The National 2019 KIDS COUNT Data Book is out!

Overall, children are doing better today than they were 30 years ago: Of the 16 areas of child well-being tracked across four domains — health, education, family and community and economic well-being — 11 have improved since the first publication of the Data Book in 1990.
Growth Spurt : The nation’s child population added more than 9 million kids since 1990. Half of this came from three states: Texas, Florida and California. In Maine, the child population declined from 1990 by 18%, tying for the largest decrease with Vermont .
Location Matters : In terms of overall child well-being, six of the 10 top-ranked states are in the Northeast - including Maine, which saw a improvement from 16th to 9th place in one year . States in Appalachia, the South and Southwest — where families have the lowest levels of household income — are at the bottom of the overall rankings.
Diversity Data : Nearly half of the nation’s child population (47%) are now kids of color. At the local level, every state reported a higher proportion of non-white kids compared to three decades ago.

