1/ When people moved out of expensive cities, where did they go?
A year of migration data reveals trends and interesting surprises: bloom.bg/3xCC4YB
2/ After much speculation about emptied downtowns and the prospect of remote work, a year of @USPS data gives the clearest picture yet of how people moved.
3/ There is no urban exodus — perhaps it's more of an urban shuffle.
Despite talk of mass moves to Florida and Texas, data shows most people who did move stayed close to where they came from.
4/ Across the U.S., the number of people making moves that they defined as permanent was up a modest 3% between March 2020 and February 2021.
But zoom in to a few of America's densest and most expensive metro regions and the picture is more dramatic.
5/ "The phrase or the concept of urban exodus, that really only applies to New York and San Francisco," says Stephan D. Whitaker, a policy economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, who has been analyzing migration patterns during the pandemic.
6/ Those Americans who did move accelerated a trend that predates the pandemic: People moved outward.
Outward to the suburbs of their core metro area, but also farther out, to satellite cities or other major urban centers that might still give people proximity to their region.
7/ The regions around San Francisco and San Jose, two of the country's most expensive housing markets, saw the greatest increase in rates of permanent moves.
And compared to other metros, a far greater percentage of people left the Bay Area — moving to other California cities.
8/ One potential explanation for the Bay Area's movement is its high proportion of residents in what's called the "untethered class."
These are renters with remote-friendly jobs and no kids whose life circumstances make it easier to move around.
9/ In the New York City region, many people who moved during the pandemic migrated to as close as the next block or the next borough over.
More Manhattanites moved to Brooklyn than moved to the entire state of Florida.
10/ The data analysis revealed that people in New York City's higher-income zip codes were more likely to move.
11/ But urban dwellers also moved outward.
One of the clearest trends in New York and across the U.S. is one that predates the pandemic: Core urban areas lost movers while suburban ones gained.
12/ One of the dominant reasons for movement out of expensive urban areas is housing costs.
But while some people with remote-friendly jobs may have the opportunity to find cheaper housing elsewhere, most Americans don't have that option.
13/ These trends matter to cities as they reckon with the pandemic's economic fallout.
Migration patterns can affect housing prices, tax revenue, jobs and cultural vibrancy.
Explore this interactive map to see where people moved to and from your region: bloom.bg/3xCC4YB
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2/ When appraisers mapped cities for the federal Homeowners' Loan Corporation in the 1930s, they assigned grades to neighborhoods based on several factors, race high among them.
Black and immigrant neighborhoods were deemed undesirable, marked by yellow or red lines.
3/ These historically redlined neighborhoods suffer a far higher risk of flooding today, according to new research from @Redfin, the Seattle-based real-estate brokerage.
1/ Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has unveiled legislation that offers billions in federal dollars for cities willing to demolish urban highways that razed or divided neighborhoods decades ago. bloom.bg/3pMf9pl
2/ The Economic Justice Act, a spending package worth over $435 billion, includes a $10 billion pilot program that would provide funds for communities to examine transit infrastructure that has divided them along racial and economic lines and potentially alter or remove them.
3/ The backstory:
In 1956, the U.S. Congress passed the Federal-Aid Highway Act, the $25 billion program that launched the Interstate Highway System. This nationwide frenzy of freeway building left behind a "horrific legacy" in scores of cities.
1/ America's states and cities are emerging from political exile bloom.bg/3ivSHhn
2/ President-elect Joe Biden's proposed cabinet includes at least six officials who have led municipalities or states, like Pete Buttigieg and Gina Raimondo.
That's in sharp contrast to President Trump, whose cabinet relied heavily on corporate and industry insiders.
3/ With the release of Biden's proposed economic stimulus package, local leaders got a glimpse of what an ally in the White House will mean.
The plan would provide $350 billion in aid to municipal governments. Such help was a major roadblock in stimulus negotiations in 2020.
Demands for police accountability, criminal justice reform and racial justice have been translated from rallying cries and protest signs into initiatives on state and local ballots.
According to a @ballotpedia count, there are at least 20 local police-related measures that qualified for the ballot after the killing of George Floyd.
While some of the measures were proposed directly as a response to the police killing of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and the calls for change that followed, others had been in the pipeline for years or months, only to gain new momentum this spring.
The plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is the latest example of the far-right/anti-government terrorism happening across the country, and researchers say it’s unlikely to be the last. bloom.bg/3m8nMbo
Since the Minneapolis killing of George Floyd on May 25, professor @areidross has collected nearly 800 incidents.
Including the murders of two BLM protesters by 17-year-old Kyle Rittenhouse in Kenosha, WI. bloom.bg/3m8nMbo
@areidross has built an interactive map meant to track harassment done by both individuals and groups such as the Proud Boys and Boogaloos.