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Wilmington Population and Demographics


DCMetroRaleigh

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On 4/5/2023 at 10:41 AM, Phillydog said:

Has anyone spoken to NC Commerce Department about this?  It does hurt business attraction.  Brunswick not part of ILM MSA.

Just as I believe Raleigh and Durham are one large metro, Brunswick County needs to be returned to Wilmington metro.  While lot of growth all over Brunsco the southern half closer to Myrtle Beach is mainly retirees with more commuters in the northern section like Leland into Wilmington.  Given Brunswick is one of the top fastest growing counties in NC (and the nation) it inflates currently Myrtle Beach metro growth when it should be inflating Wilmington metro growth.

It reminds me of what Benjamin Franklin said about New Jersey it is a barrel tapped at both ends (NYC and Philly) and in state reminds me of Alamance County which draws into Durham and the Triangle and into Greensboro and the Triad. 

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After a decade, Brunswick County has finally been moved back into the Wilmington Metropolitan Statistical Area. 

from Wilmington Biz today:

 

The federally defined economic areas help researchers and businesses make conclusions and decisions about patterns in urban hubs. Brunswick County’s exclusion from the Wilmington MSA has long been a point of contention for local officials, who have argued the 2013 realignment translated to missed opportunities for the area. 

The Office of Management and Budget announced the new MSA delineations Friday, with Wilmington’s to include New Hanover, Pender and Brunswick counties. 

Brunswick County spent the past decade in the Myrtle Beach-Conway-North Myrtle Beach, S.C. MSA. 

Of the Brunswick County residents participating in the workforce, about 27% travel to New Hanover County for work, and 3% drive to Horry County, South Carolina, according to a 2021 Cape Fear Collective analysis.

Brunswick County's removal “had an adverse effect” on the city’s economic development opportunities, Wilmington Mayor Bill Saffo said during a legislative breakfast in February. “This is something extremely critical.”

Tyler Newman, president and CEO of Business Alliance for a Sound Economy (BASE), has advocated for the change for years. 

"It’s extremely exciting news—and something we have been working hard to make right since 2013," he wrote in an email Friday. "Having been in the room in DC in 2013 when we were told there’s no appeal process and to come back in 10 years, it is gratifying.

"It’s a big deal for the region and the entire state of North Carolina that we are no longer statistically ceding one of the fastest growing counties to South Carolina. From economic development and investment to Medicare reimbursement, this is a big deal. Thanks to UNCW and Cape Fear Collective for helping us gather data show how our growth and commuting patterns clearly tie Brunswick County to Wilmington, New Hanover and Pender. Most importantly, thanks to Sen Budd, Sen Burr, Sen Tillis and Congressman Rouzer and their staffs for continuing to highlight the importance of this issue at every opportunity," Newman said.

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from Wilmington Biz 

https://www.wilmingtonbiz.com/government/2023/07/28/with_brunswick_back_on_map_wilmington_msa_could_find_road_to_new_jobs_officials_say/24671

Welcome back, Brunswick. Though bridges, beaches and a ferry bind Brunswick County to New Hanover County, the economic allegiance is finally official (again). 

Last Friday, the Office of Management and Budget released its updated Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) delineations, grouping Brunswick County back into the Wilmington MSA along with New Hanover and Pender counties after a 10-year hiatus.

While the designation may seem esoteric, local leaders and area politicians from both sides spent years rallying for last week’s decision. 

Federal officials sort counties into MSAs for purely statistical purposes. In its bulletin of the new delineations, the OMB makes it clear it doesn’t consider non-statistical uses when publishing the urban groupings. But that doesn’t stop private or public entities from relying on MSAs for myriad reasons – from grant funding to whether a major employer would even consider locating in an area. 

When OMB first shifted Brunswick County south to the MSA including Myrtle Beach, South Carolina in 2013, local- and state-level politicians decried the move. Former Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) called it a “classic Washington maneuver.” The late former Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) and former Rep. Mike McIntyre (D-N.C.) jointly described the removal as making “no sense culturally or economically.”

Investors, site selectors, analysts and more scour data when making business decisions, which often include MSA-based metrics. While interested parties may utilize multiple data sources for analysis, officials have argued that Brunswick's removal placed the region at a disadvantage by creating another layer of research necessary to show the intrinsic economic ties between the areas.

As of 2022, the Wilmington MSA’s population landed in 168th in the nation, according to census data. If it had included Brunswick County's population, it would have been 122nd. 

“In some respects, we won’t know how many times we lost out on a business or investment "because of where the Wilmington MSA fell in the rankings, said Tyler Newman, president and CEO of Business Alliance for a Sound Economy (BASE). 

The 153,000-person boost to the Wilmington MSA profile marks a 50% population increase, University of North Carolina Wilmington regional economist Mouhcine Guettabi noted in a blog post about the realignment. “This has significant implications for how the area’s labor market, purchasing power, and attractiveness from an economic development and investment standpoint is perceived,” he wrote.

A 643-person difference in the 2010 census count sealed Brunswick’s MSA fate in 2013, according to previous Business Journal reporting. Estimates at the time had more Brunswick residents belonging to the Myrtle Beach urban cluster. 

Residents of some communities in western Brunswick County do shop and work in Myrtle Beach as opposed to Wilmington. At the same time, Wilmington has helped propel the Leland area's explosion in northern Brunswick County. (Notably, strides in commercial real estate options like a farm supply store and breweries have lately given Leland residents fewer reasons to cross the bridge, but still, the interconnectedness remains.)

The question bureaucrats were faced with in the MSA tug-of-war: Which urban hub’s commuting ties are stronger? 

OMB links outlying counties to urban core counties based on commuting connectivity data, the agency detailed in its 2020 Federal Register Notice. 

An outlying county lands in the central county’s MSA if at least 25% of its employed residents worked in the central county; or if at least 25% of its employment is accounted for by workers who reside in the central county, according to the notice. OMB took note of the possibility of remote work shifts affecting commuting behavior, but in its notice said it would revisit whether this trend would sustain during its next delineation update next decade.

In 2021, Cape Fear Collective, UNCW, Wilmington Chamber of Commerce and BASE coordinated to present commuting findings to OMB. The analysis found that of Brunswick County’s 68,600 employed residents, 42% work in the county and 27% traveled to New Hanover County for their jobs. Meanwhile, just 3% of Brunswick’s workforce commuted to Horry County, South Carolina (home to Myrtle Beach).

In Guettabi’s post this week, the UNCW economist further detailed the financial ties: Of New Hanover County’s workforce of 85,400, about 53% live in the county, 11% live in Brunswick County and 8% live in Pender County. “This shows that almost half of all the earnings by workers employed in New Hanover county flow to other counties,” Guettabi wrote. “While one can consider these earnings to be leakage, it also points to the fact that the labor market consists of more than just the people who reside within the boundaries of the county.”

Congressman David Rouzer (R-N.C) called OMB’s realignment “welcome news.” 

“Brunswick County leads our state and nation in growth, and this will help ensure our region is in the best possible position for economic development opportunities,” Rouzer told the Business Journal. 

Wilmington Mayor Bill Saffo said the modification both opens opportunities and brings new challenges to infrastructure, “which often require a regional approach to address.”

Wilmington chamber president and CEO Natalie English said the move will have “an immediate and far-reaching effect on local businesses and the overall economic landscape in southeastern North Carolina” that will “usher in a new era of growth and prosperity.” It will enhance the region’s attractiveness to businesses and investors, English said, by generating “new interest from industries seeking to establish or expand their operations, offering a clearer economic potential and facilitating informed investment and development decisions.”

“The Brunswick MSA realignment represents a pivotal moment for southeastern North Carolina and the collaborative efforts within our community have played a vital role in making this vision a reality,” English said. 

Steve Yost, president of North Carolina’s Southeast, a regional economic development agency, said the tri-county area is enmeshed by a transportation network, labor shed and other financial characteristics.

“Brunswick’s omission from the Wilmington MSA never made sense,” he said. Yost added that while it’s positive to see the change, it’s still a strength for Brunswick County to be adjacent to another MSA. “We never observed any negative impacts while it was officially part of the Myrtle Beach MSA, and the county’s economic growth during that time span is evidence of that,” he said. “In fact, we adjusted our marketing to essentially promote that Brunswick County was part of two of the fastest-growing MSAs in the country, which is an extra plus when marketing to companies that are evaluating site locations, labor availability and other criteria.”

Longtime Brunswick County Commissioner Frank Williams described the change as a “common-sense move” that will benefit the county’s economic development efforts. 

However, the leader of Brunswick County’s own economic development agency, Bill Early, said based on benefits relating to economic development, OMB’s decision doesn’t impact his team’s efforts.

“From my perspective, the realignment does not affect our economic development recruitment efforts,” said Early, the executive director of Brunswick Business & Industry Development. “Companies considering Brunswick County are focused on their ability to recruit employees. Workers are available to them regardless of MSA boundaries, so we utilize data from both areas to showcase our labor pool.”

Meanwhile, the head of New Hanover and Pender counties’ economic development arm, Scott Satterfield, said Wilmington Business Development was excited to see Brunswick County reenter the Wilmington MSA. “There has always been an intrinsic tie between us and this change could lead to further economic development opportunities for the region,” he said. 

Wilmington International Airport hasn’t seemingly suffered from the exclusion; ILM beat its busiest outbound passenger month of all time by 25% in June. Still, airport spokesperson Erin McNally said ILM officials communicate its “catchment area,” which extends beyond MSA borders, to carriers. This area conveys the potential number of travelers that live closest to ILM, she said. “With the inclusion of Brunswick County as part of the Wilmington MSA, it provides one data point to understand the size and growth of the nearby population and reinforces the overall figures in ILM’s total catchment area,” she said. 

Brunswick County continues to reign as the fastest-growing county in the state, according to the latest census count. The county added 8,250 residents between 2021 and 2022, a growth rate of nearly 6%. 

“As the fastest-growing county in the state, it's imperative that we align our strategic initiatives to deliver on our promise to provide the highest quality care to our patients and communities,” said Heather King, president and chief operating officer of Novant Health Brunswick Medical Center. “Brunswick County's inclusion in the Wilmington, North Carolina MSA better reflects how we engage as a community. The trends predicted by MSA data will continue to inform our growth strategies for physician recruitment, capital investments and more.”
 

 

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With the recent readdition of Brunswick County to the Wilmington metro area (MSA), the Port City jumped up 53 rank order spots (from #168) to become the nation's 115th largest MSA.

The Wilmington MSA now includes Brunswick, New Hanover, and Pender Counties.

Rank       MSA                         2023 Est. Pop.

115        Wilmington           467,337

129       Savannah                424,935

131       Asheville                 417,202  

139       Myrtle Beach       397,478

142       Fayetteville           392,336

150       Hickory                    370,030

Links:

https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/popest/2020s-total-metro-and-micro-statistical-areas.html#v2023

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_statistical_area

Map of Wilmington, NC and Brunswick County NC. Find a beach home on one of  the many island in Coast… | Coastal north carolina, North carolina beaches,  Holden beach 

Wilmington NC City Map

Edited by QCxpat
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