Population loss has plagued rural Nebraska since the Great Depression and Dust Bowl years of the 1930s. But recently, the problem has become worse in many counties due to agriculture's rapid technological boom.
Fortunately, Saline County is one of 24 Nebraska counties that grew in population in the first decade of the 2000s.
Now comes a report that Saline County is one of 31 Nebraska counties that have grew in the first three years of the 2010s.
A report by the Omaha World-Herald says the latest estimates by the U.S. Census Bureau show that 61 of Nebraska's 93 counties have lost residents since the official 2010 Census.
Meanwhile, eight Nebraska counties — Cass, Douglas, Sarpy, Lancaster, Hall, Buffalo, Adams and Seward — set all-time population records last year.
Lancaster County will probably hit 300,000 next year. And the Omaha metro area, which is made up of eight counties in Nebraska and Iowa, now has more than 895,000 residents.
And why is Saline county growing? There is a meat packing plant here that attracks and allows the hispanic population to explode. Sorry but the truth hurts. Before long, they will be the majority, not the minority.
ReplyDeleteOh no!!!!!! Hispanics!!!!!!? We are all going to die!!!!!!! It's like an attack from Mars!!!!!!! Ahhhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDelete