El Dorado News-Times

Lawmakers fear turning 144 cities INTO ‘MICROPOLIT­AN’ areas

- By Mike Schneider

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators and congressme­n is urging the federal government not to approve recommenda­tions to remove 144 cities from the designatio­n of metropolit­an statistica­l areas. Reclassify­ing them as “micropolit­an” would put key federal funding at risk, they said.

The request comes after The Associated Press reported this month that the federal government is contemplat­ing raising the population criteria for core cities in metro areas from 50,000 residents to 100,000 residents. Doing so would reclassify more than a third of the current 392 metro areas as micropolit­an statistica­l areas.

Officials in some of the affected cities worry that the change could have adverse implicatio­ns for federal funding and economic developmen­t, since some housing, transporta­tion and Medicare reimbursem­ent programs are directed specifical­ly to metropolit­an statistica­l areas.

“Adhering to this recommenda­tion has the potential to harm communitie­s across the nation, which we hope you take into account while considerin­g these recommenda­tions,” said the letter sent last week by eight U.S. senators and two U.S. representa­tives to the Office of Management and Budget.

The letter was signed by senators John Thune and Mike Rounds of South Dakota, Kevin Cramer and John Hoeven of North Dakota, Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming and Deb Fischer of Nebraska, all Republican­s, along with Arizona’s two Democratic senators, Kyrsten Sinema and Mark Kelly. Also signing were Republican Reps. Dusty Johnson of South Dakota and Adrian Smith of Nebraska.

In a separate letter to the Office of Management and Budget, Hoeven said the proposal also would hurt micropolit­an areas that were on the cusp of becoming metro areas. If approved, it wouldn’t take effect until 2023.

Statistici­ans who recommende­d changing the definition of a metro area say it’s long overdue, given that the U.S. population has more than doubled since the 50,000-person threshold was introduced in 1950. Back then, about half of U.S. residents lived in metros; now, 86% do.

Scores of city leaders and rural researcher­s also have written, urging the Office of Management and Budget to reject the proposal.

The city manager of Mankato, Minnesota estimated that her community would lose directly $400,000 in funding that goes toward homeless shelters, affordable housing and medical care to the uninsured. This federal funding also leverages other low-income housing projects, said Susan Arntz

“The City of Mankato, Minnesota is very troubled by the proposal to modify the standards,” Arntz said in a letter.

Another concern for many metros areas at risk of being reclassifi­ed is that they will have less name recognitio­n outside their region, George Hammond, a University of Arizona economist, said Tuesday during an online seminar about the topic sponsored by the National Associatio­n for Business Economics and the Associatio­n for University Business and Economic Research.

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 ?? (Ben Allan Smith/The Missoulian via AP) ?? In this Sept. 29, 2019 file photo, a pedestrian crosses Front Street under snowfall in Missoula, Mont. Under a new proposal, a metro area would have to have at least 100,000 people to count as an MSA, double the 50,000-person threshold that has been in place for the past 70 years. Cities formerly designated as metros with core population­s between 50,000 and 100,000 people would be changed to “micropolit­an" statistica­l areas instead.
(Ben Allan Smith/The Missoulian via AP) In this Sept. 29, 2019 file photo, a pedestrian crosses Front Street under snowfall in Missoula, Mont. Under a new proposal, a metro area would have to have at least 100,000 people to count as an MSA, double the 50,000-person threshold that has been in place for the past 70 years. Cities formerly designated as metros with core population­s between 50,000 and 100,000 people would be changed to “micropolit­an" statistica­l areas instead.

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