News -> INDReporter THU, SEP 22 10:19AM by Leslie Turk

Best, brightest leaving state

The Advocate reported Thursday that while the state is gaining more population than it loses, Louisiana lost 1,990 more people with advanced graduate and professional degrees than it gained in the swap. The data comes form 2010 U.S. Census Bureau estimates.

Analysts The Advocate interviewed disagreed with Gov. Bobby Jindal’s positive spin on whether the new estimates show Louisiana moving forward:

The numbers of people with bachelor’s degrees were nearly identical for those coming into and leaving Louisiana.

“That’s positive,” said Troy Blanchard, a sociology professor and demographer at LSU. “In the past, we were losing four-year-degree people.”

Blanchard added, however, that the decrease in Louisiana residents with advanced degrees is a “brain drain that is part of a historic trend.”

Jindal was quick to take credit for the overall gains and says the survey's results are positive for the state. But Shreveport demographer Elliott Stonecipher argues that the governor is taking credit for Louisianians who are returning to the state after being displaced by hurricanes. 

"My point continues to be the most basic one: if we subtract from these supposed migration 'gains' and 'losses' the churn of Louisiana residents who temporarily moved away from the state in the aftermath of Katrina, Rita, Ike and Gustav, only to return a year or more later, then we would be able to see what’s actually happening," Stonecipher said in an email this morning. "In other words, only about now can we begin to study this issue as we had long been doing before the hurricanes hit."

Read the story here



Comments (15)add
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written by Bubba Boudreaux , September 22, 2011 - 12:52 pm
This story has been recycled for the past 30-years...
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written by Morrow , September 22, 2011 - 01:23 pm
Doesn't say anything good about us that's for sure if it has continued for 30 yrs... I'd leave too if I could... Growing up, I loved Laf & thought I'd love it till I died here & was buried here. There are stil a lot of things I like about the area. Its my history. The traffic & the corruption, the lack of committed planning, the ignornance (of even educated people) - its a test of patience. I still have hope & I'll stay till my kids are grown & educated & move on. Maybe, I'll follow them out.
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written by Gaius Cilnius Maecenas , September 22, 2011 - 05:20 pm
To Leslie Turk:

Thanks for bringing this to our attention. This has been going on for a very, very long time. One of the things I was shocked to learn, when attempting to start a high-tech firm, was how many of our beautiful, bright Louisianians are in key positions at multi-billion dollar per annum firms around the country. Our French native population is extremely photogenic, when you add a high moral character, a work ethics, and superb intellectual development---it is a deadly cocktail for success!

I have long thought that this State is stupid not to fund these kids with a $5 Million Dollar grant [no strings attached] to open a new sort of Industry niche! Creativity and Innovation seems to be in the gene matrix here! Once again, Thank you for your informative, on-going attention to these matters!
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written by Phil N deBlanc , September 22, 2011 - 05:36 pm
It's like 1984 all over again. Brain drain then, brain drain now. They can leave, but they always come back to home.

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written by ragin_cajun , September 22, 2011 - 07:04 pm
Gaius --

"One of the things I was shocked to learn, when attempting to start a high-tech firm"

What kind of high-tech firm were you thinking about? Do you have technical skills/experience with computers/telecom?
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written by Regular Grind , September 22, 2011 - 08:38 pm
A decrease in population results in less pollution, traffic, and cheaper real estate. So it's a good thing. Just think, if a few more reporters would leave--paradise.
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written by Gaius Cilnius Maecenas , September 22, 2011 - 08:39 pm
[R]agin_cajun:

To your questions, No! I was a Value-Added Reseller to a multi-billion dollar international corporation. So all my technical skills were supplied by the larger firm. My father was an industrialist with the larger firm, how I connected. My efforts were too pre-mature for Louisiana at that time. I should have listened to my brothers, and had gone to Silicon Valley. My business experience was the classic case of "right idea, right time, but wrong place." I was fiercely loyal to Louisiana, since I had taught brilliant children in its schools, so I knew I would have the work-force I required eventually!
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written by HARD HAT , September 22, 2011 - 10:34 pm
Not everyone leaves, Duh ! But the legislators freebie educated inbred chirin are quickly sent off by their legislator Poppa & Momma, A La Craving Cravens Jr. with a package wrapped with freezer wrap under his arm, Dallas bound.
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written by disgusted , September 23, 2011 - 05:08 am
Maybe more cuts in education would help this?! Go Gov. Jindal...NOT!
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written by Cracklin Patin , September 23, 2011 - 07:49 am
by Gaius Cilnius Maecenas "I was a Value-Added Reseller to a multi-billion dollar international corporation. I should have listened to my brothers, and had gone to Silicon Valley".
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And so modest too! When are you leaving?
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written by the original northsidian , September 23, 2011 - 04:02 pm
Gaius, if you could sell your high dollar talk maybe you could move to River Ranch!! So you were getting help from your DaDa? My boy, I don't know all a dem big werds, but I drives nice cars and has some moneys in da banks!! Silicon folks couldn't unerstan what i say anyway!! My advice to you is, continue enjoying being dada's lil boy!!
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written by NORTHSIDIAN SHOTGUN , September 23, 2011 - 10:10 pm
There are teachers and there are doers
There are industralists children and there are laborer's children
There are families who have been on the welfare teat for six generations
And their are folks who would pickup aluminum cans along-side roads before cashing in a chit from the welfare office.
But for the grace of God there goes I.......
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written by yadumonde , September 23, 2011 - 11:36 pm
Why shouldn't they leave? Lafayette is nothing more than a bunch of small-town wannabes who are addicted to oil. And yes, as soon as I can, I will leave this little podunk town.
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written by louisiana exile , September 24, 2011 - 12:34 am
I'm one of those educated "natives" that left Louisiana in 2006 - BS from ULL, MS from La Tech, law degree from Tulane. While the main reason I left was career-related (there simply wasn't/isn't much demand in Louisiana for someone trying to make a living in my specialty), the trend in ultra-conservative Republican politics is another reason that I won't be returning.
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written by NORTHSIDIAN SHOTGUN , September 25, 2011 - 05:47 am
We elect puppets instead of leaders, we elect couillions whose first run in office is easily sidetracked, manipulated by the same local and state puppetmasters, who continue using these idiots to scam the public, at present JOEY, OBAMA, AND JINDAL, have sold out for a dollah. The proof is in the puddin. THE CRONYS GOT A BLUE LIGHT SPECIAL IN JOEY, CHEAP, CHEAP.
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