Three New York City boroughs lost almost 80,000 residents from people moving away last year, according to new population estimates, but city officials think those numbers are a vast undercount that doesn't capture the influx of asylum seekers who came to the city.
FILE - Asylum seekers arrive at the Roosevelt Hotel on May 19 in New York. Three New York City boroughs lost almost 80,000 residents from people moving away last year, according to population estimates released Thursday, but city officials think those numbers are a major undercount that didn't capture an influx of asylum seekers.
A for sale sign sits among an acreage of orange trees Oct. 12, 2007, in Bartow, Fla. More people moved to a county rich with citrus groves located between two of Florida’s most populous metros than in any other county in the U.S. last year, according to estimates released Thursday.
A for sale sign sits among an acreage of orange trees Oct. 12, 2007, in Bartow, Fla. More people moved to a county rich with citrus groves located between two of Florida’s most populous metros than in any other county in the U.S. last year, according to estimates released Thursday.
FILE - Asylum seekers arrive at the Roosevelt Hotel on May 19 in New York. Three New York City boroughs lost almost 80,000 residents from people moving away last year, according to population estimates released Thursday, but city officials think those numbers are a major undercount that didn't capture an influx of asylum seekers.