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April 6 - 12, 2001

Ivy League Uproar: Student essay at Harvard incites a national debate
(in National News)

Addicted to Big Money... and Bad Odds: Casinos target Asian Americans
(in Bay Area News)

Japan's Financial Crisis: Is there a way out?
(in Business)

The First Steps: Young Japanese artists make their marks on the international map
(in A&E)

Emil Amok: The Plane, the Plane -- A theory of negative gravity.
(in Opinion)

Related Census Stories:

California Becomes More API

By Justin Pritchard/AP

California's Asian American population has surged over the past decade to become the fastest growing race in the state, census data show.

Immigration propelled the increase, reinforcing California’s standing as a distant cousin to Asia, itself a strikingly diverse continent. More than one in three of America’s 11.6 million Asian Americans now lives in California, the survey reported last week.

About 3.8 million California residents identified themselves as Asian or Pacific Islander, up from 2.7 million in 1990. An additional 550,000 people said they were part Asian or Pacific Islander — an option for the first time as the 2000 census allowed respondents to check multiple races.

While the state’s population rose 14 percent, to 33.9 million people, those identifying as at least part Asian jumped 61 percent.

That disproportionate increase was not confined to established Asian communities around Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay area. Asian Americans percolated into high-growth suburbs as well as cities sprinkled along the Central Valley. The Asian population more than doubled in some cities including Folsom, Tracy, and Galt.

°he trend also extend to native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders. About 116,000 people in California identified as Islanders, slightly more than in the state of Hawaii itself.

Overall, 373 of California’s towns and cities saw a gain in Asian population, while just 86 lost Asian Americans.

Asian Americans are now a majority in five cities: Cerritos, Monterey Park, and Walnut Park, all in the Los Angeles area, and Daly City and Milpitas, both south of San Francisco.

Across the state, immigration was the driving force behind the rise in the state’s Asian population. Although the census hasn’t yet broken down respondents into country of origin birth, California netted 731,000 Asian Americans or Pacific Islanders through immigration and 528,000 through births during the 1990s, according to Mary Heim, a demographer with the state’s Finance Department.

Work originally drew Asian immigrants to California in the 1850s and work was again the main enticement in the 1990s, analysts said.

Äut while Chinese first came to help mine the Sierras and build the rail system, the state’s recent high-tech gold rush is one of the new stimuli, and it is attracting a broad mix of immigrants.

“It’s job-based immigration,” said Chin Ming Yang, a Taiwan-born regional planner who came to Philadelphia for school but settled in the Bay Area.

Yang’s success motivated six nieces and nephews to earn advanced degrees at U.S. universities and settle within an hour’s drive of their uncle. Demographers call it “chain migration,” and it was a powerful force over the last decade as recent immigrant communities settled in the state.

Asian Americans have reached a critical cultural mass in many California communities. San Jose and Orange County have Vietnamese language papers, while Asian shopping districts, cultural centers and other public spaces abound across the state.

In the Silicon Valley bedroom community of Fremont, for example, the API population more than doubled in the 1990s. During that span, the city acquired a Hindu temple where many Indian computer programmers and engineers worship.

“Asian Americans want to come to already established communities,” said William Frey, a demographer at the Milken Institute in Santa Monica. “Because of these kinds of community ties, California remains the top destination.”

While Chinese and Japanese immigrants first came generations ago, many new groups have come for political reasons.

Refugees from Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia began immigrating after the United States pulled troops from Southeast Asia in the 1970s. Filipinos were already immigrating after damage to their country during World War II.

Once the first members of those groups settled, they attracted their extended families, in part because immigration laws make it easier for immigrants to come if they already have a relative who is a U.S citizen.

Also, newer immigrants tend to have higher birth rates than longer-established Chinese and Japanese immigrants, Heim said. That produced a spike in the number of children born to Asian parents, she said.


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