Executive Summary - Focus on Florida: Population, Resources and Quality of Life (2024)

Executive Summary - Focus on Florida: Population, Resources and Quality of Life (1)


Florida’s fledgling growth management efforts are likely to be overwhelmed by the state’s projected population increase of more than 5.5 million in the next 25 years. Unless immediate steps are taken, population growth will further strain already overcrowded schools and highways, swallow up the state’s farmland and valued open space, and have a dire effect on water supplies.

That’s the conclusion of noted population policy experts Dr. Leon Bouvier and Sharon McCloe Stein, in a new Negative Population Growth (NPG) report on the likely impact of Florida’s population trends.

In the report “Focus on Florida: Population, Resources, and Quality of Life,” Bouvier and Stein look at how Florida is bearing up under the pressure for more housing, roads, and schools. In recent years, Floridians have begun to address growth issues, but growth control efforts cannot succeed without addressing population increases. Because Florida has no plan to limit population growth, Bouvier and Stein warn, current population trends will generate even more traffic congestion and sprawl, open space will continue to vanish, and 16,000 new teachers will have to be hired every year to keep up with growing enrollments. Diminishing water quality and availability, air pollution, traffic congestion, and an overwhelmed infrastructure will cause a rapid deterioration of quality of life in Florida.

Escaping this fate, say Bouvier and Stein, depends on a unified state commitment to stop rewarding development combined with strong incentives to reduce the state’s future population size. They propose a variety of approaches for Florida residents to pursue at the federal, state, and local level, including:

  • Linking permission to build with a county’s school capacity.
  • Supporting education programs throughout the state on family planning and the need for small families.
  • Allowing community residents to vote directly on development proposals that will affect their city or county.
  • Requiring developers to pay impact fees to fund new or expanded schools, roads, sewage systems, water systems, and other infrastructure required to serve new growth.
  • Encouraging the state to enter into cooperative agreements with federal authorities to improve immigration law enforcement, and encourage comprehensive immigration reforms to reduce annual nationwide immigration levels.


Polls show that most Florida voters believe continued population growth will worsen the quality of life in the state. Over 70 percent believe Florida’s overcrowding and overpopulation is a major problem. Nearly 60 percent believe that adding another five million people to Florida’s population is a serious problem. Forty percent say Florida has become a less comfortable place to live over the past five years. And 68 percent agree that “Florida would be better-off in the long term with a smaller population to maintain a sound economy and a healthy environment.”

Permission to reprint is granted in advance. Please acknowledge source and author, and notify NPG.

In addition to this report, NPG also publishes:

NPG Forums, articles about population, immigration, natural resources, and the environment;
NPG Footnotes, shorter articles on topical issues; and
NPG Position Papers.

Founded in 1972, NPG is a national membership organization advocating a gradual and voluntary reduction of world and U.S. populations to more sustainable levels.

Executive Summary - Focus on Florida: Population, Resources and Quality of Life (2024)

FAQs

What has been the most important cause of population increase for Florida as a whole? ›

Most of that growth is due to immigration, according to newly released Census data. In 2022, net international migration — the number of people moving into and out of the country — was the biggest driver of population growth in the U.S., according to the report.

What ways does population growth present a challenge to Florida government? ›

Unless immediate steps are taken, population growth will further strain already overcrowded schools and highways, swallow up the state's farmland and valued open space, and have a dire effect on water supplies.

What are the 4 factors that affect population growth? ›

When demographers attempt to forecast changes in the size of a population, they typically focus on four main factors: fertility rates, mortality rates (life expectancy), the initial age profile of the population (whether it is relatively old or relatively young to begin with) and migration.

Why does Florida's population continue to grow at such a rapid rate? ›

Both the '60s housing boom people and the COVID Era housing boom drew people here by the age-old Florida promise: sunshine, beaches and water nearby, low cost of living, natural beauty, a laid-back lifestyle.

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