Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania’s population drops during pandemic
Pennsylvania’s inhabitants shrank .17% between 2020-2022, per new U.S. Census Bureau knowledge, Axios’ Alex Fitzpatrick and Kavya Beheraj report.
- Philadelphia County noticed a steeper drop of about 2% over the identical span, down from 1,600,600 to 1,567,258.
The large image: The previous few years have been particularly turbulent for inhabitants developments, with the COVID-19 pandemic affecting start and dying charges, interstate and worldwide migration, and extra.
Of word: Philadelphia County’s start and dying charges remained comparatively regular. There have been about 300 extra births in 2022 when in comparison with the 19,355 in 2021, per the info.
What they’re saying: “Some social scientists would say ‘don’t make an excessive amount of of it’,” Carl Gershenson, undertaking director on the Eviction Lab, informed Axios. “There’s so many questions on the way forward for cities. All of us wish to put extra narrative on these statistics than we will bear.”
Zoom out: Idaho, Montana and Florida noticed the best inhabitants development amongst U.S. states between 2020-2022, whereas New York, Illinois and Louisiana suffered probably the most shrinkage.
- Idaho’s inhabitants of roughly 1.84 million grew by practically 4.9%, whereas that of Montana (1.1M) and Florida (21.6M) grew by 3.3% and three.0%, respectively. Utah and South Carolina got here in only a hair beneath 3%.
- New York, in the meantime, shrank by 2.1%, whereas Illinois and Louisiana misplaced 1.6% and 1.3% of their populations, respectively.
Zoom in: Some cities have been hit significantly exhausting by inhabitants loss.
- San Francisco misplaced a staggering 7.1% of its residents — a pattern that was probably not less than partially fueled by tech staff newly unshackled from their places of work within the distant work period, mixed with excessive housing prices.
- Manhattan, nonetheless, grew a bit, as Axios’ Emily Peck reviews, complicating the sweeping “huge cities are dying” narrative of the late pandemic period.
The intrigue: A number of the quickest rising areas — we’re you, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico — are additionally a number of the most weak to the continued results of local weather change, together with drought and a dwindling water provide.
Pennsylvania
As shoppers pick up last-minute groceries in Pennsylvania, prices for Thanksgiving foods are down
Last-minute shoppers streamed in and out of the Acme on City Avenue in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, Wednesday night.
Whether they’re hosting or visiting friends and family, shoppers were seeing lower prices on many items compared to last year.
Felicia, who was picking up two sweet potato pies, said she saw “a lot of sales.”
Another shopper said costs are “still a little high,” but according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, the average cost of a Thanksgiving dinner for ten people is expected to be $58. That’s down from the 2022 high of $64.
While cranberries are up 16% and wine up 2% this year, staples such as pumpkin and green beans are down 9% or more.
And when it comes to turkey prices, a whole bird is about $1.40 per pound — that’s down 16% from last year and the lowest it’s been in 5 years.
CBS News Philadelphia also spotted several carts loaded with canned soda. Many belonged to savvy Philly shoppers who cross into Montgomery County to dodge the soda tax.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania implements mandatory testing for milk as precaution for bird flu
Outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu, have hit poultry and cattle farms in the country, and Pennsylvania is taking preventative measures with bulk testing of milk.
As of Tuesday, Nov. 26, the state’s Department of Agriculture requires milk tank trucks to submit at least one sample to a Pennsylvania Animal Diagnostic Laboratory System lab within 48 hours. The process will be at no cost to farmers.
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If HPAI is detected, the department will establish a special quarantine on the farm where the sample originated. All dairy cattle herds inside the quarantine zone will undergo additional sampling and testing.
The virus is not typically fatal for dairy cattle like it is for poultry, but it can lead to serious illnesses for some cows and slow down milk production. Milk from infected cattle is still safe to drink after it is pasteurized.
“Increased, proactive testing is the only way to confirm that we don’t have the virus in Pennsylvania dairy cows or catch it early and stamp it out if we do, so farms can quickly get back to normal,” State Veterinarian Dr. Alex Hamberg said.
Pennsylvania has no confirmed cases of HPAI, but the U.S. Department of Agriculture said there have been 286 cases in cattle across two states (California and Utah) in the past 30 days. The state joins three others (Arkansas, Massachusetts and Oklahoma) that don’t have an outbreak but have ordered mandatory testing of milk samples.
“Taking this proactive step will ensure that we can protect our cattle, poultry, and farmworkers,” Pennsylvania Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding said. “We are taking this step after careful consideration, in consultation with dairy and poultry farmers, and after voluntary testing was not adequate to get samples necessary for detection and prevention. Pennsylvania’s large number of farms with both dairy cattle and poultry present unique risks that demand extra vigilance.”
According to the state Department of Agriculture, poultry and dairy are the two largest sectors in the state’s $132.5 billion agriculture industry.
In California, the virus was found in raw milk sold in stores, and the state’s Department of Public Health issued a recall and urged citizens not to drink the product. The CDC also confirmed that a child in California was infected and has recovered from the bird flu.
Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania State Police reports: woman accidently fires her bedside handgun
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