San Francisco is shrinking. In this Reuters story about newly released Census data, SF is even compared to Flint, Michigan and Gary, Indiana thanks to its incredibly vanishing population.
San Francisco, with a population of about 776,000 in mid-2002, joins some other famously depressed U.S. cities, including Flint, Michigan, which ranked 240 on the list with a population decline of 1.4 percent or 1,687 people, and Gary, Indiana, which came in at 227, losing 0.8 percent of its population, or 793 people.
And then the Census bureau announces that this extended urban area (aka, the Bay Area) is now officially known as the San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland metropolitan area, . This was front page news in the (ahem) San Francisco Chronicle just over a week after the above Reuters story… although I’m guessing both tidbits came from the same release of Census info. Of course, it’s not like the government moved quickly on this decision.
San Jose surpassed San Francisco in population in 1990, but San Francisco had held onto top billing until June, when census officials decided to change the name.
In any event, I’m not planning on going anywhere.