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Aunque la poblaci贸n Latina de St. Louis y Missouri es todav铆a relativamente peque帽a, est谩 creciendo r谩pidamente. Los observadores pol铆ticos dicen que su voto podr铆a ser cada vez m谩s influyente en los a帽os que vienen.
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Though St. Louis and Missouri's Latino population is still relatively small, it鈥檚 growing rapidly. Political watchers say the vote could be increasingly influential in the years to come.
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The St. Louis metropolitan area is showing troubling signs when it comes to population trends.
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Biden officials approved proposals for the U.S. census and federal surveys to change how Latinos are asked about their race and ethnicity and to add a checkbox for "Middle Eastern or North African."
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According to new U.S. Census Bureau estimates, the St. Louis region lost more than 3,200 residents in the year ending July 1, 2023. The population decline caused the region to drop from the 21st-largest U.S. metro area to the 23rd, now behind Charlotte and Orlando.
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The region bucks the norm in most other major metropolitan areas: people from India make up the largest share of foreign-born people in the St. Louis region over people from Mexico.
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The head of the U.S. Census Bureau says the latest census data can make health more equitable in Illinois and across the country.
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The study examined migration patterns for young adults across the country, tracking where residents born between 1984 and 1992 were living when they were 16 years old and then again when they were 26.
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The Asian community grew 37% in the past decade, and the region鈥檚 universities play a key role as an attraction. But there are many other things that make the area desirable.
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More than 27,000 Black residents left St. Louis over the past decade for other counties or states. Many left for better jobs, schools and safety.