Too Bad We Pulled Back This Hub

EyeInTheSky said:
defender, wow 3 whole posts on this board! Yeah, I know for a fact that the writer's trip was subsidized (funded, paid in full, blah, blah, blah) by the city.
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As I thought, you don't have a clue. And you use baby talk to answer questions such as blah, blah.
 
ClueByFour said:
Link? Oh, and show the math while we are batting a grand. Show us that %4.
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OK, I'll admit when I'm wrong. Didn't use the spreadsheet on my analysis. Still doesn't change the fact that the area is losing substatial population.

In the 1990s, the population of the Pittsburgh MSA declined about 2% and employment declined about 4%. As the Pittsburgh region's population and job base was shrinking in the last decade, the U.S. experienced 13% growth in population and a 12% growth in jobs.

Pittsburgh MSA POP Change, 1960-2000
1960 Pop: 2,689,414
2000 Pop: 2,358,695
Change: -330,719 (-12%)

Additionally, the City of Pittsburgh dropped from 600,000 residents in 1960 to 334,000 in 2000. Allegheny County population fell from 1.62 million in 1960 to 1.37 million in 2000, a 15% decline.

Sources: U.S. Census, ESRI, U.S. Economic Census