Stamford Advocate

N.Y. closes migration gap with area

- By Alexander Soule

Fairfield County continues to win the battle with New York as a destinatio­n to live, but on dwindling numbers, according to fresh estimates by the federal government, with Connecticu­t’s southweste­rnmost county continuing to lose ground to the New Haven and Hartford areas.

On a net basis, nearly 900 households relocated to Fairfield County in 2016 from Bronx County, N.Y., according to updated U.S. Census Bureau calculatio­ns, along with another 860 moves to Fairfield County from its economic rival Westcheste­r County, N.Y.

Including other New York City-area communitie­s including on Long Island and extending north along the Hudson River, Fairfield County picked up more than 3,800 households on a net basis, with the figure subject to margins of error that could make the actual totals higher or lower. Another 1,500 New Jersey households relocated to Fairfield County, the Census Bureau estimates.

Even as New Yorkers arrived by the thousands in 2016, however, larger numbers of Fairfield County residents were decamping for lower-cost cities and towns, the Census Bureau determined. More than 1,100 families landed in New Haven County, with another 2,500-plus headed to Hartford County and Tolland County just east.

Add it up, and more than 7,900 residents moved away from Fairfield County in 2016, if the Census Bureau estimates are accurate, reversing a 5,200 gain the year before.

The Census Bureau figures do not include net migration totals for foreign countries, with nearly 8,900 new arrivals from overseas, but the Census Bureau not offering estimates on how many people moved abroad from Fairfield County.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? A United Van Lines truck heads eastbound in the winter of 2017 on Interstate 95 in Stamford.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo A United Van Lines truck heads eastbound in the winter of 2017 on Interstate 95 in Stamford.

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