number of jobs declined in New York state. The young population moved to states with jobs [Texas for instance], and, started their families there. As a state with above average immigration from other countries, New York state ought to have grown faster than other states, all things else equal. Obviously, they weren't.
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jimrtex
YaBB God
Posts: 5089
Re: what did New York do to lose five seats in 1980?
«
Reply #18 on:
April 02, 2012, 05:15:59 pm »
Quote from: BigSkyBob on April 02, 2012, 12:04:56 pm
Quote from: jimrtex on April 02, 2012, 12:17:00 am
Most of the population drop was due to children not being replaced, while the distribution of the adult population was changing.
Total population is the number of housing units multiplied by the average number of person per household [plus homeless people.] Nassau suffered the combined effects of the ending of the build out, and the drop of birthrates. But, New York state as a whole suffered a decline in population more than the nation's. Presumably, the New Yorkers in their 20's could have lived in another county, or new housing could have been constructed farther out from Manhattan.
Most of the decline in Nassau County in 1980 was among children. It was precipitous, with a
40% decline
in 5-9 YO.
The population between 20-34 was increasing (44% among 25-34 males; 27% among 25-34 females). This would be children from the early settlers sticking around, or a new group moving out from Queens and Brooklyn. But housing would be limited. It takes a while for apartments and condos to be built in an area where everyone's dream was to escape the tenements. But the base population in 1970 in these age groups was low, since the original settlers were now in middle age.
So while between 1970 and 1980 the male 25-34 population increased by 44%; the male 35-44 population
decreased
by 20%.
The drop in the Nassau County population (10%) was due to the lack of new housing, and the rapid development 30 years earlier, with a side effect of the end of the baby boom.
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