Borderstan

Dupont – Logan – U Street

DC’s 600,000 People: The Redistricting Angle


Click for detailed maps. DC's Ward map. (DDoT Website)

The very good news that the most recent estimate puts DC’s population right at the 600,000 brings up the redistricting angle and how the increase will affect various boundaries within the city.

You can bet that lots of folks inside the Wilson Building have been asking these questions for some time.

  1. The additional 28,000 residents since the 2000 census is about a 5% increase. It’s not huge, but it appears to be concentrated in a relatively small section of the city.
  2. How many new residents were added in the Logan Circle, U Street, NoMa, Shaw and Columbia Heights neighborhoods? What will population growth in these neighborhoods mean after the 2010 census and it is time for redistricting… to redraw various city boundaries— Ward maps and ANC maps?
  3. The two wards that would seem to be affected most by the city’s population increase are 1 and 2, but possibly 4 and 6 as well. And, what about Wards to the east: 5, 7 and 8? Did they lose population?
  4. How often are the MPD’s police district boundaries redrawn? Anyone have an answer?

The number of new residential buildings in the U Street, 14th Street, P Street, Rhode Island, 11th Street, Massachusetts Avenue (toward Union Station) and other areas is astounding.

If you have only lived in the area for a few years, it is difficult to appreciate the change. For example, on the 1400-block of P Street there was no Whole Foods, Mova Lounge, Logan Tavern, banks, etc. This block, along with the 14th Street corridor has become a traditional Main Street for many people.

The fallout from the 2010 census on ward and ANC boundaries should be very interesting.

January 4, 2010 - Posted by | politics and government | , ,

8 Comments »

  1. […] Some of the change is due to the newcomers moving into existing residences where African-Americans previously lived. However, it is also due to the huge number of new—and expensive—residential buildings constructed in the past five to 10 years. The rapid demographic changes in the Borderstan area in the past decade are astounding. (Also, see “DC’s 600,000 People: The Redistricting Angle.”) […]

    Pingback by Borderstan Blog CLYBOURNE Pre-Hash (excerpt) « Woolly's Blog | March 19, 2010 | Reply

  2. […] Some of the change is due to the newcomers moving into existing residences where African-Americans previously lived. However, it is also due to the huge number of new—and expensive—residential buildings constructed in the past five to 10 years. The rapid demographic changes in the Borderstan area in the past decade are astounding to me. (See “DC’s 600,000 People: The Redistricting Angle.”) […]

    Pingback by Woolly Mammoth’s “Clybourne Park” Looks at Gentrification « Borderstan | March 19, 2010 | Reply

  3. These population numbers are only detailed to the state level. They don’t even have county-level data at this time.

    To get census tract-level information we will have to wait until the 2010 census data is fully released. It will be 2011.

    Comment by BeyondDC | January 4, 2010 | Reply

    • That’s what I figured. Thanks.

      Comment by mattyillini | January 4, 2010 | Reply

  4. you beat me to the punch, here. i’ve been meaning to work on some maps showing what the population changes could mean for redistricting in the city for some time. guess i’ll really have to get on that project, finally.

    Comment by IMGoph | January 4, 2010 | Reply

    • Do you know if the most recent population estimates are detailed down to the level of census tracts? I assume that is how the city would make decisions about redistricting… and of course it would tell us where the population growth has been.

      Comment by mattyillini | January 4, 2010 | Reply

  5. 14th is MY AVE

    Comment by 14th St Binx | January 4, 2010 | Reply


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