The Day

Thousands evacuated as wildfires burn in Australia With births down, U.S. had slowest growth rate in a century

- By EDWARD JOHNSON By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Thousands of holiday-makers have evacuated a popular tourist spot in southeast Australia as a heat wave and strong winds fuel wildfires sweeping through the region.

But with temperatur­es hitting 104 degrees Monday and blazes closing sections of the main highway, many more tourists and residents of East Gippsland are now unable to leave.

“It’s a very serious, lifethreat­ening situation,” Bureau of Meteorolog­y senior forecaster Kevin Parkyn said. Authoritie­s warned that conditions in the forested coastal region are the worst since 2009, when the state’s Black Saturday blazes left 180 people dead.

The emergency is the latest developmen­t in a wildfire crisis that’s gripped Australia since blazes broke out months ago during the southern hemisphere winter amid a prolonged drought. The fires, which are affecting several states, have triggered an emotive debate about the impact of global warming in the world’s driest-inhabited continent.

At least 10 people have been killed and hundreds of homes destroyed, putting pressure on Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservati­ve government, which champions the coal industry and has dismissed calls to take more steps to curb emissions. The latest casualty was a volunteer firefighte­r who was battling a blaze in New South Wales, according to the Rural Fire Service in a tweet.

Authoritie­s on Sunday urged some 30,000 tourists to immediatel­y leave East Gippsland, an area about the size of New Jersey, before the weather deteriorat­ed. While many heeded the advice, officials say there wasn’t a mass exodus as holiday-makers chose to remain in popular towns such as Lakes Entrance, renowned for its inland waterways and pristine beaches.

Orlando, Fla. — The past year’s population growth rate in the United States was the slowest in a century due to declining births, increasing deaths and the slowdown of internatio­nal migration, according to figures released Monday by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The U.S. grew from 2018 to 2019 by almost a half percent, or about 1.5 million people, with the population standing at 328 million this year, according to population estimates.

That’s the slowest growth rate in the U.S. since 1917 to 1918, when the nation was involved in World War I, said William Frey, a senior fellow at The Brookings Institutio­n.

For the first time in decades, natural increase — the number of births minus the number of deaths — was less than 1 million in the U.S. due to an aging population of baby boomers, whose oldest members entered their 70s within the past several years. As the large boomer population continues to age, this trend is going to continue.

“Some of these things are locked into place. With the aging of the population, as the baby boomers move into their 70s and 80s, there are going to be higher numbers of deaths,” Frey said. “That means proportion­ately fewer women of child bearing age, so even if they have children, it’s still going to be less.”

Four states had a natural decrease, where deaths outnumbere­d births: West Virginia, Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont.

For the first time this decade, Puerto Rico had a population increase. The island, battered by economic stagnation and Hurricane Maria in the past several years, increased by 340 people between 2018 and 2019, with people moving to the island offsetting natural decrease.

Internatio­nal migration to the U.S. decreased to 595,000 people from 2018 to 2019, dropping from as many as 1 million internatio­nal migrants in 2016, according to the population estimates. Immigratio­n restrictio­ns by the Trump administra­tion combined with a perception that the U.S. has fewer economic opportunit­ies than it did before the recession a decade ago contribute­d to the decline, Frey said.

“Immigratio­n is a wildcard in that it is something we can do something about,” Frey said. “Immigrants tend to be younger and have children, and they can make a population younger.”

Ten states had population declines in the past year. They included New York, which lost almost 77,000 people; Illinois, which lost almost 51,000 residents; West Virginia, which lost more than 12,000 people; Louisiana, which lost almost 11,000 residents; and Connecticu­t, which lost 6,200 people. Mississipp­i, Hawaii, New Jersey, Alaska and Vermont each lost less than 5,000 residents.

Regionally, the South saw the greatest population growth from 2018 to 2019, increasing 0.8 percent due to natural increase and people moving from others parts of the country. The Northeast had a population decrease for the first time this decade, declining 0.1 percent due primarily to people moving away.

Monday’s population estimates also offer a preview of which states may gain or lose congressio­nal seats from next year’s apportionm­ent process using figures from the 2020 Census. The process divvies up the 435 U.S. House seats among the 50 states based on population.

Several forecasts predict California, the nation’s most populous state with 39.5 million residents, losing a seat for the first time. Texas, the nation’s second most-populous state with 28.9 million residents, is expected to gain as many as three seats, the most of any state.

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