Atlanta, New Orleans, San Francisco gain in population counts following census correction

Population Corrections in High-Profile U.S. Urban Areas

In a surprising turn of events, some of the most well-known urban areas in the United States experienced a population boost this week. However, this wasn’t due to a sudden influx of newcomers flooding cities like Atlanta, New Orleans, and San Francisco. Instead, the U.S. Census Bureau has rectified errors in the population and housing counts of these urban areas, as officially reported back in December.

Let’s break down the changes:

Atlanta: The population of the Atlanta urban area has been adjusted to 5.1 million residents, up from the previous count of 4.9 million. It turns out that an extra 100,853 residents, residing in over 37,000 homes, were mistakenly attributed to the Gainesville, Georgia, urban area.

San Francisco: The San Francisco-Oakland urban area now boasts a population of 3.5 million residents, up from the previous 3.2 million. This correction by the U.S. Census Bureau added around a quarter of a million residents and over 100,000 homes. These numbers were mistakenly counted separately under the San Rafael-Novato, California, urban area when they should have been merged with the San Francisco-Oakland area.

New Orleans: The population of New Orleans’ urban area has also seen an increase, rising to 963,212 residents from 914,531. The extra 48,681 residents had been mistakenly counted under the Laplace-Lutcher-Gramercy, Louisiana, urban area, which was initially supposed to be removed after merging with the New Orleans area.

After each once-in-a-decade census, the Census Bureau releases a list of urban areas along with their population and housing counts. The most recent update, published in December, has now been corrected to reflect these adjustments.

Leave a Comment