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Introduction to the American Community Survey. North Carolina State Data Center North Carolina Office of State Budget & Management. Have You Read the News Lately?.
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Introduction to theAmerican Community Survey North Carolina State Data CenterNorth Carolina Office of State Budget & Management
There have been a lot of recent news items published referring to new Census numbers and something called the American Community Survey.There are other stories, too.
We’ve Got Questions! • What’s happening with the Census? • What are these new data? • How do I use the data?
Decennial Census Data • Decennial Census runs every 10 years • Basic demographic data to the census block level is released through Summary Files 1 and 2 • Detailed socio-economic data to at least the census tract level and in many cases to the census block group level is released through Summary Files 3 and 4
The socio-economic data on Summary File 3 is very useful, but … The data is needed more often than once every 10 years. Point-in-time data collection (i.e. April 1, Census Year) may not provide the most accurate picture of a community. The Need for More Data
What is ACS? • Monthly, rolling survey to collect socio-economic data. • Annually reports data • Data reported to the at least to the census tract level. In many cases census block group data will be available • Replaces Summary Files 3 and 4!2010 Census will be short form only
Data Collection • Census 2000 Summary File 3 sent a long-form questionnaire to a 1 in 6 household sample nationally. • ACS sample will be smaller than the Census 2000 sample. • Decennial census surveys every 10 years • ACS surveys every month.
Rolling Monthly Survey • Sample addresses are selected every month from the MAF and surveys are mailed. • The following month, Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) will contact the non-responding households. • A month after CATI, Computer Assisted Personal Interviewing (CAPI) will contact the non-responding households.
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Sampling • Sampling will cover all census geographic levels. • Since the sample size is smaller, it will take more time to collect adequate data from smaller population areas. • This sample time requirement means that data will be reported differently for smaller population areas.
Data Reporting • ACS data will be released annually. • Data for areas with a population of 65,000 or more will be reported as single-year estimates. • Data for areas with a population between 20,000 and 64,999 will be reported as a 3-year average. • Data for areas with a population under 20,000 will be reported as a 5-year average.
Data Release Schedule * - Data from test areas with a population of 250,000 or more
Data Available in 2006 • 2006 will be the first year of data for a fully-implemented ACS. • Earlier data is available for test sites, but these tests use slightly different methodologies. • Group quarters are not included in the test area data. • Test areas were generally based on areas with a population of 250,000 or more.
Data Releases in 2006 • Demographic data was released in mid-August. • Economic data was released in late August. • Housing data will be released in October. • Special cross-tabulations will be released in November. • Data only for areas with a population of 65,000 or more.
Data Products • Profiles data, narrative, multi-year • Selected Population Profiles race or ethnic group, ancestry • Tables subject, detailed, custom • Ranking Tables states, counties, places • Maps reference, thematic
Narrative Profiles • Text based profile • Select information from each of the data profiles • Bar charts of select data items • Quick links to the Ranking Tables main page
Selected Population Profile • Single profile combining demographic, social, economic and housing data items • Data is shown for a specified race/ethnic group including some multiple race and tribal groups or for a specified ancestry group
Ranking Tables • 2005 ACS compares selected data item across all states. • Previous ACS data ranked counties and places. • Data items are organized by subject. • Sorts are dynamic and may be resorted by rank or alphabetically by geography name.
Geographic Comparison Tables • Shows select data as percentages or medians for all geographies within a state. • GCT tables list geographies alphabetically or numerically and, unlike ranking tables, are static. • There are approximately 65 GCT tables.
Geographic Comparison Table – 2005 Geographies • States • Congressional Districts (109th Congress) • Counties • Places • Public Use Microdata Areas • School Districts • Urban/Rural and Inside/Outside Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas
Maps • Reference maps show location of geographies with no data. • Thematic maps show selected data items, similar to those shown on the ranking tables, across user-selected geographies. • Thematic maps allow user to define data classes, boundaries, features, and titles.
Test area data reports an estimate, upper, and lower bounds.
ACS Data • All ACS data are estimates • 90% confidence that the actual data point is within the margin of error • While this is a new way of presenting the data, there has always been a confidence interval with Summary File 3 sample data.
ACS and Decennial Data • Since ACS and Summary File 3 are sample data products and ACS replaces the long form (Summary File 3), isn’t it OK to compare ACS data with decennial data? NO!
ACS and Census – Comparison • Sample sizes are different • Residency rules are different • Legislative purposes are different • Group Quarters data may be missing • Geographies may be different • Users should not compare ACS and SF3 data
ACS Table Names • Base table data is the most detailed and is the “base” for all other ACS tables and profiles • Census contains Population and Housing tables (i.e. P0010001, PCT159H001, H001001) • ACS contains Base and Collapsed tables (i.e. B03002, C03002, B05003H)
ACS Table Naming Structure • Initial letter identifies the type of table – base and collapsed • Following 2 digits identify subject area 01 – age and sex 02 – raceThere are 26 subject areas • Next 3 digits are table sequence numbers • An alphabetic suffix indicates race/ethnic classifications and are not the same as the Census classifications
Collapsed Table – Quick Guide • For some areas, the detailed Base Tables may have estimates that are unreliable. • Reliability, in the form of median coefficient of variation, is checked for all Base Tables for each area. • Coefficient of Variation = standard error/estimate • If the median CV for a Base Table is less than 61%, the table passes and is published. • If the median CV for a Base Table is greater than 61%, the table fails.
Collapsed Table – Quick Guide • If a Base Table fails the check, some detailed estimates are “collapsed” into a single estimate in a Collapsed Table. • The median CV reliability check is now run on the Collapsed Table. • If the Collapsed Table passes the median CV check, it is published. • If the Collapsed Table fails the median CV check, it is dropped and not published.
Collapsed Tables – Last Word • The median Coefficient of Variation check is only done on Base Tables for single year data (i.e. for areas with a population of 65,000+) and for 3-year average data (i.e. for areas with a population from 20,000 to 64,499). • For 5-year average data, all Base Tables are published. There are no dropped or collapsed tables. • Standard disclosure rules apply to all ACS releases.
ACS and Dynamic Geographies • Populations change • Boundaries change • ACS reports data as single year, 3-year average, and 5-year average depending on the population of the area. • ACS accounts for these changes through sampling strategy and the Boundary and Annexation Survey.
Boundaries • Governmental unit boundaries are based on annual Boundary and Annexation Survey (BAS) benchmark file • Boundaries are as of January 1 of the reported year (i.e. 2005 ACS boundaries are as of January 1, 2005) • Non-governmental unit census geographies will be drawn once a decade prior to the decennial census
Sampling • Monthly samples include locations across census geographies. • Samples are collected each month for areas that are not in incorporated places. • When areas are annexed, their sampled data is added to the total for the annexing place.