
Bacon Bits: Cloudy Day Edition
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10 responses to “Bacon Bits: Cloudy Day Edition”
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Staunton population – 24,992, about the same as in 1970.
Waynesboro population – 22,628, up from 16,707 in 1970
Augusta County population – 75,457, up from 44,220 in 1970Total population in 1970 – 123,077
Total population in 2018 – 184,004CAGR – 0.84%
Virginia population in 1970 – 4,648,494
Virginia population in 2019 – 8,517,685CAGR – 1.27%
So, it seems that the Staunton / Waynesboro MSA (including towns and unincorporated areas in Augusta County) can sustain population growth at about 2/3 the overall rate in Virginia.
Shouldn’t every rural and micropolitan area in Virginia be going through the same type of analysis? What population level, over time, can our local economy sustain?
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I too would like to see what kind of jobs there was growth in (and shrinkage).
We go down through Lynchburg and Danville several times a year and recently took a side trip into Lynchubrg to check out their Blackwater Cree trail which is a deep cut through the city that the city grew up around and most of the housing stock is fairly old.
In any given town – there are “internal” jobs like municipal, schools, police, etc and then there can be “external” jobs which is a company that produces a product or service that is sold both within and outside that urban area. THe jobs associated with the stuff sold outside the area are “net” jobs.
So if a place has “growth” of population the question is – are those folks who migrated TO that place and not just “growth” of the existing population base?
There are a lot of factors that make it not easy to figure out if a small urban area is really “growing” – economically beyond organic population growth.
My understanding is that they pay college professors a pretty penny to urber slice and dice data… for us ignorant cretins…….
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Fearless Lord Jim reports “The Staunton/Waynesboro labor market has the lowest unemployment rate of any in the state — 2.5%, according to August 2019 data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as reported by the News Leader. Next lowest: Charlottesville and Winchester at 2.6%, Harrisonburg at 2.7%, and Roanoke at 2.8%.”
With that said: 6 gigantic myths collapse in space of two sentences. And these towns, still on the bottom (For example drive through Stanton to understand that caveat), have no where to go but up and up, if they be given a fair chance. So key question is how to jump-start these towns unlocking their awesome power to go.
My comments here do not include Charlottesville, a town I consider utterly hopeless under present management.
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But always remember that:
Jump starts require big views, acute judgement, integrity and deep wisdom, the absolute reverse of Fairfax Country where absurd growth and greed poisoned the golden egg.
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On the affordable college issue – why do we think it is Government’s responsibility to fix that? Same issue with “affordable housing”.
I can see liberal types advocating that but what would Conservatives advocate for or what SHOULD they advocate for or do they say that the govt should not be involved in either?
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“On the affordable college issue – why do we think it is Government’s responsibility to fix. Same issue with affordable housing.”
Because incompetent government is main cause and culprit behind unaffordable education and also behind unaffordable housing.
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sorry – the two problems are nation-wide… are we saying that all govt everywhere is incompetent.
Can’t go there.. especially since govt is US! are WE “incompetent” at governance? that line of thinking seems pointless….
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interesting:
Cities Start to Question an American Ideal: A House With a Yard on Every Lot
By EMILY BADGER and QUOCTRUNG BUI JUNE 18, 2019Townhomes, duplexes and apartments are effectively banned in many neighborhoods. Now some communities regret it.
Residential land zoned for:
detached single-family homes = pink
other housing = greenhttps://ggwash.org/images/made/images/posts/_resized/draft3_(1)_619_800.png

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