Table 17g: Number of Migrants and Percent of Two or More Races 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 1,015,612 16.1 Alabama 13,577 31.8 Alaska 7,875 26.5 Arizona 36,318 27.5 Arkansas 11,753 35.3 California 292,581 19.7 Colorado 42,737 37.7 Connecticut 16,570 23.9 Delaware 3,154 26.9 District of Columbia 4,896 36.3 Florida 119,111 32.6 Georgia 51,439 48.4 Hawaii 23,538 10.1 Idaho 7,913 34.3 Illinois 47,664 22.4 Indiana 21,910 31.4 Iowa 10,689 39.4 Kansas 16,490 31.0 Kentucky 14,613 37.3 Louisiana 13,652 28.8 Maine 3,835 31.5 Maryland 30,888 32.0 Massachusetts 37,537 27.5 Michigan 44,770 25.6 Minnesota 27,357 37.5 Mississippi 7,689 40.7 Missouri 26,892 34.6 Montana 5,006 33.4 Nebraska 7,794 38.2 Nevada 24,416 35.1 New Hampshire 4,572 35.8 New Jersey 52,515 25.9 New Mexico 14,996 24.6 New York 120,654 22.0 North Carolina 40,953 43.8 North Dakota 2,462 38.6 Ohio 35,560 24.6 Oklahoma 36,136 24.5 Oregon 32,240 32.7 Pennsylvania 35,340 26.8 Rhode Island 5,710 22.1 South Carolina 14,132 39.6 South Dakota 3,552 39.9 Tennessee 21,526 36.4 Texas 127,453 27.8 Utah 13,791 33.4 Vermont 2,350 32.3 Virginia 59,082 44.2 Washington 56,412 28.7 West Virginia 4,430 28.4 Wisconsin 17,881 30.3 Wyoming 2,476 30.9 ___________________________________________________________________________ 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.