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New Orleans was among metros with the largest decline in city-suburb segregation among blacks and whites since 2000, due largely to the exodus of low-income blacks from the city after Hurricane Katrina. Other large metros showing less segregation included those with technology-based economies, such as Boston, Seattle,
Houston, Austin and San Francisco, which attracted middle- and upper-income blacks to their suburbs. Still, the recent gains in racial integration are somewhat limited, said John Logan, a sociologist at Brown University who has studied residential segregation. He noted that black-white segregation remained generally high in areas of the Northeast and Midwest. In those areas, there is slow population growth and white flight from increasingly minority neighborhoods is still common. As for Hispanics and Asians, while residential movement out of ethnic neighborhoods has been increasing, those numbers have generally been surpassed by the arrival of new immigrants into traditional enclaves. "The political implications of these trends are great in the long run
-- majority black districts will become harder to sustain, while more majority Hispanic districts will emerge, especially for state and local positions," Logan said. The figures come from previous censuses and the 2009 American Community Survey, which samples 3 million households. Due to incomplete 2009 data, the analysis of racial segregation omits seven metro areas: Sarasota, Fla.; Greenville, S.C.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Jackson, Miss.; McAllen, Texas; Portland, Maine; and Poughkeepsie, N.Y. ___ Online:
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