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Extended Immigration Data for Kansas Printer-Friendly Version
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Summary Demographic State Data (and Source)
Population (2007 CB est.): 2,775,997
Population (2000 Census): 2,688,418
Foreign-Born Population (2007 FAIR est.):
Foreign-Born Population (2000 Census):
179,880
134,735
Share Foreign-Born (2007 FAIR est.):
Share Foreign-Born (2000):
6.5%
5.1%
Immigrant Stock (2000 CB est.): 308,000
Share Immigrant Stock (1997 est.): 11.5%
Naturalized U.S. Citizens (2006 CB est.): 60,210
Share Naturalized (2006): 34.7%
Legal Immigrant Admission (DHS 1997-2006): 39,035
Refugee Admission ( DHS 1997-2006): 1,731
Illegal Alien Population (2007 FAIR est.) 90,000

Costs of Illegal Aliens - 2005 (2006 FAIR est.):

$235,000,000
Projected Population - 2050 (2006 FAIR): 3,800,814
 

STATE POPULATION
The Census Bureau estimated that in July 2007 Kansas’s population had increased by an annual average of about 11,940 residents since 2000 (to 2,775,997 residents). Over that period, net immigration was adding about 6,345 persons each year (more immigrants arriving than leaving). During the same period there was an annual average population loss of about 9,220 residents from net domestic migration (more native-born residents leaving than arriving). Net immigrant settlement accounted directly for more than half (53.1%) of the population increase over this period, and that does not include the children born to the immigrants after their arrival in the United States.

 


[Note:children born in the United States to immigrants (part of the immigrant stock) are not included as part of the immigration flow.]
 
The 2000 Census found 2,688,418 persons resident in Kansas. This was an increase of 210,844 persons above the 1990 Census. The rate of increase (8.5%) was slightly below the average rate in the country.

The 2000 population is about 20,000 more persons than the Census Bureau had expected to find in the state in 2000 when it issued its most recent state population projections in 1996. The significance of this is that the Census Bureau has concluded that much of the shortfall in their population estimates during the 1990s was due to an underestimation of the illegal alien population.


Kansas had the 39th greatest rate of population increase in the country between 1960-2000.

Between 1980 and 1990, the overall population of Kansas grew by 4.8 percent (from 2,364,236 to 2,477,574 residents).

FOREIGN-BORN POPULATION 

FAIR estimates that the foreign-born population of Kansas was about 179,880 residents in July 2007. This meant a foreign-born population share of 6.5 percent. The amount of change since the 2000 Census indicates an average annual rate of increase in the foreign-born population of about 6,185 people, which is nearly one-third (51.5%) of the state’s annual average population increase. Since 2000, the foreign-born population has increased by 33.5 percent compared to a 1.6 percent increase in the native-born population.

Immigration also contributes to population growth through the children born to immigrants in this country. Nationally the share of births to the foreign-born is about double their share of the population. A 13 percent share of the state’s current births is large enough to account for about 5,095 births a year. Combining the increase in the foreign-born population and estimated immigrant births suggests that immigration may account for adding about 11,275 persons to the state’s population annually, i.e., most (94%) of the state’s overall population increase.

The 2000 Census recorded 134,735 foreign-born residents in the state. That was five percent of the state's overall population and an increase of 114.4 percent above the 1990 foreign-born population of 62,840 residents. That increase of more than doubling of the immigrant population of ten-years earlier was much higher than the 5.8 percent increase in the native-born population. The rate of increase in the immigrant population was the 14th highest in the country, and the amount of increase in the foreign-born population was the 25th highest in the country.

A comparison of the increase in the immigrant population from 1990 with the change in the overall population during the same period shows that immigrant settlement directly accounted for 34.1 percent of the state's overall population increase over that decade. The share of the population increase due to immigration would be still higher if the children of the immigrants born here after their arrival were included with their immigrant parents in the calculation. The amount of the overall impact of immigration (immigrants plus their children) on population change is likely to be closer to 42 percent, which is based on the increase in the share of those who speak a language other than English at home in Kansas.


The 2000 Census found that 55.1 percent of Kansas's foreign-born population had arrived in the state since 1990. This demonstrates the effects of the current mass immigration, and it is a much higher share than the national average (43.7%).

An indicator of the change in the immigrant population may be seen in data on the share of the population that speaks a language other than English at home. Between 1990 and 2000 the share of non-English speakers at home in Kansas increased slightly from 5.7 percent to 6.2 percent. Fewer than half (44.9%) of those who said they spoke a language other than English at home in 2000 also said they spoke English less than very well.

Speakers of Foreign Languages
(at home in Kansas in the 2000 Census)

Spanish

137,245

German

16,820

Vietnamese

10,395

French

6,535

Chinese

5,435

Korean

3,665

Laotian

3,145

Arabic

2,835

Tagalog

2,235

Russian

1,995

(Source: Census Bureau report: Language Spoken at Home for the Population 5 Years and Over, April 2004)

The Census Bureau estimated from its American Community Survey that in 2006, the foreign born population was 173,394 representing a change of 28.7 percent since 2000. In comparison, the foreign-born population changed from 62,840 to 134,735 between 1990 and 2000, a difference of 114.4 percent.

The ten countries above constituted 71.1% of the foreign-born population in Kansas in 2006. Mexico accounted for almost half (46.6%) alone.

Foreign-Born Change Since 1980: Top Ten Countries 1990-2006

Rank

Country

1990

 

Country

2000

 

Country

2006

1 Germany 6,541 Mexico 63,358 Mexico 80,768
2 Canada 2,930 Vietnam 9,105 Vietnam 8,989
3 U.K 2,850 China 5,088 India 8,796
4 Mexico 2,725 India 4,975 China 5,668
5 Vietnam 2,173 Germany 4,953 Korea 4,070
6 Laos 2,041 Canada 3,635 Germany 4,024
7 Korea 1,801 Korea 3,553 Canada 3,494
8 Soviet Union 1,662 United Kingdom 2,849 Philippines 2,933
9 Soviet Union 1,654 Laos 2,722 El Salvador 2,352
10 Denmark 1,174 Philippines 2,717 England 1,966
All Other 17,765 All Others 31,780 All Others 50,154
Total 43,316 Total 134,735 Total 123,240

Between the 2000 Census and the Census Bureau estimate for 2006, the foreign-born population in Kansas increased by nearly 38,700 persons (28.7%). Latin America (including Mexico) accounted for an increase of more than 23,500 immigrants (31.9%). Mexico alone accounted for an increase of more than 17,400 additional immigrants (up 27.5%). Immigrants from Asia rose by 28.6% (about 11,100 people). Immigrants from Africa more than doubled (about 4,500 persons). The immigrant population from Europe and Canada decreased by more than 400 persons (-2.3%).

 

CONNECT TO LEGAL IMMIGRATION ADMISSIONS DATA

THE IMMIGRANT STOCK
The Census Bureau estimated that there were about 308,000 people in Kansas in 2000 who were "immigrant stock." That is a term that refers to immigrants and their children born here after their arrival. Based on that estimate, and a population estimate of 2,688,418, the immigrant stock share of the state's population was 11.5 percent.

As the graph below shows, the amount and share of Kansas’ population change due to the increase in the foreign stock is rising rapidly. Over the past 34 years the new immigrants and children born to them have added about 205,400 people to the population. Over this period, the increase in the foreign stock has accounted for 42 percent of the state’s population increase.

Kansas Foreign Stock

NATURALIZATION

Data from the 2006 American Community Survey indicate that 60,210 residents, or 34.7 percent, of the foreign-born population in Kansas were citizens, compared to 44,763 residents, or 33.2 percent, in 2000.

Nationally, 40.3 percent of the foreign-born population was citizens in 2000, and 42.0 percent in 2006 

Refugee Settlement
Kansas has received 1,731 refugees over the most recent ten fiscal years (FY'97-'06) including 150 persons in FY’06 year.

 

 

Under the Office of Refugee Resettlement's (HHS/ORR) assistance funding for FY'02 $156,357 is available for refugee employment training and other services programs in Kansas based on a three-year refugee settlement program covering 623 refugees (an average of $251 per refugee). This allocation does not include a larger share (55%) of funding programs for communities heavily affected by recent Cuban and Haitian entrants, communities with refugees whose cultural differences make assimilation especially difficult, communities impacted by federal welfare reform changes, educational support to schools with significant refugee students, and discretionary grants. ORR grants for FY’05 and FY’06 respectively were $556,916 and $705,238.

LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENCY STUDENTS
Data are not available nationally on immigrant students (either legally or illegally resident in the United States) who are enrolled in primary and secondary schools (K-12). However, many of these students are enrolled in Limited English Proficiency/English Language Learning (LEP/ELL) instruction programs. Many may be U.S.-born, but the majority of these students may be assumed to be either immigrants or the children of immigrants, with the exception being areas with native Americans who speak a native language other than English.

In Kansas, overall enrollment in 2002 (468,140) was 3.7 percent above enrollment in 1993. By contrast, LEP enrollment (28,383 - 6.1% of all enrollment) was 311 percent higher than a decade earlier.

Data on enrollment in LEP/ELL programs are collected by the federal government from school systems that receive Title VII funds for these special instruction programs. The data on LEP/ELL enrollment are understated because data from private schools that do not apply for Title VII assistance are sketchy.

FOREIGN STUDENTS
The 2006/07 annual report of the Institute of International Education (IIE) lists the number of foreign students attending post-secondary school in Kansas as 6,139. Three schools in Kansas are listed as having a major concentration of these students:

Univeristy of Kansas had enrollment of 1,771 foreign students, 6.0% of total enrollment.

Kansas State had enrollment of 1,201 foreign students, 5.2% of total enrollment.

Wichita State Univeristy had enrollment of 1,197 foreign students, 8.4% of total enrollment.

Below, a chart illustrates the sharp increase of foreign students attending school in Kansas from 1960-2000. 

For information on foreign student issues see: Foreign Students in the United States.

ILLEGAL ALIENS

FAIR Estimate - FAIR’s estimate of the state’s illegal alien population as of 2007 is about 90,000 persons. This is part of an overall estimate of the U.S. illegal alien population of about 13 million persons.

INS/DHS Estimate - The INS (now dissolved into the Dept. of Homeland Security) estimated in February 2003 that the resident illegal population in Kansas was 47,000 as of January 2000. This number was 27,000 higher than the INS' 1996 estimate.

Other Estimates - The Pew Hispanic Center estimates the illegal alien population of the state at 40,000 to 70,000 as of 2005.

COSTS OF ILLEGAL ALIENS
Incarceration Costs- Kansas has received partial compensation under the federal State Criminal Alien Assistance Program (SCAAP) that was established in 1994 to compensate the states and local jurisdictions for incarceration of "undocumented," aliens who are serving time for a felony conviction or at least two misdemeanors.

The recent SCAAP amounts that Kansas has received were:

FY’99—$1,266,792
FY’00—$1,618,764
FY’01—$1,329,405
FY’02—$1,559,101
FY’03—$624,943
FY’04—$757,840

The amount of SCAAP awards has been declining in both total distributions and even more as a share of the state’s expenses. In FY’99 the state received 38.6% of its costs for 172 prisoner years of detention. By FY’02, the state’s reported illegal alien detention had more than doubled to 350 prisoner years, while compensation increased by 23 percent but then fell steeply.


Medical Costs Under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, hospitals with emergency rooms are required to treat and stabilize patients with emergency medical needs regardless whether or not they are in the country legally or whether they are able to pay for the treatment. Congress in 2003 enacted an appropriation of $250 million per year (for 4 years) to help offset some of the costs due to use of this service by illegal aliens. This amount has been allocated among the states based upon estimates of the illegal alien population and data on the apprehension of illegal aliens in each state. This amount compensates only a fraction of the medical outlays. For Kansas, the proposed payment in fiscal year 2004 is $1,120,805.

Educational Costs - In our study Breaking the Piggy Bank: How Illegal Immigration is Sending Schools into the Red, we estimated based on 2004 data that educational expenditures for illegal immigration were costing the Kansas taxpayer $82.5 million dollars annually. This cost was partially for educating students who were themselves illegally in the country ($34.4 million) and in part for the education of their siblings born in the United States to illegal residents ($48.1 million).

Projected Fiscal Costs - In 2006 we estimated that Kansas taxpayers are currently burdened with annual costs of about $235 million because of illegal aliens residing in the state. That estimate was based on only expenditures for education, emergency medical care and incarceration. We projected that those costs will rise unless we gain control over our borders and our worksites. If a new amnesty and increases in immigrants and guest workers were enacted, as proposed by business and ethnic advocacy groups, we project that the cost to the state’s taxpayers for those same programs would rise to $396 million per year in 2010 and to $685 million per year in 2020.

LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS
You can view a listing of local immigration reform organizations here.

STATE CONGRESSIONAL DELEGATION VOTING RECORD
You can view the voting record of your representatives in Congress regarding immigration issues in our voting report section.

Revised July 2008

 

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