Under the new proposal, a metro area would have to have at least 100,000 people in its core city to count as an MSA, double the 50,000-person threshold.
So long, Sheboygan: 144 cities could lose status as metro areas By: Associated Press March 8, 2021
9:42 am
A crew from Northeast Asphalt rolls new blacktop at Sixth Street and Center Avenue in Sheboygan. The Wisconsin city is one of 144 that the federal government is proposing to downgrade from the metropolitan statistical area designation. (File photo by Corey Hengen)
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
Bye-bye, Bismarck. So long, Sheboygan.
Those cities in North Dakota and Wisconsin, respectively, are two of 144 that the federal government is proposing to downgrade from the metropolitan statistical area designation, and it could be more than just a matter of semantics. Officials in some of the affected cities worry that the change could have adverse implications for federal funding and economic development.
In Corvallis, Oregon, the state designates certain funding sources to metropolitan statistical areas and any change to the city's status could create a ripple effect, particularly when it comes to transportation funding.
Move over, Muncie: Five Indiana cities could lose status as metro areas
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Move over, Muncie. Take a powder, Terre Haute.
Those Hoosier cities are two of 144 that the federal government is proposing to downgrade from the metropolitan statistical area designation, and it could be more than just a matter of semantics. Officials in some of the affected cities worry that the change could have adverse implications for federal funding and economic development.
Under the new proposal, a metro area would have to have at least 100,000 people in its core city to count as an MSA, double the 50,000-person threshold that has been in place for the past 70 years.