participant statistical areas program for the 2010 census

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Participant Statistical Areas Program for the 2010 Census. Michael Ratcliffe Indiana GIS Conference March 13, 2007. Participant Statistical Areas. Census Tracts Block Groups Census Designated Places Census County Divisions. Topics Geography Division reexamined. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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1

Participant Statistical Areas Program for the 2010 Census

Michael RatcliffeIndiana GIS ConferenceMarch 13, 2007

2

Participant Statistical Areas

• Census Tracts

• Block Groups

• Census Designated Places

• Census County Divisions

3

Topics Geography Division reexamined

• Current relevance and use of these geographies

• Needs of the data user community

• Validity of existing thresholds

• Accommodating ACS data• Minimum thresholds for data reporting • Population vs. housing unit counts

• Through: • Geography Division research• Consultation with Census Bureau stakeholders

(ACS team leaders, statisticians, and others)• Consultation with non-Census Bureau stakeholders

4

No substantial changes to criteria

• All PSAP geographies are recognizable in:• Concept and purpose• Coding and naming conventions• Boundary features permitted

• Things done informally in operational guidelines in the past are made clear and consistent in the criteria

5

Census Tracts

• Nationally consistent small, statistical geographic units

• Boundary continuity for data comparability

• Data reliability

6

Census Tracts: Considerations for the 2010 Census

• All types of populated tracts meet the same thresholds• National standard• Reliability of sample data

• Change minimum population threshold to 1,200

• Reliability of sample data • Avoid application of disclosure avoidance

methodologies

7

Census Tracts: Considerations for the 2010 Census

• Housing unit counts or population counts to meet thresholds

• Accommodate ACS data

  Census 2000 Proposed for the 2010 Census

   Population Population Housing Unit

Optimum 4,000 4,000 1,600

Minimum 1,500 1,200 480

Maximum 8,000 8,000 3,200

Thresholds

8

Indiana Census Tracts

9

Census Tracts: Tippecanoe County

10

11

Block Groups (BGs)

• BGs nest within census tracts

• Smallest area for ACS sample data tabulation

• Continuity and comparability from one census to another less of a concern

12

Block Groups:Considerations for the 2010 Census

• All types of populated BGs meet the same thresholds

• National standard• Reliability of sample data

• Increase the minimum thresholds • Sample data reliability • Avoid application of disclosure avoidance

methodologies

13

Block Groups:Considerations for the 2010 Census

• Housing unit counts or population counts to meet thresholds

• Accommodate ACS data

  Census 2000 Proposed for the 2010 Census

   Population Population Housing Unit

Optimum 1,500 --- ---

Minimum 600 1,200 480

Maximum 3,000 3,000 1,200

Thresholds

14

Tracts and Block Groups:Considerations for the 2010 Census

Special land use tracts and block groups

• Areas of 1 sq. mile or more within an urban area, 10 sq. miles outside

• No residential population

• Has an official name• Large public parks, large public forests

15

Tract and Block Groups: Considerations for the 2010 Census

Special land use areas

Source: NPS

Central Park, NY1.3 mi2

Lava Beds National Monument, CA73 sq mi2

Source: NPS

16

Tract and Block Groups: Considerations for the 2010 Census

Why define special land use tracts and block groups?

• Clarify and cohere current practice

• Enhance thematic mapping of data

17

Tribal tracts and tribal block groups • Unique geographic framework separate from the

county-based census tracts and block groups that are defined nationwide

• Equivalent to county-based census tracts and block groups

• Improve data relevance, availability, and reliability for American Indian tribes

Implications: • Standard, county-based census tracts defined

nationwide (wall-to-wall coverage) • Tribal tracts are a completely separate set of geography

for data presentation purposes

Tract and Block Groups: Considerations for the 2010 Census

18

Census Designated Places

• Place-level statistics for well-known, settled unincorporated communities;

• Statistical equivalents of incorporated places;

• Mix of residential, commercial, and retail areas around a nucleus of relatively high residential population density

19

Census Designated Places:Considerations for the 2010 Census

• CDPs cannot have zero population and zero housing units • Zero population and housing units is contrary

to the concept of “place”

• Not allow CDPs to be defined coextensively with governmentally functioning MCDs in the 12 “strong-MCD” states • Reduce redundancy in data presentations

20

Number of CDPs and Incorporated Places in the US, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas: 2000

CDPsIncorporated

Places

United States 5,698 19,452

Puerto Rico 225 0

American Samoa 0 73

Guam 32 0

CNMI 16 0

USVI 6 3

21

Distribution of CDPs and Incorporated Places by Population

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

CDPs

Inc Places

22

Indiana Places

Incorporated Places: 567

Mean Population: 6,851

Median Population: 1,137

Census Designated Places: 34

Mean Population: 3,363

Median Population: 1,741

23

Indiana CDPs by Population

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

24

Indiana CDPs

25

Census County Divisions

• Set of sub-county units that have stable boundaries and recognizable names;

• Provide comparable set of sub-county geographic areas for longitudinal analysis;

• Represents one or more communities, trading centers, or major land uses;

• Can have more CCDs than census tracts in counties with small populations

26

Census County Divisions

27

Census County Divisions:Considerations for the 2010 Census

Options:

1. Retain the CCD concept

2. Eliminate the CCD concept and do not replace with another type of sub-county geographic unit

28

Participant Statistical Areas Program

• Regional, multi-county organizations, (e.g. COGs, MPOs) preferred primary participant• To reflect local input and the needs of

a wide range of data users• Participation open to all interested

parties • MAF/TIGER Participant Software for

electronic submission of boundaries

29

Participant Statistical Areas Program

• Proposed criteria published in Federal Register in Spring 2007

• 90 day public review and comment period• Final criteria published late 2007• Participants identified late 2007 – early 2008• Materials distributed: Summer 2008• Participants will have 120 days to review

and submit boundaries

30

Comments and Suggestions?

Geographic Standards and Criteria Branch (GSCB)

301-763-3056April Avnayim, Vince Osier, & Mike Ratcliffe

geo.psap.list@census.gov

www.census.gov/geo/www/psap2010/psap2010_main.html

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