Politics & Government

New Census Data Shows Highland Park Growing, Highwood Shrinking

In the past 10 years, Highland Park's population rose by 1.4 percent, as Highwood's fell by 6.1 percent.

The population of Highwood was 5,074 in 2020, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That's 331 fewer residents than 2010 but still 931 more than the village had in 2000.
The population of Highwood was 5,074 in 2020, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That's 331 fewer residents than 2010 but still 931 more than the village had in 2000. (Jonah Meadows/Patch)

HIGHLAND PARK, IL — New census data show the population of Highland Park grew during the past decade, while neighboring Highwood lost residents.

Highland Park added 413 residents between 2010 and 2020, an increase of 1.4 percent, as the population rose to 30,176. But the city still has 1,226 fewer residents than it did in the 2000 census.

Meanwhile, Highwood's population fell by 6.1 percent, shrinking by 331 residents. But it still has 931 more people than it did 20 years ago.

Find out what's happening in Highland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Lake County as a whole gained 10,880 people since the last census. The increase of 1.5 percent was the third lowest in the Chicago area, ahead of only Kane and McHenry counties, according to the largest set of 2020 data yet released from the U.S. Census Bureau.

From 2010 to 2020, 87 of Illinois' 103 counties lost residents — with 14 counties seeing their populations decline by more 10 percent. (NIU)

Population trends in Illinois mirror those of the nation as a whole during the past decade. More urban areas are growing. Rural and less densely populated areas are growing slower or shrinking.

Find out what's happening in Highland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, 53 percent of the nation's counties lost residents, but 81 percent of metropolitan areas grew during the past 10 years.

Every county in the Chicago area added population, with Kendall, Will, DuPage and Lake counties' population rising at the highest rate. Kane and McHenry counties grew the slowest.

Illinois was one of three states — along with Mississippi and West Virginia — to lose population during the past 10 years, recording 18,124 fewer residents in 2020 than in 2010.

But Chicago remains the nation's third largest city, at least for the moment. The population of Houston is projected to eventually surpass it. But the sprawling 627-square-mile Texan city still trailed Chicago by about 442,000 residents.

Although Chicago lost almost 7 percent of its population in the decade leading up to the 2010 census, the city grew by 1.9 percent during the past decade, adding nearly 51,000 additional residents.

Still, that was the slowest growth rate and smallest population growth of any of the 10 largest U.S. cities.

Aurora is the second largest city in Illinois, with a population of 180,542. The city lost more than 17,000 residents in the last decade. Joliet, the third largest, grew by 2 percent to reach 150,362 residents.

Naperville added more than 5 percent to reach a population of 149,540, the state's fourth-largest, and Rockford lost nearly 3 percent of its population, going from the third largest city in the state in 2010 to the fifth largest in 2020.


A visualization produced by the Center for Governmental Studies at Northern Illinois University shows population changes in the 2020 census. Areas in light green grew by 0 to 10%, dark green by 10% or more, while areas in yellow shrunk by 0 to 10% and red by 10% or more. Bannockburn was the only municipality in the Lake County shown as shrinking by more than 10 percent, as the population declined by 570, or 36 percent.(NIU)

Information released Thursday was originally due to be made public in the spring, but issues associated with the coronavirus pandemic led to delays.

The data will be used to redraw congressional districts ahead of next year's elections. Illinois is one of seven states that will lose a seat.

In a game of partisan musical chairs, the super-majority of Democrats in the Illinois General Assembly will seek to enact new maps that cuts one of the congressional delegation's five Republicans rather than one of its 13 Democrats from the mix when the state is reduced to 17 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives after the midterms.

But the latest census data will not be used to redraw state legislative districts in Illinois. In a party-line vote in May, Democratic lawmakers in Springfield approved new House and Senate district maps.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker had pledged to veto partisan maps. But in June he signed into law the new district boundaries, which relied on estimates from the American Communities Survey instead of the full 2020 Census Redistricting Data.

Related: Illinois Losing Congressional Seat With 2020 Census Apportionment


Patch staff contributed.

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