MCD Flow users,
It has come to our attention at the Census Bureau that some of the MCD
Flow files on the internet site are not correct. The Excel files sorted by
Workplace MCD for MI, MN, NJ, NY, PA, and WI erroneously contain the
residence sorted data. We have transmitted the correct files to replace
the incorrect files on the internet and will let you know as soon as they
are fixed.
In the meantime, you can use the plain text file to get the workplace sort
for these states. The only drawback is you will not be able to open these
in Excel as they have too many records. If this will be a problem for you,
please let me know. We do appologize for any inconvienience this may have
caused.
Clara
----- Forwarded by Celia G Boertlein/POP/HQ/BOC on 07/30/2003 04:10 PM
-----
|---------+---------------------------->
| | phillip.a.salopek|
| | @census.gov |
| | Sent by: |
| | owner-ctpp-news@c|
| | hrispy.net |
| | |
| | |
| | 07/25/2003 10:04 |
| | AM |
| | |
|---------+---------------------------->
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| |
| To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net |
| cc: |
| Subject: [CTPP] Release of MCD/County-to-MCD/County Worker Flow Files |
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
The Census Bureau released today the Census 2000 MCD/County-to-MCD/County
Worker Flow Files. These files contain commuter flow data at the county
subdivision or minor civil division (MCD) level in twelve states:
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin. For
the other 38 states and the District of Columbia data are presented at the
county level. Files for Puerto Rico are also provided in this product,
showing data at the county equivalent (municipio) level. The files may be
found at the following location:
www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/mcdworkerflow.html
Alternatively, from the Census Bureau home page (www.census.gov) click on
"J" in the Subjects A to Z Index. On the next page click on the link for
"Journey to Work and Place of Work Data." From there, under the heading
Census 2000 Data click on the link "2000 Minor Civil
Division/County-to-Minor Civil Division/County Worker Flow Files."
CTPP users,
We have identified a problem with Table 1-039 of CTPP 2000 Part 1. This
table is supposed to be Household Income by Worker Earnings for Workers in
Households. However it looks like it is tabulating Household Income by
Means of Transportation. But, the numbers are incorrect even for that
cross (see table 1-034 for the right numbers) because the variables do not
have the same number of categories. DO NOT USE TABLE 1-039. We are
working on correcting the table and will make it available to you as soon
as we can.
As of today this affects: AL, AZ, CA, CO, DE, DC, FL, GA, ID, IL, IN, MD,
MI, MT, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, OH, OR, TN, TX, UT, WA, WV, WI. We expect
it will not be a problem in the remaining states. This problem does not
affect the ASCII files for CTPP 2000 Part 1. If you have any questions or
concerns, let me know. We regret any inconvienience this has caused you.
Clara Reschovsky
TO: CTPP-News
This e-mail may be of interest to the State DOTs and MPOs who have requested an ASCII version of the CTPP Part 1 CD data from the Census Bureau, and who are using (or will be using) SAS to analyze CTPP datasets.
The Census Bureau did a great job in providing SAS jobs for building master SAS databases. This is *extremely* helpful!
I did some minor modifications to the programs, that I've included in a zip archive of CTPP Part 1 SAS programs. I also have some jobs which extract my region's data, then exports various tables into "csv" files of less than 256 columns, for purposes of importing into spreadsheets and GIS. Essentially this is a "SAS chop shop" approach that is an alternative to using CAT (CTPP Access Tool).
(A key addition to the SAS code that saves immensely on the SAS file size is the use of the variable "default length=5" statement which limits variables to less than one-half billion in value.) These SAS files are on our web site, at:
http://www.mtc.ca.gov/datamart/census/ctpp2000/
(This is using our http site, rather than our ftp site, so it should be available to some of my colleagues who've had firewall problems accessing our ftp site.)
The SAS jobs also have some "label statements" that may be extremely useful to non-SAS programmers, e.g.:
tab15x1 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=1"
tab15x2 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=2"
tab15x3 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=3"
tab15x4 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=4"
tab15x5 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=5"
tab15x6 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=6"
tab15x7 ="tab15: OCCUPATION=1, INDUSTRY=7"
The real effort will be to create mnemonic variable names for variables such as "tab15x1" (perhaps "occ1ind1" ?)
Hope this helps.
Chuck Purvis, MTC
Laurie,
We published a report in 1992 on Commuting Patterns in the metropolitan
Washington region that included tables on 1980 and 1990 county-to-county
worker flows for jurisdictions in the metropolitan region. The report is not
available in electronic form, but I could arrange to get you a hard copy of
it if that would help.
Bob
Robert E. Griffiths
Director of Technical Services
Department of Transportation Planning
Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
-----Original Message-----
From: Gill, Laura A. [mailto:lgill@pwcgov.org]
Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 2:19 PM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: RE: [CTPP] 1980 County-to-County Worker Flows
Does anyone know if this historical data (I'm interested in 1970 and
1980) is tabulated according to the place of work? That is, I want to
find out where all workers in a given jurisdiction are commuting from.
I'd even be satisfied to know the percentage of workers that are coming
from outside of a given jurisdiction.
The data available at the link below is fantastic, but as far as I can
tell, it is only available according to place of residence.
Thank you for any help you can give me.
Laurie Gill
Demographer
Prince William County, VA
-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Purvis [mailto:CPurvis@mtc.ca.gov]
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2003 11:15 AM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: Re: [CTPP] 1980 County-to-County Worker Flows
Bob and others:
The 1970, 1980 and 1990 data on county-to-county total commuter flows is
available on the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis web
site at:
http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/regional/reis/jtw/
Anything finer grained that county, or county-to-county by means of
transportation to work, would have to be extracted from your old 1970
UTP, 1980 UTPP and 1990 CTPP data files.
Note that the 1980 Census workplace information was coded for only half
of the long form sample. So, essentially the sampling rate for the 1980
commute flows is about 1-in-12, not the 1-in-6 sampling rate we have
from the 1990 and 2000 Censuses.
Also note that the largest county-of-work in the 1970 Census is "Not
Reported." So, take care in how you report/allocate/impute the 1970
data, if at all.
Chuck Purvis, MTC
>>> "Bob Paddock" <bob.paddock(a)METC.STATE.MN.US> 04/18/03 07:40AM >>>
Pardon my asking this, but are county-to-county worker flows available
from the 1980 census datafiles? I know that it goes back a bit and is
not the latest and greatest from the US Census. I have some flow data
but am looking for additional counties to include in my review.
Bob Paddock
Metropolitan Council
Minneapols-St.Paul
Peter,
All numbers in CTPP are rounded. The rounding rules are as follows:
Any number from 0-7 is rounded to 4.
Any other number is rounded to the nearest 5.
Totals in tables are rounded independently of the cells, so cell values may not add up to the total.
SF 3, being a standard product of the decennial census, did not have any rounding.
Nandu
-----Original Message-----
From: peter(a)caliper.com
Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 12:59 PM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: [CTPP] Rounding and Totalling in CTPP Part 1 Data
All:
Has anyone else noticed that the values for counts in the CTPP Part 1 data
always seem to be rounded to multiples of 5 (except for 5 itself, which
usually seems to be 4)?
Also, it seems that the total for a variable rarely is the sum of the other
values for that variable. For example:
- If you add up the individual means of transportation, only coincidentally
will they add up to the total of all means of transportation, using the
Both Sexes fields in Table 1-002
- When you look at the same data in SF 3, the values are close but
different, clearly not rounded to multiples of 5 and definitely adding up
to the expected total (in this case, All Workers)
Peter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Peter Van Demark
Director of GIS Products and Training Phone: 617-527-4700
Caliper Corporation Fax: 617-527-5113
1172 Beacon Street E-mail: peter(a)caliper.com
Newton MA 02461-9926 Web site: http://www.caliper.com
Laura:
Yes, the 1980 data on place-to-place (city-to-city) commuting is available from the 1980 UTPP. I'm looking at the 4/26/83 version of the "Part 6 Data Dictionary" and the variables SUMLEV and SUMLEVW represent the summary levels for residence area to work area. SUMLEV=44 is for SMSA-STATE-COUNTY-PLACE; and SUMLEVW=44 is for SMSA-STATE-COUNTY-PLACE of WORK.
In response to Joe Barbeau's (Central Connecticut RPA) question: Yes, 1980 UTPP data has MCD to MCD flows (SUMLEV=43 and SUMLEVW=43). On the other hand, it does NOT have county subdivision (COUSUB in census-speak) summary levels.
In terms of 1970 data on place-to-place commuter flows, I am very certain it does *not* exist unless you or your predecessors did the computations and saved the data from over 30 years ago. My agency, for example, only has the 1970 commuter flow on zone-to-zone (our very old zone system) basis, by means of transportation. Our old zones don't aggregate very well to cities.
One critical (and available in libraries) reference to the 1980 UTPP is the Transportation Research Record #981, which includes an Appendix "D" on "Areas Covered by the UTPP and Contacts" as of 12/1/84.
Laurie: since Prince William County is in the Metro Wash COG region, you can probably contact the census guy at MWCOG (Bob Griffiths?), or check with Nanda Srinivasan at FHWA.
Joe: Lucky for you, Connecticut purchased a statewide 1980 UTPP data file. The Connecticut DOT contact was Mr. Joseph Spragg as of 12/1/84, so chances are the contacts for the state have changed. With even better luck, the DOT will have saved the 1980 UTPP data and downloaded it from 6250 bpi density mainframe tapes to PC files. Again, check with Nanda to see if they have the 1980 UTPP tape for Connecticut.
I know that Nanda has been working - in his spare time - on assembling/archiving old (pre-1990) census journey-to-work data files. Unfortunately, the Census Bureau never archived (i.e., kept their own copy) the 1980 UTPP tapes that they produced in 1983-1985.
Chuck Purvis, MTC
****************************
>>> "Gill, Laura A." <lgill(a)pwcgov.org> 07/28/03 11:19AM >>>
Does anyone know if this historical data (I'm interested in 1970 and
1980) is tabulated according to the place of work? That is, I want to
find out where all workers in a given jurisdiction are commuting from.
I'd even be satisfied to know the percentage of workers that are coming
from outside of a given jurisdiction.
The data available at the link below is fantastic, but as far as I can
tell, it is only available according to place of residence.
Thank you for any help you can give me.
Laurie Gill
Demographer
Prince William County, VA
Does anyone know if this historical data (I'm interested in 1970 and
1980) is tabulated according to the place of work? That is, I want to
find out where all workers in a given jurisdiction are commuting from.
I'd even be satisfied to know the percentage of workers that are coming
from outside of a given jurisdiction.
The data available at the link below is fantastic, but as far as I can
tell, it is only available according to place of residence.
Thank you for any help you can give me.
Laurie Gill
Demographer
Prince William County, VA
-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Purvis [mailto:CPurvis@mtc.ca.gov]
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2003 11:15 AM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: Re: [CTPP] 1980 County-to-County Worker Flows
Bob and others:
The 1970, 1980 and 1990 data on county-to-county total commuter flows is
available on the Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis web
site at:
http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/regional/reis/jtw/
Anything finer grained that county, or county-to-county by means of
transportation to work, would have to be extracted from your old 1970
UTP, 1980 UTPP and 1990 CTPP data files.
Note that the 1980 Census workplace information was coded for only half
of the long form sample. So, essentially the sampling rate for the 1980
commute flows is about 1-in-12, not the 1-in-6 sampling rate we have
from the 1990 and 2000 Censuses.
Also note that the largest county-of-work in the 1970 Census is "Not
Reported." So, take care in how you report/allocate/impute the 1970
data, if at all.
Chuck Purvis, MTC
>>> "Bob Paddock" <bob.paddock(a)METC.STATE.MN.US> 04/18/03 07:40AM >>>
Pardon my asking this, but are county-to-county worker flows available
from the 1980 census datafiles? I know that it goes back a bit and is
not the latest and greatest from the US Census. I have some flow data
but am looking for additional counties to include in my review.
Bob Paddock
Metropolitan Council
Minneapols-St.Paul
All:
Has anyone else noticed that the values for counts in the CTPP Part 1 data
always seem to be rounded to multiples of 5 (except for 5 itself, which
usually seems to be 4)?
Also, it seems that the total for a variable rarely is the sum of the other
values for that variable. For example:
- If you add up the individual means of transportation, only coincidentally
will they add up to the total of all means of transportation, using the
Both Sexes fields in Table 1-002
- When you look at the same data in SF 3, the values are close but
different, clearly not rounded to multiples of 5 and definitely adding up
to the expected total (in this case, All Workers)
Peter
----------------------------------------------------------------
Peter Van Demark
Director of GIS Products and Training Phone: 617-527-4700
Caliper Corporation Fax: 617-527-5113
1172 Beacon Street E-mail: peter(a)caliper.com
Newton MA 02461-9926 Web site: http://www.caliper.com
This week the following Part 1 CDs were mailed out:
GA, IL, IN, MD&DC, MI, NJ, NM, TN, OH
This makes a total of 20 states done. Note that CA is being rerun and
will be redistributed next week to correct the the 6 MPO regions where
no TAZ data was present.
--
Ed Christopher
Planning Specialist
Resource Center
Federal Highway Administration
19900 Governors Drive
Olympia Fields, Illinois 60461
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)
The Census Bureau released today the Census 2000 MCD/County-to-MCD/County
Worker Flow Files. These files contain commuter flow data at the county
subdivision or minor civil division (MCD) level in twelve states:
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wisconsin. For
the other 38 states and the District of Columbia data are presented at the
county level. Files for Puerto Rico are also provided in this product,
showing data at the county equivalent (municipio) level. The files may be
found at the following location:
www.census.gov/population/www/cen2000/mcdworkerflow.html
Alternatively, from the Census Bureau home page (www.census.gov) click on
"J" in the Subjects A to Z Index. On the next page click on the link for
"Journey to Work and Place of Work Data." From there, under the heading
Census 2000 Data click on the link "2000 Minor Civil
Division/County-to-Minor Civil Division/County Worker Flow Files."