Postcard from Retiring Guy's collection
Excerpt from Madison.com (top headline)
The exodus from the biggest U.S. metropolitan areas was led by New York, which lost almost 328,000 residents. The decline was driven by people leaving for elsewhere in the U.S., even though the metro area gained new residents from abroad and births outpaced deaths.
The data, based on change-of-address data filed with the U.S. Postal Service, jibes with similar calculations undertaken by Queens College professor Andy Beveridge, according to Gothamist. The demographics expert found there were 33,000 more estimated move-outs than the baseline in 2020, but 23,000 more move-ins estimated than expected in 2021.
“It’s a straw in the wind that things are starting to go back to normal,” Beveridge told Gothamist. (top headline)
Original 3/24/2022 post start here.
Postcard from Retiring Guy's collection
Excerpt from Madison.com (top headline)
After returning to metro San Francisco following a college football career, Anthony Giusti felt like his hometown was passing him by. The high cost of living, driven by a constantly transforming tech industry, ensured that even with two jobs he would never save enough money to buy a house.
Excerpt from San Jose Mercury News (bottom headline)
The San Francisco and San Jose metros were two of the fastest-growing destinations for college-aged and post-grad transplants in the U.S. in recent months, according to real estate consulting firm Yardi Matrix.
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