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What Do The Numbers Mean - 2010 U.S.Census
1. The 2010 Census: What the Numbers Mean
Using and Interpreting the Data
Holly St. Clair, Director of Data Services,
Metropolitan Area Planning Council
May 2, 2011
15. U.S. Census & Federal Funding
• From these seven programs Massachusetts received
over $8.2 billion in FY2007 and over $6.3 billion in
FY2006.
• Medicaid
• Highway Planning and Construction
• Title I Grants to Local Education Agencies
• Foster Care
• Federal Mass Transit Grants
• Community Development Block Grants
• Nutrition Program to Women, Infants, and Children
16. Census = $2000 per person
•Schools
•Medicaid
•Health Centers
•Food Stamps - WIC
•Roads
•Housing
•Used a dominator for health statistics, crime
statistics, etc.
17. Examples of State Programs
•40 B
•Consolidate Plan - DHCD
•Annual Qualified Allocation Plan process for
the Low Income Housing Tax Credit program
•Funding to local Council’s on Aging- Total
Population
18.
19. •We are getting older
•We are growing more diverse
•Our children are increasingly of color
•Promote the American Community Survey in your
Community
•Report Building Permits every month
Take Away’s
20. Holly St. Clair,
Director of Data Services
Metropolitan Area Planning Council
hstclair@mapc.org
www.mapc.org
www.metrobostondatacommon
Questions
Hinweis der Redaktion
Apportionment data: “The populations of the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico excluded because they do not have voting seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.”
Redistricting data: “The census data allow state officials to realign congressional and state legislative districts in their states, taking into account population shifts since the last census and assuring equal representation for their constituents in compliance with the “one-person, one-vote” principle of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.”
Source: http://2010.census.gov/2010census/data/
Not sure why this is so blurry…
Growing urban communities accounted for almost half of the state’s population increase. The Inner core grew @ 3.4%, faster than state overall.
Almost a quarter of the state’s population gains were in five urban communities: Boston, Worcester, Revere, Lawrence, and Quincy. Large gains were also seen in many Regional Urban Centers or “Gateway Cities” such as Lowell, New Bedford, Springfield, Salem, and Lynn.
Source: K:DataServicesDatasetsU.S. Census and DemographicsCensus ComparisonsNotesforMDD_3_22_11.docx
The Lobster cartogram
Lawrence, Chelsea, Springfield, and Boston have been Majority Minority communities since 2000. The communities in green are “new” Majority Minority communities (they were not Majority Minority communities in 2000).
Racial and ethnic minority group populations increased from 18% to 24%, an increase of 5.7%. In 65 municipalities, the share of this population increased by that amount or more, and not just in urban areas. There were 31 suburban communities where the minority group population grew by 5.7% or more. However, in the vast majority of suburban communities, this population increased less than that amount, which means that, while the state is becoming more diverse, these communities are falling behind with regard to segregation.
K:DataServicesProjectsCurrent_ProjectsCensus_MappingCensus2010Race_PopulationMaps
If our region were completely integrated, White residents would make up an equal share of the population in every neighborhood, matching the region-wide share of about 75%. Similarly, every neighborhood would include about 25% racial/ethnic minorities. However, such an equal distribution of Whites and minority group populations across neighborhoods is far from our current reality. This segregation is measured by a tool called the Dissimilarity Index. This tool compares two groups, measuring the percentage of the smaller group that would have to move to a different geographic area in order to produce an equal distribution of the smaller group across the area in question. Nearly 62% of all Black/African American residents of Metro Boston would have to move to a new neighborhood in order to achieve complete integration with Whites, translating to a “dissimilarity index” of roughly .62. Values of .6 and greater are generally considered `high.’ Roughly 60% of all Latino residents of Metro Boston would also have to move to a new neighborhood in order to achieve complete integration with Whites, with the region’s Latino-White dissimilarity index equal to .60 in 2010.
The region has made steady progress towards better Black/African American-White integration since 1980, with the dissimilarity dropping from nearly .75 in 1980. While segregation of the region’s Latino population had risen from 1980 - 2000, 2010 shows improved integration from 2000. Because most major metropolitan areas in the United States grapple with persistent segregation, Metro Boston falls roughly in the middle of the pack of similarly sized urban areas in terms of Black/African American- White segregation.
Keeping in mind that in an integrated region, each neighborhood would be about 75% White, we can also ask how much exposure residents have to people of different races or ethnicities in their neighborhoods. White residents of Metro Boston live in neighborhoods that are, on average, 83% White and only 4% Black/African American. Black/African American residents, by contrast, live in neighborhoods that average 43% White and 31% Black/African American. Likewise, Latino residents in Metro Boston lived in neighborhoods that were about 31% Latino, while White residents lived in areas that were roughly 6% Latino.
K:DataServicesProjectsCurrent_ProjectsCensus_MappingCensus2010Race_PopulationMaps
Munis with highest percentage point change in Latino pop
Revere
Lawrence
Lynn
Chelsea
Springfield
Everett
K:DataServicesProjectsCurrent_ProjectsCensus_MappingCensus2010Race_PopulationMaps
Munis with highest percent change in Latino pop
Chesterfield
Monroe
Mount Washington
Alford
New Ashford
Phillipston
Hawley
Nantucket
K:DataServicesProjectsCurrent_ProjectsCensus_MappingCensus2010Race_PopulationMaps
Munis with highest percentage point change in Asian pop
Acton
Westborough
Lexington
Quincy
Westford
K:DataServicesProjectsCurrent_ProjectsCensus_MappingCensus2010Race_PopulationMaps
Munis with highest percent change in Asian pop
Aquinnah
Monroe
Bernardston
Middlefid
Clarksburg
MA Summary: Massachusetts housing units have grown by 7% percent between 2000 (2,621,989 total housing units) and 2010 (2,808,254 total housing units). 9% of Massachusetts’ 2010 housing units were vacant, compared to 7% in 2000.
Community Type Summary: Regional urban centers (869,278 housing units) had the most housing units in 2010, followed by developing suburbs (715,012 housing units), the inner core (603,970 housing units), maturing suburbs (558,955 housing units), and rural towns (61,039 housing units).
The percentage change in housing unit growth/decline between 2000 and 2010 ranged from 36% to -10%. Communities with housing unit growth of 25% or more include: Upton (36%), Montgomery (33%), Berlin (33%), Middleton (30%), Uxbridge (30%), Erving (28%), Douglas (27%), Nantucket (25%), Leverett (25%), Rutland (25% ), and Northbridge (25%).
8 communities lost housing units between 2000 and 2010 [Lincoln (-10%), Harvard (-8%), North Adams (-5%), Nahant (-2%), Marblehead (-1%), Swampscott (-1%), Wendell (-1%), and Hopedale (-0.2%)]
are falling behind with regard to segregation.
MA Summary: Massachusetts housing units have grown by 7% percent between 2000 (2,621,989 total housing units) and 2010 (2,808,254 total housing units). 9% of Massachusetts’ 2010 housing units were vacant, compared to 7% in 2000.
Community Type Summary: Regional urban centers (869,278 housing units) had the most housing units in 2010, followed by developing suburbs (715,012 housing units), the inner core (603,970 housing units), maturing suburbs (558,955 housing units), and rural towns (61,039 housing units).
The percentage change in housing unit growth/decline between 2000 and 2010 ranged from 36% to -10%. Communities with housing unit growth of 25% or more include: Upton (36%), Montgomery (33%), Berlin (33%), Middleton (30%), Uxbridge (30%), Erving (28%), Douglas (27%), Nantucket (25%), Leverett (25%), Rutland (25% ), and Northbridge (25%).
8 communities lost housing units between 2000 and 2010 [Lincoln (-10%), Harvard (-8%), North Adams (-5%), Nahant (-2%), Marblehead (-1%), Swampscott (-1%), Wendell (-1%), and Hopedale (-0.2%)]
are falling behind with regard to segregation.
MA Summary: Massachusetts housing units have grown by 7% percent between 2000 (2,621,989 total housing units) and 2010 (2,808,254 total housing units). 9% of Massachusetts’ 2010 housing units were vacant, compared to 7% in 2000.
Community Type Summary: Regional urban centers (869,278 housing units) had the most housing units in 2010, followed by developing suburbs (715,012 housing units), the inner core (603,970 housing units), maturing suburbs (558,955 housing units), and rural towns (61,039 housing units).
The percentage change in housing unit growth/decline between 2000 and 2010 ranged from 36% to -10%. Communities with housing unit growth of 25% or more include: Upton (36%), Montgomery (33%), Berlin (33%), Middleton (30%), Uxbridge (30%), Erving (28%), Douglas (27%), Nantucket (25%), Leverett (25%), Rutland (25% ), and Northbridge (25%).
8 communities lost housing units between 2000 and 2010 [Lincoln (-10%), Harvard (-8%), North Adams (-5%), Nahant (-2%), Marblehead (-1%), Swampscott (-1%), Wendell (-1%), and Hopedale (-0.2%)]
are falling behind with regard to segregation.
MA Summary: Massachusetts housing units have grown by 7% percent between 2000 (2,621,989 total housing units) and 2010 (2,808,254 total housing units). 9% of Massachusetts’ 2010 housing units were vacant, compared to 7% in 2000.
Community Type Summary: Regional urban centers (869,278 housing units) had the most housing units in 2010, followed by developing suburbs (715,012 housing units), the inner core (603,970 housing units), maturing suburbs (558,955 housing units), and rural towns (61,039 housing units).
The percentage change in housing unit growth/decline between 2000 and 2010 ranged from 36% to -10%. Communities with housing unit growth of 25% or more include: Upton (36%), Montgomery (33%), Berlin (33%), Middleton (30%), Uxbridge (30%), Erving (28%), Douglas (27%), Nantucket (25%), Leverett (25%), Rutland (25% ), and Northbridge (25%).
8 communities lost housing units between 2000 and 2010 [Lincoln (-10%), Harvard (-8%), North Adams (-5%), Nahant (-2%), Marblehead (-1%), Swampscott (-1%), Wendell (-1%), and Hopedale (-0.2%)]
are falling behind with regard to segregation.
there are a lot of poor reporters, but not necessarily b/c they are only doing 6 months out of the year- More often, they report 12 months a year for a few years, then there is no reporting for a few years
MA Summary: Massachusetts housing units have grown by 7% percent between 2000 (2,621,989 total housing units) and 2010 (2,808,254 total housing units). 9% of Massachusetts’ 2010 housing units were vacant, compared to 7% in 2000.
Community Type Summary: Regional urban centers (869,278 housing units) had the most housing units in 2010, followed by developing suburbs (715,012 housing units), the inner core (603,970 housing units), maturing suburbs (558,955 housing units), and rural towns (61,039 housing units).
The percentage change in housing unit growth/decline between 2000 and 2010 ranged from 36% to -10%. Communities with housing unit growth of 25% or more include: Upton (36%), Montgomery (33%), Berlin (33%), Middleton (30%), Uxbridge (30%), Erving (28%), Douglas (27%), Nantucket (25%), Leverett (25%), Rutland (25% ), and Northbridge (25%).
8 communities lost housing units between 2000 and 2010 [Lincoln (-10%), Harvard (-8%), North Adams (-5%), Nahant (-2%), Marblehead (-1%), Swampscott (-1%), Wendell (-1%), and Hopedale (-0.2%)]
are falling behind with regard to segregation.