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White Children Now In Minority



Tue, 15 Aug 2006 09:57:21 -0700 soc.retirement
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Sordo...
White Children Now In Minority

By CHRIS ECHEGARAY and DOUG STANLEY The Tampa Tribune

Published: Aug 15, 2006

The youngest Anglo children in Hillsborough County and across Florida
are now a minority, foreshadowing the day when Florida - like four
states now - becomes a majority-minority state.

Non-Hispanic whites in Florida accounted for fewer than half of all
children younger than 5 last year, according to U.S. Census Bureau
estimates released today. Slightly more than 47 percent of the state's
youngest children were non-Hispanic whites, down from nearly 55 percent
five years earlier.

In Hillsborough County, non-Hispanic white children have become a
minority also, making up less than 47 percent of the population younger
than 5, down from nearly 51 percent in 2000.

In parts of the county, the trend was evident before this report. The
Hillsborough County school district reported nonwhite enrollment of 55
percent in 2004. At St. John Presbyterian Learning Center, students move
between two worlds, speaking English and Spanish and adjusting based on
when their families moved here.

Out of 100 children at the learning center, 75 are nonwhite, many in
families that moved here from Colombia, Cuba, Mexico or Puerto Rico,

Thumper...
One need not speak Spanish to be Hispanic. One of the definitions and
used in the USA is
A U.S. citizen or resident of Latin-American or Spanish descent.

Director Dianne Patterson said. The numbers have been high for five
years because the center, at 4120 N. MacDill Ave., attracts low-income
families, which are predominantly nonwhite.

"The children learn the language very rapidly," said Patterson, who
adapted by hiring staff to reflect the student population. "Having a lot
of Spanish-speakers is the trend all over. We have 4- and 5-year-olds
interpreting for their parents."

The impact of the population shift will be felt in school and
health-care systems that may not be prepared, demographers say.

Children who live in minority neighborhoods and are not exposed to
mainstream society - by attending child care or prekindergarten, for
example - will struggle with language and assimilation, said Mark
Mather, a demographer with the Population Reference Bureau.

"It won't be an immediate impact," Mather said. "Once they start going
through the school system, there will be more demand for language
courses. Some are assimilating more than other certain groups, who are
more likely to live in minority enclaves.

"I'm speaking mainly of Hispanics and Asians," Mather added. "There will
be more challenges for those groups, the schools and medical systems."

The recent Census estimates come from the American Community Survey, the
cornerstone of the government's effort to keep tabs on the nation's
changing population. The new survey will provide demographic,
socio-economic and housing information about America's communities every
year - information that until now was only available once a decade.

Texas, the Census Bureau reported in August 2005, joined Hawaii, New
Mexico and California as a majority-minority state. Eight other states
with minority populations of about 40 percent today were expected to
join them next - Maryland, Mississippi, New York, Georgia, Arizona,
Louisiana and Florida.

Some demographers expect the U.S. population as a whole to reach that
plateau by 2050.

Aurea Velazquez, a St. John's parent, is part of the trend.

Velazquez moved from Puerto Rico, a U.S. commonwealth, six months ago.
Her 4-year-old daughter, Yamilette, is in prekindergarten.

"It's been difficult in Puerto Rico with no work, and the economy is
bad," she said. "People are going to continue to move here because of
the bad economies. Here, you can at least survive with your family."

Kristi Bennett's two children, Gillian, 4, and Aedean, 3, are among the
minority Anglo children at St. John's. Bennett doesn't mind.

"I love it," she said. "I think it's healthy to be around children who
don't look like them. It teaches them tolerance and diversity really
early on."

Reporter Chris Echegaray can be reached at cechegaray@tampatrib.com or
(813) 259-7920.
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