More people = more potential SDSU fans. Some of this growth reflects the shift from rural to urban.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...OE=click-refer
Two South Dakota counties in 10 fastest-growing
By Haya El Nasser, USA TODAY
There aren't many pockets of growth in the Great Plains, where 70% of rural counties have lost a third of their population in the past 20 years.
But two rural South Dakota counties are among the nation's 10 fastest-growing counties from 2003 to 2004: Lincoln County (pop. 31,437), south of Sioux Falls, and tiny Hanson County (pop. 3,786), 45 miles to the west.
Sioux Falls, site of Citibank's first credit card processing center, has attracted Internet and biotech companies. The number of jobs rose about 28% to 119,000 from 1994 to 2004, says Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, a research group.
The jobs are luring back young people who moved to big cities such as Chicago, he says. When they reach their 30s and have kids, "they feel they can't have good quality of life in those urban centers because of price. ... They're also coming back to a convenient thing called grandparents."
Now, "Sioux Falls is growing south into Lincoln County," says Jon Peters, an official with the county's planning department. "The sprawl is a concern. ... The urban needs to stay urban, and the rural needs to stay rural."
http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/...OE=click-refer
Two South Dakota counties in 10 fastest-growing
By Haya El Nasser, USA TODAY
There aren't many pockets of growth in the Great Plains, where 70% of rural counties have lost a third of their population in the past 20 years.
But two rural South Dakota counties are among the nation's 10 fastest-growing counties from 2003 to 2004: Lincoln County (pop. 31,437), south of Sioux Falls, and tiny Hanson County (pop. 3,786), 45 miles to the west.
Sioux Falls, site of Citibank's first credit card processing center, has attracted Internet and biotech companies. The number of jobs rose about 28% to 119,000 from 1994 to 2004, says Joel Kotkin, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, a research group.
The jobs are luring back young people who moved to big cities such as Chicago, he says. When they reach their 30s and have kids, "they feel they can't have good quality of life in those urban centers because of price. ... They're also coming back to a convenient thing called grandparents."
Now, "Sioux Falls is growing south into Lincoln County," says Jon Peters, an official with the county's planning department. "The sprawl is a concern. ... The urban needs to stay urban, and the rural needs to stay rural."
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