Table 17f: Number of Migrants and Percent of Some Other Race Alone Population 5 Years of Age and Older Migrating for the United States and States in the United States, 1995 to 2000 ___________________________________________________________________________ Migrants ______________________ US/State Number Percent ___________________________________________________________________________ United States 2,245,658 16.3 Alabama 15,147 59.9 Alaska 3,813 42.6 Arizona 124,301 23.5 Arkansas 19,972 55.7 California 823,298 16.1 Colorado 100,182 36.1 Connecticut 33,682 25.1 Delaware 4,605 32.0 District of Columbia 6,456 33.0 Florida 166,202 38.8 Georgia 104,757 61.1 Hawaii 6,355 46.3 Idaho 16,029 33.1 Illinois 123,525 19.2 Indiana 37,559 43.6 Iowa 16,034 48.9 Kansas 30,733 38.3 Kentucky 12,229 63.6 Louisiana 10,778 37.4 Maine 1,117 47.3 Maryland 32,157 37.0 Massachusetts 57,902 27.1 Michigan 38,987 33.4 Minnesota 30,114 52.8 Mississippi 8,502 69.1 Missouri 20,180 50.2 Montana 1,672 35.9 Nebraska 18,925 45.4 Nevada 56,314 40.2 New Hampshire 3,407 51.4 New Jersey 102,600 24.6 New Mexico 47,879 17.1 New York 254,547 20.6 North Carolina 99,011 60.8 North Dakota 1,188 55.2 Ohio 25,570 32.5 Oklahoma 30,818 41.1 Oregon 50,056 39.0 Pennsylvania 49,629 29.6 Rhode Island 12,748 26.6 South Carolina 21,944 63.4 South Dakota 1,951 64.1 Tennessee 31,623 64.4 Texas 471,857 21.6 Utah 34,172 41.4 Vermont 603 51.4 Virginia 65,047 52.4 Washington 64,351 32.1 West Virginia 1,309 46.5 Wisconsin 27,365 36.8 Wyoming 3,408 30.2 ___________________________________________________________________________ Note: Migrants are defined as persons who were in a different residence in 2000 than in 1995 and for whom the 2000 residence was in a different county or country than their residence in 1995; that is, a migrant is one who in moving crosses a county boundary in the United States or who comes to the United States from another nation. The total number of migrants in this table thus includes both domestic migrants and international migrants.