To be fair though, Denver has more going for it other than just being a fad city. It has breathtaking natural beauty/scenery right at its doorstep and is in a state that has a much more progressive, functional state government. Denver is also much larger than OKC and is a truly major metro area in a way OKC isn't. To top it off, salaries are higher in Denver than OKC, though probably not high enough to make the cost of living comparable. You pay more to live in Denver because you value the amenities that living somewhere like that offers.
Haha, very possible. I was in downtown Portland this summer, and EVERYWHERE I looked, there were tons of homeless people. It was almost epidemic level, when I was there. When COL rises well beyond salary levels, this happens quickly. Not saying OKC is perfect or way better off. But there is a dark side to high COL cities.
Some people are homeless because they're mentally ill. If you've got schizophrenia and no family to take care of you, congratulations, you're homeless now.
On the other end of the spectrum, some people are homeless because they're young and directionless, and they'd rather be homeless in a cool place than get a job is a boring place. Chris Pratt was homeless in Hawaii for several years, and apparently just smoked pot on the beach all day.
Then there are all kinds of people in between. The trendier your city, the higher your cost of living, the more you're going to have a problem with "voluntary homeless" people. Most of them aren't going to become famous actors, and many of them are going to have some degree of drug addiction or mental illness. But there are plenty of people who would rather sleep on somebody's couch, or in a van, especially in a city that has a lot of services to cater to them, and weather that won't kill you (not many homeless people in Barrow, Alaska).
As far as cost of living goes, too far one way or the other can be a real problem. Ultra high cost means that normal people have a hard time getting by. Ultra low cost means that there's very little demand to live there. People would rather not live there, even though it's cheap. Neither one is a good thing.
If Oklahoma can get its education system out of the bottom 10 and cut down on its incarceration rate (criminal justice reform has some real momentum lately), we could see much better growth in the next 10 years.
That is my point. I was lucky enough to have moved here quite a few years ago when it was just pricey. Now it's nearing the point where out of the reach of most - other than people from the east or west coasts.
I was pointing out that one can like nearly like a king in nice, but quickly improving OKC, for what one can live modestly for in Denver.
All those things you love about progressive cities, progressive politics and lots of high paying jobs are simply inflationary. Would you rather have a far lower COL with money to spend or live in a high COL city and be a slave to your house or have 4 roommates because you can't afford more?
I saw this article when it came out. I noted it did NOT have any pop figures for OKC. Remember, in 2017, Tulsa did not gain any people, and OKC gained about 12,000. So my theory is that the Tulsa World didn't note OKC numbers for some reason.
Frankly a lot of small towns in Oklahoma are dying, losing their hospitals, turning to four-day schools, etc. And they don't seem to care based on their voting numbers. So I could see OKC gaining while Tulsa stays flat and the rest of the state loses population.
Why are posters reluctant to acknowledge that people are in reality leaving Oklahoma. Many posters on this board who criticize me as negative, do not themselves live in the State. Stop skewing the truth, the State is losing people to other places. Oklahoma has dismal rankings in so many areas and its political leadership is weak. OKC is growing slightly but will soon (2020) be surpassed by cities on a higher growth trajectory
I don't see that happening - denying the population slowdown. OKs population grows and slows with the oil and gas industry and that industry is hurting at the moment. Dallas is exploding with new HQs and large corporate installations so it's no wonder people are flocking there - not to mention Austin. When the O & G industry turns back up, the population in OKC will start to expand again. It's just the normal cycle.
Edit: The US Census dept. shows OKCs population is 643,648 as of last year. Its probably around 650,000 now.
People leave and move to every state. Oklahoma isn't in the top 10 for states that people are moving to, but we aren't in the top 10 that people are leaving either. As for small towns losing population, that's something going on nationwide. Not just Oklahoma. And there are small towns that are actually gaining in population such as Elk City, Clinton, Ardmore, Durant, Woodward, and Enid.
The Dallas metroplex will always be our biggest & worst enemy. Many recent college grads & young professionals still flock to the Dallas area for better jobs/lifestyle as they did 20 years ago. Many high school grads from north Texas flock to OU for college, but when they graduate, take their degrees & move right back to Dallas. Our biggest downfall is not being able to retain those students, who will get a decent job & start families & stay put for a while.
As long as Dallas ecomony stay strongs, it will forever suck people & dollars from Oklahoma. As we only live a couple hours away from one the fastest growing metro areas in the nation.
Relax man.
1. I said it's a THEORY.
2. You're a Tulsan; you should understand. Tulsa World ultimately is just as cheerleady for Tulsa as the Oklahoman is at times for OKC.
3. Are you suggesting that the population trends from 2017 radically shifted in 2018? If so, why? I see no reason to indicate that they would.
To repeat, in 2017, OKC population increased (somewhat marginally). Tulsa's held pat (no increase in migration but a tiny net gain based on births and deaths). And the rural areas of Oklahoma continued to depopulate.
So, if you notice, the subject of this multiyear thread is OKC Population Growth. Not Oklahoma population growth. Most of us here would be running for the exits if we were not in one of the two metro areas. The state of the state is as bad as it has been in my lifetime.
As most people on this forum, I want OKC population growth figures. The Tulsa World provided no detail in that area for whatever reason. I think you would agree that it's likely OKC continued its marginal population growth while Tulsa held even and the rest of the state lost people. I'm basing this on recent history not the whims of a Tulsa World editor.
In 2017, OKC grew by 11,000. Tulsa grew by 3,000.
Both OKC and Tulsa have seen recent yearly decreases in yearly population.
OKC growth in 2015: 20,382 (+ 3,478)
OKC growth in 2016: 16,345 (- 4,037)
OKC growth in 2017: 11,274 (-5,071)
Tulsa growth in 2015: 10,974 (+ 4,115)
Tulsa growth in 2016: 7,257 (- 3,717)
Tulsa growth in 2017: 3,241 (- 4,016)
If those trends continued than OKC grew by 6,000 and Tulsa saw no growth or negative growth.
But if I had to guess, I’d say OKC grew by 7,000 and Tulsa grew by 2,000.
Yes marginal growth in the two metros nearly offset by losses in the rural counties.
Interesting map I found showing projected growth over the next 40 years. As you can see the OKC and Tulsa metro counties have 5-10% population gains (Canadian County the only one projected to be +10%) and generally surrounding the metros there are 0-5% gains and everywhere else has losses.
Like any population trends you have to take it with a grain of salt. This shows oil & gas activity driving high growth in areas like West Texas and Western North Dakota which as we've seen is very cyclical. Same for growth in Oklahoma counties like Woods, Alfalfa, and Major. Any oil downturn will halt growth in those areas.
Elk City, Clinton and Woodward are growing? I don't question Ardmore and Durant, but in my business travel, I've noted that population gains in those communities are transient and are based on drilling activity. A lot of those migrants are temporary residents, many living in hotels. The book is out on Enid, but in the year or so I spent there visiting on business, it did not appear to be a growing community.
I looked at the 2017 and 2016 population estimates for towns mentioned, and all had small losses except for Durant. I don't know what your source is, but someone else said that July 2018 population estimates for cities from the Census aren't released until May 2019. Hopefully, higher oil prices in 2018 helped those and other Oklahoma towns. Besides Durant, college towns Tahlequah and Stillwater have slowly been growing since 2010 and that's about it outside the metros.
I don’t see the problem?
In Dallas metroplex they have so many people wanting a piece of the tax pie its growing their cost of living. OKC doesn’t have nearly that. For every 1 of our problem they have 100. Before long you can drive to Dallas from OKC in the same time as from Fort Worth to Dallas. Its crowded down there and infrastructure costs are growing.
I don’t want OKC to become Dallas, I like it smaller. If one likes Dallas then I say go live in Dallas!
My son in 20’s lives there. Nice condo off DNT and 121. Live in girlfriend. But they are already talking about buying a house out in the burbs due to how much the cost is even close to work. So they will have to commute to their jobs in that crap traffic. He told me he is already wondering if he shouldn’t move back to OKC. But since not married he’ll stay for now.
I think you will start to see real numbers leaving Dallas even as they add more (more will arrive than leave). Dallas metro will still have a huge net gain but a lot of folks are tired of the crowds.
What good is all the fun stuff when its a nightmare to even get to it. So yes Dallas has way more than OKC but that does not alone make for a better quality of life. If you spend 7.5 extea hours commuting to work and fun per week compared to OKC thats a lot of fun time wasted.
I don’t know why people want us to be Dallas. Dallas is fine to travel to for a weekend getaway but the day to day grind is not what some think.
Just my opinion on the matter
I simply go here to spot trends and blips. https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/...xhtml?src=bkmk
nm
2018 metropolitan census data was released today!
https://www.census.gov/data/tables/t...cal-areas.html
Oklahoma City metro area grew from 1,383,249 to 1,396,445 adding 13,196 persons. That's way better than the 2016-2017 growth of 9,000 persons.
This bodes well, as it looks like the population growth should be picking back up, after recent years of tepid growth.
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