Jump to content

Immigration Statistics 2006


Recommended Posts

Here are some statistics of immigrants admitted to places in the region during fiscal year 2006:

Source: Department of Homeland Security

*Note: I will post more data as they become available

Hawaii: 7,501 (+1,021 more than 2005) and 43,092 total admitted since the year 2000. The figure does not include the total amount that settle in Hawaii yearly who were born in American Samoa, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands and Puerto Rico.

Honolulu: 5,729 (+773 more than 2005) and 33,114 total admitted since the year 2000.

Alaska: 1,554 (+29 more than 2005) and 9,838 total admitted since the year 2000.

San Juan: 3,699 (+385 more than 2005) and 16,415 total admitted since the year 2002.

*I don't have any statistics for Puerto Rico or the other territories yet but there were 7,175 (+1,179 more than 2005) people admitted to all the territories, commonwealths and arm service posts in 2006 for a total of 44,262 since the year 2000.

===========================

Nationwide there were: 1,266,264 admitted in 2006 (+143,891 more than 2005) and 7,009,322 admitted since the year 2000.

Top States including D.C.

1. California: 264,677

2. New York State: 180,165

3. Florida: 155,996

*Hawaii Ranked at #25

*Alaska ranked at #44

Top CBSAs = PMSAs not CSAs

1. New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA: 224,444 (+51,586 more than 2005) :shok: INSANE! and that's not even the entire metro!!!!!!

2. Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA: 120,880

3. Miami-Fort Lauderdale-Miami Beach, FL: 98,922

*Honolulu ranked at #28

*San Juan ranked at #44

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 11
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  • 2 months later...

Here are some updates mainly regarding Hawaii and Alaska, there are no stats available for PR, Guam, USVI, CNMI or American Samoa yet.

Persons Naturalized in 2006:

Hawaii: 5,276 ranked #21 nationally including DC

Alaska: 831 ranked #42 nationally including DC

==========================

Persons Naturalized 1997-2006:

Hawaii: 36,456 ranked #22 nationally including DC

Alaska: 7,987 ranked #40 nationally including DC

===========================

Persons Naturalized in 2006:

Honolulu MSA: 4,207 ranked #24 nationally among CBSAs/MSAs

Persons Naturalized 1997-2006:

Honolulu: 31,010 ranked #26 nationally among CBSAs/MSAs

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

According to the Current Population Survey by the US Census as of mid 2006....

Hawaii's foreign-born was estimated to be at 234,685 (around #24 nationally in raw numbers) or 18.3% (4th nationally by percentage).

Alaska's foreign-born was estimated to be at 40,340 or 6.0% of its population.

More to come eventually! :P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Here are the latest immigrant statistics of different areas represented in this forum.

earthmu3.gif

The two sets of information are of "Legal Permanent Residents" and "Naturalized citizens."

1. Legal permanent residents (LPRs) are foreign nationals who have been granted the right to reside permanently in the United States. LPRs are often referred to simply as "immigrants," but they are also known as "permanent resident aliens" and "green card holders."

2. Naturalized citizens are foreign nationals who have become citizens of the United States after fulfilling requirements established by Congress in the Immigration and Nationality Act.

Alaska Immigrants Admitted, Top 25: 2005-2006

alaskaimmigrantsadmuk2.png

Factoid: People born in over 120 countries immigrated to Alaska during 2005-06.- from Armenia & Belize to Bosnia & Cameroon to Gambia & Georgia Republic to Kyrgyzstan & Sri Lanka to Yemen & Venezuela.

Alaska Immigrants Naturalized, Top 25: 2005-2006

alaskaimmigrantsnatzg9.png

Factoid: People born in over 115 countries were naturalized in Alaska during 2005-06.- from Austria & Bahamas to Congo, Republic & Luxembourg to Singapore & Sierra Leone to Nepal & Slovenia to Uzbekistan & Tonga.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Anchorage Immigrants Admitted, Top 10: 2005-2006

anchorageimmigrantsadmvc0.png

Anchorage Immigrants Naturalized, Top 10: 2005-2006

anchorageimmigrantsnatnn3.png

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Fairbanks Immigrants Admitted, Top 10: 2005-2006

fairbanksimmigrantsadmla1.png

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Hawaii Immigrants Admitted, Top 25: 2005-2006

hawaiiimmigrantsadmzg9.png

Factoid: People born in over 142 countries immigrated to Hawaii during 2005-06.- from Albania & Argentina to Bermuda & Cyprus to Grenada & Gibraltar to Mauritius & San Marino to Uganda & Iceland.

Hawaii Immigrants Naturalized, Top 25: 2005-2006

hawaiiimmigrantsnathc0.png

Factoid: People born in over 148 countries were naturalized in Hawaii during 2005-06.- from Anguilla & Azerbaijan to Benin & Cote d'Ivoire to Kuwait & Malawi to Suriname & Sudan to Tuvalu & Zimbabwe.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Honolulu Immigrants Admitted, Top 25: 2005-2006

honoluluimmigrantsadmzw2.png

Factoid: People born in over 131 countries immigrated to Honolulu during 2005-06.- from Algeria & Brazil to the Cook Islands & Liberia to the Solomon Islands & Syria to Mongolia & Paraguay to United Arab Emirates & Norway.

Honolulu Immigrants Naturalized, Top 25: 2005-2006

honoluluimmigrantsnatpx9.png

Factoid: People born in over 144 countries were naturalized in Honolulu during 2005-06. - from Afghanistan & Angola to Bahrain & Cape Verde to Kiribati & Mozambique to Seychelles & Saint Lucia to Tunisia & Uruguay.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Maui County Immigrants Admitted, Top 10: 2005-2006

mauicountyimmigrantsadmgh6.png

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Hawaii County Immigrants Admitted, Top 10: 2005-2006

lhawaiicountyimmigrantsji5.png

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

San Juan Immigrants Admitted, Top 25: 2005-2006

sanjuanimmigrantsadmje1.png

Factoid: People born in over 96 countries immigrated to San Juan during 2005-06.- from Australia & Barbados to C

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

^I wonder if its because they are probably able to blend in? I'd imagine that there's probably a decent share of Spanish speaking Arabs moving to PR from places like Colombia (and perhaps other South American countries). :huh: I think Colombia has over half a million alone.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

^Yeah especially because Puerto Ricans are racially diverse. You got blondes, brunettes, auburns, blacks, whites, asians, mixed races, etc.

Here's a different take on the statistics just for 2006

As of 2006 Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, US Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa had a combined population of 6,301,107

If they were all one state or country this is what the Top 30 would look like in 2006:

1 Philippines: 5,509

2 Dominican Republic: 2,751

3 China, People's Republic of: 1,282

4 Japan: 840

5 Korea, Republic of: 596

6 Colombia: 344

7 Mexico: 318

8 Cuba: 253

9 Canada: 241

10 Vietnam: 240

======================

11 Venezuela: 219

12 Thailand: 197

13 Saint Lucia: 155

14 Peru: 140

15 Saint Kitts and Nevis: 130

16 Taiwan: 116

17 Argentina: 116

18 Dominica: 113

19 Germany: 108

20 United Kingdom: 108

======================

21 Brazil: 95

22 Samoa: 83

23 Tonga: 82

24 Antigua and Barbuda: 69

25 Ukraine: 67

26 Hong Kong (Special Administrative Region): 59

27 Australia: 58

28 Russian Federation: 56

29 Haiti: 55

30 Panama: 54

Other Countries: 1,681

TOTAL: 16,135

Alaska had 1,554, Hawaii had 7,501 and Puerto Rico, Guam, USVI, Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa had 7,080 immigrants in 2006 for a grand total of 16,135 and a combined population of 6,301,107!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.