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The state added only 14,573 residents last year, or a little
more than one-tenth of a percent.
Since the 2000 Census, Ohio gained only 189,505 residents.
During the same time only five other states grew more slowly
than Ohio, which has about 11.5 million residents.
The state had about 40,000 more births than deaths over the past
year, but that was offset by 36,000 people who left the state
for elsewhere, according to the Census. The only bright note was
about 12,000 new residents from outside the U.S.
Gov. Ted Strickland has warned that slow growth leaves Ohio in
danger of losing two seats in the House of Representatives when
the official 2010 Census counts are released next December. The
435 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives are divided by
population.
Losing two seats would hurt Ohio politically since the state
would have less clout in Congress and fewer electoral votes in
presidential elections, said University of Akron political
scientist John Green.
No Republican has been elected to the White House without
winning Ohio in more than 100 years, and only two Democrats have
done so.
The low population growth will hurt Ohio economically as well,
said Mark Salling, director of the Northern Ohio Data and
Information Service at Cleveland State University.
``It means fewer businesses in the state, because people are
leaving,'' Salling said. ``Tax revenues will decline because
we're not really growing.''
Texas stands to gain three states in Congress next year, most of
any state. Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, South Carolina,
Utah, and Washington would all pick up single seats.
Ohio had 24 U.S. representatives during the 1960s, slipped to 23
during the 1970s, 21 during the 1980s and 19 during the 1990s.
Information from: Akron Beacon Journal,
http://www.ohio.com
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