Posted on 05/24/2005 12:34:12 PM PDT by Uncledave
By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO - Anne Bakstad and Ed Cohen are starting to feel as if their family of four is an endangered species in San Francisco.
Since the couple bought a house five years ago, more than a dozen families in their social circle have left the city for cheaper housing, better schools or both.
The goodbyes are so frequent that Carina, age 4 1/2, wants to know when she is going to move, too. Eric, 2 1/2, misses Gus, his playmate from across the street.
"When we get to know people through our kids, we think to ourselves, `Are they renters or owners? Where do they work?' You have to figure out how much time to invest in people," Bakstad said. "It makes you feel like, `Where is everyone going? Stay with us!'"
A similar lament is being heard in San Francisco's half-empty classrooms, in parks where parents are losing ground to dog owners, and in the corridors of City Hall.
San Francisco has the smallest share of small-fry of any major U.S. city. Just 14.5 percent of the city's population is 18 and under.
It is no mystery why U.S. cities are losing children. The promise of safer streets, better schools and more space has drawn young families away from cities for as long as America has had suburbs.
But kids are even more scarce in San Francisco than in expensive New York (24 percent) or in retirement havens such as Palm Beach, Fla., (19 percent), according to Census estimates.
San Francisco's large gay population estimated at 20 percent by the city Public Health Department is thought to be one factor, though gays and lesbians in the city are increasingly raising families.
Another reason San Francisco's children are disappearing: Family housing in the city is especially scarce and expensive. A two-bedroom, 1,000-square-foot starter home is considered a bargain at $760,000.
A recent survey by the city controller found 40 percent of parents said they were considering pulling up stakes within the next year.
Determined to change things, Mayor Gavin Newsom has put the kid crisis near the top of his agenda, appointing a 27-member policy council to develop plans for keeping families in the city.
"It goes to the heart and soul of what I think a city is about it's about generations, it's about renewal and it's about aspirations," said Newsom, 37. "To me, that's what children represent and that's what families represent and we just can't sit back idly and let it go away."
Newsom has expanded health insurance for the poor to cover more people under 25, and created a tax credit for working families. And voters have approved measures to patch up San Francisco's public schools, which have seen enrollment drop from about 62,000 to 59,000 since 2000.
One voter initiative approved up to $60 million annually to restore public school arts, physical education and other extras that state spending no longer covers. Another expanded the city's Children's Fund, guaranteeing about $30 million a year for after-school activities, child care subsidies and other programs.
"We are at a crossroads here," said N'Tanya Lee, executive director of the nonprofit Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth. "We are moving toward a place where we could have an infrastructure of children's services and no children."
Other cities are trying similar strategies. Seattle has created a children's fund, like the one in San Francisco. Leaders in Portland, Ore., are pushing developers to build affordable housing for families, a move Newsom has also tried.
For families choosing to stay in San Francisco, life remains a series of trade-offs. They can enjoy world-class museums, natural beauty and an energy they say they cannot find in the suburbs.
But most families need two or more incomes to keep their homes, and their children spend most of their days being cared for by others.
"We have so many friends who are moving out and say how much easier life has been for them," Bakstad said. "If we can make it work in the city, we would love to stay. In a way, the jury is out."
I've been to Muleshoe, TX, and Bucksnort, TN. Nothing terrible about either one :-).
Went to a nice park outside of Muleshoe once. I am like to varmit, and it made me laugh that the dang praire dogs came up to the car and begged!
I think I have a Muleshoe postcard somewhere :-).
Several locations in Oklahoma have "domesticated" prairie dogs, but they tend to carry diseases, unfortunately.
Link please?
WARNING! Link is to a 7.5 MB CSV File
(Actually not a big deal if you have broadband)
http://www.census.gov/popest/counties/asrh/files/CC-EST2003-alldata-36.csv
I loaded it into SQL server and did the analysis.
This gives you the layout of the file. http://www.census.gov/popest/counties/asrh/files/CC-EST2003-alldata_layout.txt
Oh, I hope he's a HE.... : )
SELECT LEFT(CTYNAME,20) AS COUNTY,STR(ROUND(((SUM(POPESTIMATE2003)/(SUM(POPESTIMATE2000)*1.0))-1) * 100,2),10,2) AS "CHANGE_00_03" FROM JUNKDAT WHERE AGE=1 AND SEX=0 AND RACE=1 AND ORIGIN=1 GROUP BY CTYNAME ORDER BY ((SUM(POPESTIMATE2003)/(SUM(POPESTIMATE2000)*1.0))-1) * 100 DESC COUNTY CHANGE_00_03 -------------------- ------------ New York County 29.15 Kings County 1.99 St. Lawrence County -3.70 Montgomery County -4.40 Schuyler County -5.02 Chemung County -5.11 Hamilton County -5.36 Bronx County -5.67 Cattaraugus County -6.26 Seneca County -6.26 Sullivan County -6.32 Rockland County -6.41 Fulton County -6.44 Tompkins County -6.51 Queens County -7.17 Steuben County -7.26 Jefferson County -7.33 Warren County -7.38 Genesee County -7.55 Chautauqua County -7.65 Schenectady County -7.73 Lewis County -7.74 Oswego County -7.89 Onondaga County -7.92 Allegany County -7.96 Broome County -8.00 Cortland County -8.12 Cayuga County -8.25 Oneida County -8.25 Wyoming County -8.73 Monroe County -8.92 Ontario County -9.00 Albany County -9.28 Ulster County -9.39 Erie County -9.44 Chenango County -9.52 Saratoga County -9.57 Niagara County -9.73 Yates County -9.99 Madison County -10.10 Otsego County -10.11 Tioga County -10.25 Washington County -10.48 Essex County -10.52 Livingston County -10.60 Clinton County -10.72 Suffolk County -10.79 Herkimer County -10.96 Franklin County -11.60 Rensselaer County -11.97 Orange County -12.00 Wayne County -12.03 Richmond County -12.13 Delaware County -13.21 Orleans County -13.34 Putnam County -13.38 Columbia County -13.43 Dutchess County -13.51 Westchester County -13.69 Greene County -13.89 Schoharie County -16.22 Nassau County -16.36 (62 row(s) affected)
Thanks buddy. :-)
Oops, I didn't think about that! The whole concept of Admin Mod just seems so masculine ...
*files story under "No Sh-t"*
Who'd guess that the kiddy population would dwindle in gay capital of the world.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.