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Articles written by Mike Schneider


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    Residents left big metros during pandemic for family, study says

    Mike Schneider, Associated Press|Updated May 12, 2021

    Cece Linder was living in a 770-square-foot apartment outside Washington, D.C., last spring when the area went into lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic. In May 2020, after a few months of both living and working in the small space, Linder decided to leave the capital area and move into the 2,000-square-foot beachside home she jointly owns with her parents in Cocoa Beach, Florida. Now she gets to see the sun rise over the water each morning before work. "If I'm...

  • Study: Residents left big metros during pandemic for family

    MIKE SCHNEIDER, Associated Press|Updated May 9, 2021

    Cece Linder was living in a 770-square-foot apartment outside Washington, D.C., last spring when the area went into lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic. In May 2020, after a few months of both living and working in the small space, Linder decided to leave the capital area and move into the 2,000-square-foot (186-square-meter) beachside home she jointly owns with her parents in Cocoa Beach, Florida. Now she gets to see the sunrise over the water each morning before...

  • Study: Residents left big metros during pandemic for family

    MIKE SCHNEIDER, Associated Press|Updated May 9, 2021

    Cece Linder was living in a 770-square-foot apartment outside Washington, D.C., last spring when the area went into lockdown because of the coronavirus pandemic. In May 2020, after a few months of both living and working in the small space, Linder decided to leave the capital area and move into the 2,000-square-foot (186-square-meter) beachside home she jointly owns with her parents in Cocoa Beach, Florida. Now she gets to see the sunrise over the water each morning before work. “If I’m teleworking anyway, why not move to thi...

  • Census: Texas gains Congress seats, Calif. loses first time

    MIKE SCHNEIDER NICHOLAS RICCARDI, Associated Press|Updated Apr 26, 2021

    WASHINGTON (AP) - America's population growth has declined to its slowest rate since the Great Depression, the Census Bureau said Monday, while the nation's political center of gravity keeps shifting further to the Republican-led South and West. Texas, Florida and other Sun Belt states are gaining congressional seats as chillier climes like New York and Ohio lose them. Altogether, the U.S. population rose to 331,449,281 last year, the Census Bureau said, a 7.4% increase that...