Texas
Booming Houston suburb, other Texas towns among the fastest-growing U.S. cities in 2023
One Houston suburb experienced one of the most rapid growth spurts in the country last year: Fulshear, whose population grew by 25.6 percent, more than 51 times that of the nation’s growth rate of 0.5 percent. The city’s population was 42,616 as of July 1, 2023.
According to U.S. Census Bureau’s Vintage 2023 Population Estimates, released Thursday, May 16, Fulshear — which lies west of Katy in northwest Fort Bend County – ranked No. 2 on the list of fastest-growing cities with a population of 20,000 or more. It’s no wonder iconic Houston restaurants like Molina’s Cantina see opportunities there.
The South still dominates the nation’s growth, even as America’s Northeast and Midwest cities are rebounding slightly from years of population drops. The census estimates showed 13 of the 15 fastest-growing cities in the U.S. were in the South — eight in Texas alone.
The Texas cities joining Fulshear on the fastest-growing-cities list are:
- Celina (No. 1) with 26.6 percent growth (42,616 total population)
- Princeton (No. 3) with 22.3 percent growth (28,027 total population)
- Anna (No. 4) with 16.9 percent growth (27,501 total population)
- Georgetown (No. 8) with 10.6 percent growth (96,312 total population)
- Prosper (No. 9) with 10.5 percent growth (41,660 total population)
- Forney (No. 10) with 10.4 percent growth (35,470 total population)
- Kyle (No. 11) with 9 percent growth (62,548 total population)
Texas trends
San Antonio saw the biggest growth spurt in the United States last year, numbers-wise. The Alamo City added about 22,000 residents. San Antonio now has nearly 1.5 million people, making it the the seventh largest city in the U.S. and second largest in Texas.
Its population boom was followed by those of other Southern cities, including Fort Worth; Charlotte, North Carolina; Jacksonville, Florida; and Port St. Lucie, Florida.
Fast-growing Fort Worth (978,000) surpassed San Jose, California (970,000) to become the 12th most populous city in the country.
Meanwhile, population slowed in the Austin area. Jacksonville, Florida (986,000), outpaced Austin (980,000), pushing the Texas capital to 11th largest city in the U.S. (barely ahead of Fort Worth).
Population growth in Georgetown, outside Austin, slowed by more than one-fourth its population growth in 2022, the report says, from 14.4 percent to 10.6 percent. It’s the same story in the Central Texas city of Kyle, whose population growth decreased by nearly 2 percent to 9 percent in 2023.
Most populated cities
New York City with nearly 8.3 million people remained the nation’s largest city in population as of July 1, 2023. Los Angeles was second at close to 4 million residents, while Chicago was third at 2.7 million and Houston was fourth at 2.3 million residents.
The 15 populous U.S. cities in 2023 were:
- New York, New York (8.3 million)
- Los Angeles, California (4 million)
- Chicago, Illinois (2.7 million)
- Houston, Texas (2.3 million)
- Phoenix, Arizona (1.7 million)
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1.6 million)
- San Antonio (1.5 million)
- San Diego, California (1.4 million)
- Dallas (1.3 million)
- Jacksonville, Florida (986,000)
- Austin (980,000)
- Fort Worth (978,000)
- San Jose (970,000)
- Columbus, Ohio (913,000)
- Charlotte, North Carolina (911,000)
Modest reversals of population declines were seen last year in large cities in the nation’s Northeast and Midwest. Detroit, for example, which grew for the first time in decades, had seen an exodus of people since the 1950s. Yet the estimates released Thursday show the population of Michigan’s largest city rose by just 1,852 people from 631,366 in 2022 to 633,218 last year.
It’s a milestone for Detroit, which had 1.8 million residents in the 1950s only to see its population dwindle and then plummet through suburban white flight, a 1967 race riot, the migration to the suburbs by many of the Black middle class and the national economic downturn that foreshadowed the city’s 2013 bankruptcy filing.
Three of the largest cities in the U.S. that had been bleeding residents this decade staunched those departures somewhat. New York City, which has lost almost 550,000 residents this decade so far, saw a drop of only 77,000 residents last year, about three-fifths the numbers from the previous year.
Los Angeles lost only 1,800 people last year, following a decline in the 2020s of almost 78,000 residents. Chicago, which has lost almost 82,000 people this decade, only had a population drop of 8,200 residents last year.
And San Francisco, which has lost a greater share of residents this decade than any other big city — almost 7.5 percent — actually grew by more than 1,200 residents last year.
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This article originally ran on CultureMap.
Texas
Texas homeowner mistakes alligator on the porch for an Amazon package delivery
FULSHEAR, Texas – A Texas homeowner heading out for an early morning walk got quite a surprise when he mistook a large reptile parked on his front porch for an online delivery.
Officers with the Fulshear Police Department were called to a local residence last week after the homeowner accidentally struck an alligator with his screen door, initially believing it was a package from Amazon.
What they’re saying:
“With all the heavy rain we’ve been getting lately, it seems the gators are on the move,” the police department said in a statement. “This little fella decided to skip the swamp and upgrade to porch life this morning.”
Footage released by the department captures the alligator resting on the concrete porch while the homeowner explains the startling encounter to responding officers, noting he didn’t realize what it was until he banged into it with the door.
Police officers successfully wrangled the alligator and relocated it safely to a nearby pond.
Recent heavy rainfall across the region has displaced local wildlife, prompting authorities to urge residents to remain cautious as animals seek out dry territory.
“If you see an unexpected visitor like this around your home, give it plenty of space and let us handle it,” the department reminded the community. “Apparently, even the gators are looking for higher ground these days!”
The department also added a bit of local humor to the unusual morning call: “And yes, before anyone asks, this little gator is not paying property taxes.”
The Source: Fulshear Police via Storyful
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