SF News SF Still the Most Childless City in U.S., New Map Breaks Down Childlessness by Neighborhood San Francisco’s “More dogs than kids” stereotype just bought a few more years of relevance, as Census numbers show a still-declining family population, and only Bayview, Presidio, and Seacliff have more than 20% of the population under 18.
Arts & Entertainment Look Up Who Was Living In Your Apartment In 1950 Via Newly Released Census Records Ever been curious who lived in your house or apartment 72 years ago? Want to know how your grandparents or great-grandparents responded to census-taker questions when they came around in 1949 or 1950, or who their neighbors were at the time? Well, you're in luck.
SF News Census Bureau Confirms Pandemic Exodus Number For SF; 55,000 People Left the City Between July 2020 and July 2021 All signs point to new and returning people moving in to San Francisco over the last nine months, but during the first year of the pandemic, as the U.S. Census Bureau now confirms, around 55,000 people left San Francisco County.
SF News San Francisco Only Got More Childless In the Last Decade For several decades now, San Francisco has had one of the lowest percentages of school-age children and teens of any major city in the country. And the latest numbers from the 2020 Census show that SF's youth population has only decreased.
SF News SF Has 'Mediocre’ Census Response Rate, Fire-Ravaged North Bay Faring Much Worse The triple-whammy of Trump, COVID-19, and wildfire displacement are creating a drastic census undercount in NorCal, with congressional seats and billions of dollars on the line.
SF News Bay Area Doing Great On Census Responses, But Trump Still Trying to Game Who Gets Counted Three weeks out from “door knockers” being dispatched, the Bay Area is outpacing the country in responding to the delayed COVID-19 Census. Yet Trump still hopes to whittle our numbers.
SF News California May Lose a Congressional Seat After 2020 Census The loss of one Congressional seat doesn’t sound like much, but too low of a census count this year would also cost the state hundreds of billions of dollars in federal tax appropriations.