2020 Census: Oregon more diverse
Published 2:15 pm Monday, August 16, 2021
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Oregon still has a non-Hispanic white majority, but according to the first data released from the 2020 Census, the state is becoming more diverse.
Washington County now is first and Multnomah County is third in the Census Bureau’s diversity index measurement. Just 10 years ago, Washington County was fourth and Multnomah County eighth in the same index. Clackamas County is 15th among Oregon counties in the 2020 index, up from 16th in 2010.
Data released by the bureau on Thursday also shows that the three Portland metro counties outpaced Oregon as a whole in population growth during the past decade, and their share of Oregon’s population also inched up.
The three counties accounted for 43.4% of Oregon’s population, up from 42.8% in 2010. Their growth rate during the decade was 12%, slightly more than the 10.6% statewide.
The Oregon county that exceeded 25% growth was Deschutes County, which rose 25.7% from 157,733 to 198,253. Its share of non-Hispanic whites dropped from 92.2% to 85.3%.
Non-Hispanic whites in Multnomah and Washington counties fell below Oregon’s average of 72% — Multnomah at 65.7%, Washington at 60.8% — but Clackamas County exceeds the average at 77.2%.
The bureau defines the Portland metro area as five counties in Oregon and two in Washington with a total population of about 2.5 million.
All of these statistics mostly follow national trends summarized by Census Bureau officials in an online briefing Thursday.
“The U.S. population is much more multiracial, and much more racially and ethnically diverse than what we have measured in the past,” Nicholas Jones, director of race and ethnic research and outreach for the Census Bureau, told reporters.
First details
The data was the first detailed information released by the Census Bureau from its 2020 count, which dates to April 1, 2020. Various factors, including the coronavirus pandemic and data quality concerns, delayed the scheduled release from this past spring.
Marc Perry, a senior demographer for the bureau, said the nation’s metropolitan areas continued to grow at 8.7%. Metro area populations now account for 86% of the nation’s total, up 1 percentage point from each of the two most recent censuses. He also said more populous counties continue to grow, and less populated counties continue to shrink.
Oregon grew by 10.6% from 2010 to 2020 and was among seven Western states with growth at 10% or greater, outpacing the national growth of 7.4%, which Census Bureau officials said was the smallest in history except for the Great Depression of the 1930s.
The 2020 Census recorded 1.8 million housing units, though Oregon’s 8.2% growth lagged behind the pace of population.
Jones said the fastest-growing group was those identifying themselves as of more than one race.
More diverse
Oregon ranked 30th on the Census Bureau’s diversity index, which measures the probability of any two people being from different races or ethnicities, although the Oregon index number grew from 36.8 to 46.1 during the decade. In the West only Idaho trailed Oregon at 41st; Hawaii, California and Nevada led the nation, Alaska was 12th and Washington 20th.
Non-Hispanic whites accounted for 72% of Oregon’s population in the official count; Hispanics, 13.9%; Asians, 4.5%, Blacks, 1.9%, Native Americans, 1%, and two or more races, 6.1%. (Under the federal definition used by the Census Bureau, Hispanic/Latino is an ethnicity and can be of any race.)
Multnomah County remains Oregon’s most populous at 815,418, up 10.9% from 735,334 in 2010. Its share of non-Hispanic whites during the decade dipped from 72.1% to 65.7%, but Hispanics grew from 10.9% to 12.7%, and Asians from 6.5% to 7.5%.
Washington County, long acknowledged as Oregon’s most diverse county, takes over the top position in Oregon even as it crossed the 600,000 total. Total population grew 13.3% from 529,710 to 600,372. Non-Hispanic whites dropped from 69.7% to 60.8%, but Hispanics grew from 15.7% to 17.9%, and Asians, 8.6% to 11.4%.
Clackamas County also has diversified, though non-Hispanic whites still account for 77.2% of its total, down from 84.5% in 2010. Hispanics grew from 7.7% to 9.6%, and the third largest group now is people of two or more races, at 6%. Asians constituted the third largest group in 2010 at 3.6%. Total population rose 12.1% from 375,992 to 421,401.