Re: Super Maps
Actually, Shawnee is part of the CMSA but no longer part of the original MSA, for the reason you state.
Metropolitan Statistical Area includes the city and suburbs that are more or less dependent upon the central city. All of us would agree that Guthrie to Norman and El Reno to E OK county would make up Oklahoma City's Metropolitan Statistical Area. In the old days, it used to include Shawnee and Pottowattomie County as well.
Recently, the Census recognized that many more little cities have their own MSA but would still be dependent upon the central big city. They came up with CSA, Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas (or CSA for short) where more than one MSA would makeup the region. As you noted, Shawnee was observed as not being as dependent upon Oklahoma City as say El Reno, Guthrie, or Norman. So, they dropped Shawnee from OKC MSA and created their own (as Pottowattomie County). And the new Oklahoma City-Shawnee CMSA includes both the new OKC MSA and Shawnee MSA.
In a way, I think this was sort of stupid because the Shawnee MSA is only about 75,000 people or so while the OKC MSA is 1,180,000. The Oklahoma City-Shawnee CSA is 1,250,000 but so was the original OKC MSA (which included El Reno to Shawnee and Norman to Guthrie). Why did they change it? Shawnee is not that happening, is it? I would have figured Norman would have gotten an MSA over Shawnee.
But anyways, that is how it stands - OKC MSA plus Shawnee MSA gives us the OKC-Shawnee CSA and is the new designation for the populous of Central Oklahoma!
Continue the Renaissance!
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
Bookmarks