Publication Date February 6, 2023 | E&E News

Census: Disasters displaced more than 3M Americans in 2022

United States
Residents evacuate from Pine Island, Fla., before Hurricane Ian made landfall in October 2022. (Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Residents evacuate from Pine Island, Fla., before Hurricane Ian made landfall in October 2022. (Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Article Summary: About 3.4 million adults in the U.S. (1.4% of the adult population) were displaced from their homes by extreme weather disasters in 2022, a new survey from the U.S. Census Bureau reveals. Those findings, based on the 68,500 responses to the Bureau's Jan. 4–16 Household Pulse Survey, are far higher than figures from the International Displacement Monitoring Centre, which estimates an average of 800,000 U.S. residents were displaced annually from 2008 through 2021, including the 1.7 million people the Centre estimates were displaced in 2017 when Hurricanes HarveyIrma, and Maria all rocked the country. About half of those displaced in 2022 were forced to leave their homes due to hurricanes. While about 40% of those displaced return home within a week, about 12% are displaced for more than six months, and roughly 16% never return home, the portion of people with disabilities who are permanently displaced by disasters is far higher. The Census survey also found low-income households (under $25,000 per year) were forced to evacuate at twice the rate as the general population, and 4% of LGBT people were forced to evacuate, compared to 1.2% of cisgender, straight people.

(Full Article: E&E News

(Climate Signals background: 2022 Atlantic hurricane season2022 Western wildfire seasonHurricane HarveyHurricane IrmaHurricane Maria)

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