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First take daily ridership and divide by 2 (they count once each way)
Two - This line also services NJ along 78 (maybe even 50% of the riders)
Three - This includes daily trekers for things like shopping and Broadway shows
Combined Philly to NYC on Bolt/Greyhound/Mega is over 20K per day but not all are commuters
There is something like 1K commuters from Newtown/Yardely/Upper Makefield PA on busses from ride and ahre lots just on the PA/NJ border (PA side that go into Manhattan to but Bucks is def part of the Philly MSA) That is on top the far more who go from Trenton and Hamilton NJ Train stations into Manhattan
Reading even further on the link one of the Main depature places is a SEPTA Regional Rail Train Station (SEPTA is the Philadelphia PT System) in Doylestown PA (Part of Bucks county)
I think people are getting their thoughts crossed when they compare the CSA populations to the general population of a city's metro area. CSA is a better definition of a media market and the total area that a central city's influence covers. It really has nothing to do with the urban area population of Atlanta, Washington DC, etc.
Interesting to see from my home state of Iowa they combined Cedar Rapids and Iowa City, and gave Des Moines multiple cities, including Ames.
Cedar Rapids/Iowa City is now around 420,000 and Des Moines is up around 715,000.
Well these new CSAs put 1.4 million people from the Philly Media market into the NYC CSA
Well these new CSAs put 1.4 million people from the Philly Media market into the NYC CSA
This was my first thought too. I wonder if people in the Lehigh Valley can get NYC media on cable or even over the air to supplement Philly media. I know there are parts of Central Jersey where this is already the case.
Well, it looks like Miami is getting a CSA this time around with the addition of Indian River, St Lucie and Martin Counties: adding another ~566,000 to the almost 5.7 million in the MSA.
Raleigh-Durham adds a few more micropolitan areas to the CSA bringing it nearer 2.0 million.
It looks like Austin is losing its CSA and will be just a MSA for the next ten years.
Charlotte's MSA grows in county count but it appears it loses overall county count in its CSA.
It will be interesting to see how the rankings of MSAs, CSAs and PSAs (the most extensive population definition whether MSA or CSA) change for all the metros. There will be some perceived winners and losers and I imagine there will be some robust conversation about it in months to come.
San Joaquin County is pretty diverse, probably even more so than every Bay Area County not named Alameda.
38.9% Hispanic
35.4% Non-Hispanic White
14.4% Asian
7.6% Black
The only difference between San Joaquin County/Stockton and the rest of the Bay is that it has a Hispanic plurality.
Do not test me, I stand by my statement. The Bay Area became less diverse than it once was, more crime and the people are fatter now. And it's going to get worse once that hick Modesto gets included soon.
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