Politics & Government
2010 Census: Cleveland's Loss Meant Gains for Some Suburbs
Foreclosures and flight from Cleveland into the suburbs cited as reasons for the 2011 Census numbers
The farther away a suburb is from the Cleveland the greater chance its population remained stable or grew in the last decade, according to a Patch analysis of recently released 2010 Census data.
And Solon was no exception. The city, which sits about 20 miles from Cleveland, grew by about The overall population of Solon grew from 21,802 in 2000 to 23,348 in 2010.
Among six cities within 10 miles of Cleveland surveyed by Patch, only one city's population grew, and by only 0.3 percent. And within 20 miles, eight of 13 city populations dropped. Cities between 21 and 40 miles fared much better, with only two of the 10 we surveyed dropping in population.
Find out what's happening in Solonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
Robert L. Fischer, Ph.D. and co-director of Case Western Reserve University's Center on Urban Poverty & Community Development, said that there is little doubt that foreclosures are a piece of the drop. Cuyahoga County has seen 14,000 foreclosures per year since 2006, and half of those have occurred in the city of Cleveland.
"The other matter that is well documented is that while Cleveland population has declined markedly (-17 percent) the population in Cuyahoga County has not dropped as much (-8.2 percent) and the region has remained relatively flat (-2 percent)," he wrote in an e-mail.
Find out what's happening in Solonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
"Partly this reflects the migration of families out of the urban center and the sprawl of the metropolitan area, that has been taking place since the 1950s. Certainly the shifts in the regional economy have also fueled these patterns as well," he added.
But Cleveland is not alone in this pattern: Fischer added that other major cities including Cincinnati, Toledo and Akron have seen similar population patterns.
There are outliers: Avon, for example, which grew by 85 percent in the past 10 years, saw the largest growth by a wide margin, and East Cleveland's drop in population is far from the next-largest drop – Cleveland proper.
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