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  • 2020-12-29 (xsd:date)
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  • Is 'Everyone' Leaving Los Angeles in a 'Mass Exodus'? (en)
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  • When a TikTok video posted on Dec. 15, 2020, claimed there was a mass exodus from Los Angeles and that everyone's leaving, it evoked memories of scenes from the film Independence Day, so we decided to take a closer look. It was the latest in a long line of claims that people were leaving California. In the TikTok video, @margowithit showed a number of For Rent signs in what appeared to be Culver City, California, which is in Los Angeles County. The words everyone is leaving Los Angeles were displayed in the video. Everyone's leaving, she said. This is just a quick 15-minute walk around my neighborhood, and when I moved in two years ago you had to know someone in a building to get an empty rental. It may seem obvious, but a dozen or so for rent signs does not amount to a mass exodus. However, is the video picking up on some larger trend? More data will be available in the coming months about population changes in Los Angeles in 2020, as well as Houston, New York City, and other cities. We'll know more about how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted numbers, as well as if taxes, governmental policies, and immigrants swayed things one way or the other. For now, we'll have to look at two stories that have reported some initial numbers. In October 2020, Livabl.com reported that 26,438 people moved out of Los Angeles between February and July 2020. So while MyMove's numbers cited by Liveabl.com showed 26,438 residents moved out of the city of Los Angeles between February and July 2020, some of those who left appeared to not have entirely departed the county of Los Angeles. For reference, the city of Los Angeles had a population of roughly 4 million people, while the county's number hovered around 10 million. As for the state of California as a whole, on Dec. 16, 2020, The Associated Press reported that the state had the third-largest net migration loss ever recorded. This meant that more people left the state than moved into it. The state added 21,200 people from July 1, 2019, to July 1, 2020, which increased the population to 39.78 million people. This was a population growth of 0.05%. However, 135,600 more people left the state than moved here. For comparison, the state's population was more than 293 times this number. In other words, even with a high net loss of residents compared to previous years, initial numbers showed that the city and county are still plenty occupied. The reporting also offered reasons why an exodus of any size might have occurred: The Associated Press also cited more deaths and fewer births as the reason why the state population only grew by 0.05%. It appeared that all of the data were initial estimates, as the final paragraph of the story said that this year’s estimate is shakier than usual because several of those data sources were affected by the response to the coronavirus pandemic. It also added: The state will likely revise this estimate next year based on new information. We will update this story in the future should more information come to light. (en)
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