The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

68
The US Census and Secondary Data Sources 1

description

The US Census and Secondary Data Sources. Secondary Data. Data that someone has collected, collated, or analyzed The US Government provides many secondary data sources Environmental Protection Agency Department of the Interior Housing and Urban Development Department of Agriculture - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Page 1: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

1

Page 2: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Secondary Data

Data that someone has collected, collated, or analyzed The US Government provides many secondary data sources

• Environmental Protection Agency• Department of the Interior• Housing and Urban Development• Department of Agriculture• Department of Commerce• Health and Human Services

International agencies• the United Nations• Amnesty International

2

Page 3: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Secondary Data

Inexpensive – often free Widely available and accessible Thoroughly studied You do not ask the questions or determine the contents

You are never really sure how it is collected

Is an imperfect proxy for what you want to measure

BE CAREFUL 3

Page 4: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory

Census mandated in the constitution:

“[An] Enumeration shall be made within three Years after the first Meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent Term of ten Years, in such Manner as they shall by Law direct.”

Article 1, Section 24

Page 5: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory

Controlling law is Title 13 of the US Code. Title 13 :

determines how often counts are to be made and when they are available (also known as enumeration) is found in 13 USC 141.

sets fines for failure to respond ($100, which was raised from $20 in 1970s). Although this has never been enforced.

mandates a mid-decade census5

Page 6: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory – Government Uses

Redistricting—drawing boundaries for Congressional, legislative, etc. districts

Distribution of federal fundsSite locationMarketingProgram needs planningDemographic change research

6

Page 7: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory – Government UsesCensus Is Controversial

It moves power: • Congressional reapportionment• Congressional, state legislative redistricting• redistricting of many elective bodies--city

councils, school boards, etc.

It moves money: • Over 100 federal programs that allocate

$400 billion/year have census counts in some part of formulae

7

Page 8: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory – Census is always changing

Original census counted slaves (“other persons”) as 3/5 of a person. This was changed in the 14th ammendment.

Slavery last asked in 1860

Feeble-minded in 1840-1890

Income first asked in 1940

Televisions surveyed, 1950-70

Detailed ancestry beginning 1980

Multiple races and grandparents as caregivers in 2000

Questions are passed by congress as law8

Page 9: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusHistory

Grid of questions available at http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/census2/censubj.pdf

9

Page 10: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Public health professionals identify vulnerable populations for chronic disease

Urban planners identify zoning, housing, sewage, and transportation issues

Social workers conduct needs assessments for services to the elderly, poor, children

CensusPractical Applications

10

Page 11: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Marketers target likely buyers

Politicians use the census to determine voting districts and to assess constituent interests

Environmentalists map the spread of toxic effluents and population densities

CensusPractical Applications

11

Page 12: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Occupation by age, race, and sex for equal employment opportunity

Librarians base collection development policy on community characteristics

Mayors use numbers to apply for federal grants. • Undercount costs money – the reason for lawsuits• Racial minorities and undocumented aliens• Should missionaries be counted as U.S. residents

CensusPractical Applications

12

Page 13: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusCollection Method - Basic Enumeration

1. Mail Campaign (alerting postcard, the census form, note of thanks).

2. Expect about 60% - 70% response rate

3. Delivered to about 80% of respondants via USPS

4. For most of remaining 20%, census worker left a copy of the census

5. For remaining either used special methods, or collected in person

13

Page 14: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusCollection Method - Basic Enumeration

Service based enumeration – homeless people and people using shelters

Group Quarters enumeration Transient Night (T-Night) enumeration – People living

“mobile lifestyle” (campgrounds at racetracks, public and private campgrounds, fairs and carnivals, marinas)

Remote Alaskan enumeration Domestic military enumeration Overseas enumeration

14

Page 15: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusCollection Method – Nonresponse Followup (NRFU)

1. Sent census workers to collect responses at non-responsding addresses

2. Visited addresses where questions were returned without data

3. Visited buildings that were previously reported as nonexistent or vacant

15

Page 16: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusCollection Method - Undercount

The census cannot count everybody. The difference between the actual number of people

and the number of people the census bureau counts is called the undercount.

There are some people who simply will not answer census questions. Many of whom simply do not trust the enumerators (census workers).

Nonresponders are disproportionately poor and members of a minority group.

The census bureau is trying to estimate the total number through sampling.

16

Page 17: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusCollection Method – Accuracy and Coverage Evaluation (ACE)

1. Create Interactive Coverage Measurement (ICM) a “second” census of 750,000 housing units from around the country

2. Match and compare ICM with enumerated census

3. Make an estimate of undercounts and errors using Dual System Estimation (DSE)

Accuracy and Coverage Evaluation is the Census Bureau’s process for estimating the undercount using sampling methods. There are three basic steps:

17

Page 18: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Census Changes

• No long form this census (asked for detailed social and economic information)

• Previous long form information will be collected through the American Community Survey on a 1-year or 3-year cycle depending on the size of the community.

18

Page 19: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

19

Page 20: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

20

Page 21: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

21

Page 22: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

22

Page 23: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

23

Page 24: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

24

Page 25: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

25

Page 26: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

26

Page 27: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 American Community Survey Questions

27

Page 28: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

CensusShort Form

Distributed to 100% of households 10 Questions about:

– Age– Sex– Race (Multiple)– Hispanic origin– Household relationship– Owner vs. renter occupied housing

28

Page 29: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

29

Page 30: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

30

Page 31: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

31

Page 32: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

32

Page 33: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

33

Page 34: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

34

Page 35: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

35

Page 36: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

36

Page 37: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

37

Page 38: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Short Form Questions

38

Page 39: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 State Apportionment

• The first data released from the 2010 Census are the official national and state population counts, which are used to apportion seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

39

Page 40: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Census Operational Milestones

• Form delivery and Mail Back Phase (3/1 – 4/16/2010)• Door-to-Door Follow-Up Phase (5/1 – 7/10/10)• Quality Assurance Operations (4/11 – 9/3/10)• Complete Questionnaire Data Capture & Processing

(5/10 – 12/20/10)• 2010 Population Counts Reported (12/31/10)

40

Page 41: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 CensusShort Form – Same Sex Couples

“In determining the meaning of any Act of Congress, or of any ruling, regulation or interpretation of the various administrative bureaus and agencies of the United States, the word 'marriage' means only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife, and the word 'spouse' refers only to a person of the opposite sex who is a husband or wife.”

1996 Defense of Marriage Act 41

Page 42: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 CensusShort Form – Same Sex Couples

How the Census Bureau Calculates number of same sex couples:• Collect information on the sex of everybody in the household• Relationships of everybody in the household• If two responses as “husband/wife” or “umarried partner”

they counted as same sex coupleTotal Households 105,380,101 100.00%

Heterosexual Households

59,969,000 56.91%

Spouse

54,493,232 51.71%

Umarried Partner 5,475,768 5.20%

Same Sex Couples

665,523 0.63%

Male

336,001 0.32%

Female

329,522 0.31%

42

Page 43: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 CensusLong Form

Distributed to 1/6 people (appx 16.5%)Includes 52 questions on 34 subjectsPersonal subject areas include

– Social– Economic

Housing subject areas include– Physical– Financial

43

Page 44: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 CensusDistribution

FTP – File Transfer Protocol AFF – American Fact Finder DVD – Order DVD or CD ROM from the census

bureau Private Data Repackagers – Combine and make it

“easier” to use

44

Page 45: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 CensusDistribution

FTP AFF DVDDifficulty High Low LowCost No No YesUser Level High All AllSpeed Variable High N/AConnection Issues Possible Unlikely N/A

Download Limits None 5 MB CD Size

Graphical User Interface

None Yes Yes

45

Page 46: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2000 Census Public Use Microdata Samples

5% or 1% sample of individual responses to census data (micro data)

Create your own tables using raw data• Value of 2 bedroom, hispanic owned houses

• Education, occupation and citizenship status of people born in Senegal

Larger geographies• Public Use Microdata Areas (PUMAs)

46

Page 47: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLegal Areas

Nation State Counties Cities Townships Congressional Districts School Districts Native American Reservations

47

Page 48: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyCensus Designated Areas

Metropolitan Statistical Area Urbanized Area and Urban Cluster Census Tract Block Group Block Zip Code Tabulation Area PUMAS/Super-PUMAS Traffic Analysis Zones

48

Page 49: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyMain Hierarchy

49

Page 50: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Area Geographies

50

Page 51: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas - Blocks

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

legal boundariesBlock numbers completely different from 1990Size: average about 100 people

51

Page 52: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas - Blocks

52

Page 53: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas – Block Groups

Groups of blocks sharing the same first digitSmallest areas for which sample data availableSize: optimally 1,500 people, range between

300 to 3,000

53

Page 54: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas - Tracts

For the first time for Census 2000: Cover the nation

Relatively homogenous population characteristics

65,000 Census tracts across U.S.Size: optimally 4,000 people, range between

1,000 and 8,000

54

Page 55: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas – Block Groups and Tracts

55

Page 56: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas - Places

Incorporated Places Census Designated Places

56

Page 57: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyMinor Civil Divisions or Census County Divisions

57

Page 58: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographySmall Areas - Counties

• Counties in 48 States• Independent Cities in 4 States• Parishes in Louisiana• Cities and Boroughs in Alaska

58

Page 59: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Geographic Areas

Regions Divisions States Metropolitan Areas Urbanized Areas American Indian Reservations Alaska Native Areas Hawaiian Home Land Areas Zip Code Tabulation Areas (ZCTAs) Public Use Microdata Areas (PUMAs) 59

Page 60: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas - Regions and Divisions

60

Page 61: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas - Metropolitan Areas

Defined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)

Made up of a county or counties (or equivalent entities)

Contain large population nucleusHigh socioeconomic integration

61

Page 62: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas - Metropolitan Areas

Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA): One city with 50,000 or more inhabitants or a Census-defined urbanized area and a total metropolitan population of at least 100,000 (75,000 in New England)

Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA): Meets MSA standards and population > 1 million, separate standard-meeting components can be identified, and local opinion supports component areas

Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA): Components that make up a CMSA

Note: In 2003 new standards will go into effect. 62

Page 63: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas – Metropolitan Areas

63

Page 64: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas – Urbanized Areas

Densely settled areas with population of at least 50,000

Geographic core of block groups or blocks that have a population density of at least 1,000 people per square mile – Urban Cluster

Standards just released for Census 2000 tabulation in March 2002

www.census.gov/geo/www/ua/ua_2k.html

64

Page 65: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyLarge Areas – Urbanized Areas

65

Page 66: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

Census GeographyPublic Use Microdata Areas (PUMAs)

66

Page 67: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

American Community Survey

• Conducted every year• Mail survey, interview by phone, field

representative visit• Goes out to about 3 million households• Will average responses for 3 year period to

provide small area data• Large area data will be published every year• Will replace long form in 2010 census

67

Page 68: The US Census and Secondary Data Sources

2010 Census

• 74% Participation

68