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Census Basics UP206A: Introduction to GIS
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Census Basics

Feb 25, 2016

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UP206A: Introduction to GIS. Census Basics. When was the first census? 1790 How many people were counted? 3.9 million How many states did we have then? 13 original states, plus the districts of Kentucky, Maine, Vermont, and the Southwest Territory What questions were asked? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Census Basics

Census Basics

UP206A: Introduction to GIS

Page 2: Census Basics

History

» When was the first census?˃ 1790

» How many people were counted?˃ 3.9 million

» How many states did we have then?˃ 13 original states, plus the districts of Kentucky, Maine, Vermont, and

the Southwest Territory

» What questions were asked?˃ name of head of family˃ number of persons in each household of the following descriptions:

+ Free White males 16 years and upward, + free White males under 16 years, + free White females, + all other free persons (by sex and color) and slaves

Page 3: Census Basics

Census 2000

» When was it taken?˃ April 1, 2000

» How many people were counted?˃ 281,421,906 (13.2 percent increase over the 248,709,873 in 1990)

» Questionnaire included seven questions for each household:˃ name˃ sex˃ age˃ relationship˃ Hispanic origin˃ race˃ owner/renter

Page 4: Census Basics
Page 5: Census Basics

Census 2010

» When was it taken?˃ April 1, 2010

» How many people were counted?˃ 308,745,538 (9.7 percent increase over the 281,421,906 in

2000)

» Questionnaire included ten questions for each household:˃ http://

2010.census.gov/2010census/about/interactive-form.php

» Release schedule

Page 6: Census Basics

Census 2010

» Apportionment of representatives among the states˃ census determines how the 435 seats in the U.S. House of

Representatives are divided among the 50 states

Page 7: Census Basics

Why is the census important?

» Census data directly affect how more than $300 billion per year in federal funding is allocated to local, state and tribal governments – $3 trillion over a decade.

» draw legislative districts

» evaluate success of programs or identify populations in need of services

Page 8: Census Basics

Before 2010…

Short and long…

Page 9: Census Basics

Short: how many?

Page 10: Census Basics

Long = how we live

» When was the long form introduced?˃ 1940 census

» How many people got the long form?˃ 17 percent of the households (1 out of every 6 households)

» What questions were asked?˃ ancestry˃ income˃ mortgage˃ size of the housing unit˃ disability˃ etc

Page 11: Census Basics
Page 12: Census Basics

What? No more long form?

» Meet the American Community Survey » The form» Replaces the long form

˃ ie, [old long form] = [new American community survey]

» From once in 10 years, to every year! (started in 2005)

» 1, 3, and 5 year estimates˃ Which to choose?˃ http://www.census.gov/acs/www/guidance_for_data_users/estimates/

» You are in luck… the data is JUST becoming available, just in time for your final projects

Page 13: Census Basics

Summary File 1

» counts and basic cross-tabulations of information collected from all people and housing units. ˃ race, age, household size, owner/renter

» Lowest level geography: ˃ Blocks

Page 14: Census Basics

Summary File 3

» contains tables with social, economic and housing characteristics compiled from a sample of approximately 19 million housing units (about 1-in-6 households) that received the Census 2000 long-form questionnaire. Many tables are given for nine major race and Hispanic or Latino groups.

» Lowest level geography:˃ Block Groups/Census Tracts

Page 15: Census Basics

Census Geography

UP206A: Introduction to GIS

Page 16: Census Basics
Page 17: Census Basics
Page 18: Census Basics

Counties

» Counties in 48 States» Independent Cities in 4 States» Parishes in Louisiana» Cities and Boroughs in Alaska» 58 counties in California» 3,141 counties in the US

Page 19: Census Basics

Places

Incorporated Places (i.e. municipalities)Census Designated Places (i.e. unincorporated

areas)1,081 places in California25,150 places in the US

Page 20: Census Basics

Census Tracts

Cover the nation (65,000 Census tracts across U.S.)

Relatively homogenous population characteristics

Size: optimally 4,000 people, range between 1,000 and 8,000

2,054 census tracts in Los Angeles County65,344 census tracts in the US

Page 21: Census Basics

Block Groups

Groups of blocks (share the same first digit)Smallest areas for which sample data availableSize: optimally 1,500 people, but range

between 300 to 3,0006,351 block groups in Los Angeles County208,689 block groups in the US

Page 22: Census Basics

Blocks

Smallest units of data tabulationCover the entire nationDo not cross census tracts or countiesGenerally bounded by visible features and legal

boundariesSize: average about 100 people89,614 blocks in Los Angeles County8.2 million blocks in the US

Page 23: Census Basics

ZCTA’s

» ZCTAs: ZIP Code Tabulation Areas» Approximate area representations of USPS ZIP

Code service areas» Based on Census 2000 blocks» To address difficulties in mapping USPS ZIP

Codes» May represent either a five or three-digit USPS

ZIP Code» http://www.census.gov/geo/ZCTA/zcta.html

Page 24: Census Basics

FIPS

» FIPS – Federal Information Processing Standards

06 037 701400 4STATE COUNTY CENSUS TRACT BLOCK

GROUP

Page 25: Census Basics

Tiger Files

» Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing

» developed at the U.S. Census Bureau to support its mapping needs for the Decennial Census and other Bureau programs

» coverage of the United States, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and the Midway Islands

» http://www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/

Page 26: Census Basics

Data and Census Geography

» The larger the census geographic unit, the greater the amount of data available (i.e. Single years of data by County)

» The smaller the census geographic unit, the less data available (i.e., Age in five-year categories for Census Tracts)