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Other findings: In the South, white children in Maryland and Mississippi became a numerical minority for the first time this past decade, joining Texas and the District of Columbia; Florida and Georgia are expected to follow. Metropolitan areas in the South showing some of the biggest advances in black-white residential integration included Tampa, Orlando and Lakeland in central Florida; Atlanta; Louisville, Ky.; and Houston. Their segregation levels all fell in the middle range. Metro areas in the West also had substantial changes with generally lower levels of segregation, while segregation in the Midwest and Northeast declined somewhat but was typically higher than average. The South is the second most racially and ethnically diverse U.S. region after the West. Roughly 61 percent of its population is white, 19 percent black and 15 percent Hispanic. That's compared with a national breakdown of 65 percent white, roughly 12 percent black and 16 percent Hispanic. Hispanics in large metro areas in the South were more likely to live in suburbs
-- about 60 percent, compared with 56 percent for the rest of the nation. DeHaven-Smith said the higher levels of black residential integration could make it harder for states to maintain majority black districts when they redraw political boundaries in the coming months. He also noted Florida's demographic changes, with the central part of the state now becoming a presidential battleground due to an influx of non-Cuban Hispanics who are turning the Republican-leaning area more Democratic. Florida will pick up two new House seats -- which means two more electoral college votes beginning in 2012
-- based on its population growth over the last decade. "It's a narrowly balanced, very polarized state, with the shifts occurring mostly in central Florida," deHaven-Smith said. ___ Online: Census: http://www.2010census.gov/
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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