On March 27, 2012 the Census Bureau released the list of new Urbanized
Areas and Urban Clusters. For transportation related activities these
boundaries have broad and far reaching affects. Recognizing that it is
impossible to address each individual situation and question separately,
staff from the Federal Highway Administration. Federal Transit
Administration, Census Bureau and others will conduct a 2-hour webinar on
Boundary Issues and Transportation.
Participants in the webinar can expect to learn about the various
Transportation related boundaries, where and how they interact with the
federal programs and the steps that state and local agencies need to take
to address the boundary related requirements. Time will be allowed for
questions and discussion, and additional resources will also be made
available for downloading.
If you are interested in boundaries from a transportation perspective,
have a particular question or need to learn about them, this webinar is
for you. To make sure your questions get addressed you can send it send
them to ed.christopher(a)dot.gov up to the close of business the day before
the before the webinar, otherwise they will be handled on a first come
basis during the webinar.
Space for the webinar is currently limited to 350 connections and
registration is mandatory, but free. Folks who can share one connection
in a conference room setting are encouraged to do so. The webinar will be
recorded with closed captioning. Questions discussed during the webinar
will be used to update the Frequently Asked Questions that FHWA maintains
on the subject. The FAQ can be found at
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/census_issues/urbanized_areas_and_mpo_tma/…
The webinar will be
Friday, April 27, 2012 from 1:00 PM to 3:00 PM (Eastern Time) It is open
to everyone.
Register by Clicking on the link below.
https://www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov/resources/webconference/web_conf_learner_reg.a…
--
Ed Christopher
FHWA Resource Center Planning Team
4749 Lincoln Mall Drive, Suite 600
Matteson, IL 60443
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (C)
I got this from long time friend Terri Ann Lowenthal who has been my
expert contact to Census Legislative issues. Terri Ann is a consultant
for the Census Project and below is what the latest is on the ACS and
Census Bureau cuts.
-----------------------------
Thursday, May 10 @ 11:30PM
Census Project colleagues:
A quick update now that the House has passed its version of the
Commerce, Justice, and Science Appropriations bill.
First, in the chaos over the votes to make ACS response voluntary and
then eliminate the survey entirely, we missed another amendment,
sponsored by Rep. Corrine Brown (D-FL), that shifted $20M from the
Periodic Censuses account to a Justice Department local law enforcement
program. That's on top of the $4 million cut through the Lynch amendment.
Combined with the Appropriations Committee cut to the Periodics account,
the Census Bureau says (in the new Bloomberg BusinessWeek article below)
that the Economic Census is at risk again, as is planning for the 2020
Census.
With regard to the vote to eliminate the ACS entirely, I know some folks
think that the final C-J-S funding bill would never include such a
provision. That is probably correct, but it also is possible (and, I am
told, the Census Bureau fears) that the vote will be used as a
bargaining chip in conference. House Republicans will agree to fund the
ACS if conferees make response voluntary. And if that happens, the
Census Bureau obviously won't have the additional funds ($60M???) needed
to ensure reliable small area data, so stakeholders will lose census
tract data and possibly more. The situation is not good, folks, despite
the fact that it appears right now that members of the House (all of
them!) were playing politics with the census.
The Census Project is drafting a sign-on letter to all Senators,
expressing strong (STRONG!) opposition both to the House funding cuts
and, of course, the votes to make the ACS voluntary and then eliminate
the survey. We will circulate the letter sometime on Friday. If the
Senate takes up the Commerce Appropriations bill next week, we will
have to put a short deadline on it again. If consideration is put off
until after Memorial Day, as some are now saying, then we have extra time.
Unlike past sign-on letters, we will try to get a very large number of
organizational (not individual) signers from the national, state, and
local level, and will list them all simply alphabetically.
If you have state and local affiliates that want to get more involved
(in addition to signing the letter), please refer them first to the
Census Project website. They can look at past letters and fact sheets,
as well as the blog, for basic information on the key issues at hand.
We (at the Census Project) are pedaling as fast as we can but are having
a hard time keeping up with requests for background information and
strategic advice this week. This is a modestly funded project, so
please be patient with us.
Thanks for all you are doing to step up to the plate in support of the
Census Bureau's programs and reliable data to guide policymaking and
resource allocation. There is no question the Census Bureau needs to
contain the cost of the 2020 Census, but pulling the rug out from under
them makes that goal less reachable.
Terri Ann
Terri Ann Lowenthal | Consultant | TerriAnn2K(a)aol.com
(h/o) 203-353-4364 | (c) 202-258-2425
---------------------------------------------------------------
Bloomberg BusinessWeek (on-line)
Economics
Killing the American Community Survey Blinds Business
By Matthew Philips on May 10, 2012
Last week we wrote about how funding for economic data-gathering
agencies such as the U.S. Census Bureau was under threat from House
Republicans looking for ways to cut spending. Apparently, they mean
business.
On May 9 the House voted to kill the American Community Survey, which
collects data on some 3 million households each year and is the largest
survey next to the decennial census. The ACS—which has a long bipartisan
history, including its funding in the mid-1990s and full implementation
in 2005—provides data that help determine how more than $400 billion in
federal and state funds are spent annually. Businesses also rely heavily
on it to do such things as decide where to build new stores, hire new
employees, and get valuable insights on consumer spending habits. Check
out this video of Target (TGT) executives talking about how much they
use ACS data.
Initially, it looked like the House might simply repealthe survey’s
mandatory requirement, something the Census Bureau has said would just
make it more expensive since they’d have to send more agents into the
field to collect the data manually, rather than being able to legally
require people who receive the survey to fill it out. Representative
Daniel Webster (R-Fla.) went a step further, leading the charge to
dismantle the ACS entirely on the grounds that it’s unconstitutional.
Webster gained his seat as part of the 2010 Tea Party revolution that
won Republicans control of the House. Apress release on his website
criticizes the ACS for invading people’s privacy by requiring them to
answer questions such as what time they leave for work, how long their
commute is, and whether they need help going shopping. Those who receive
a survey and fail to respond are subject to fines of as much as $5,000.
The fight over cutting funds for data-gathering agencies has opened up a
rift in the deficit-hawk crowd. A handful of organizations that
generally support big fiscal spending cuts have voiced their support for
fully funding the three main data-gathering agencies: Census, the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
The Chamber of Commerce, for example, strongly advocates funding them,
since its members rely so much on the information they provide on basic
things such as household spending, per capita income, and population
estimates. The ACS is of particular value to them, says Martin Regalia,
Commerce’s chief economist. “It is especially important to some of our
bigger members for trying to understand geographic distinctions and
other granularity in the economy.”
Tom Beers, executive director of the National Association of Business
Economists, says that without good economic data, businesses would be
“flying blind.” He adds: “You end up in a guessing game about what’s
going on in the economy. The types of losses that result are far worse
than what you end up spending to fund these surveys.”
Webster says ending the ACS could save $2.5 billion over the next
decade. Asked to respond to concerns from the business community over
the impact of stopping the ACS, Webster’s communications staff referred
me to his comments on the House floor, which don’t address those concerns.
Proponents of the ACS argue that the survey is particularly important
since it forms the basis of so much other data. “The loss of the
American Community Survey will cause chaos and inefficiency in the
operations of business and government in the U.S.,” says Andrew Reamer.
In 2010, Reamer published a report for the Brookings Institution
measuring the overall impact of the ACS.
In a statement released on May 10, the Census Bureau said eliminating
the ACS would “mark the first time in the country’s history that we
would not collect and share vital economic and demographic measures of
the country. These cuts would also keep us from conducting the 2012
economic census. Eliminating the American Community Survey would make it
extremely difficult if not impossible to contain the costs of the 2020
census.”
Contacted last week, economists at conservative think tanks Cato
Institute, American Enterprise Institute, and the Heritage Foundation
all expressed support for the data-gathering agencies since all three
rely heavily on the statistics they produce to study the economy. “Those
agencies are essential,” says Phillip Swagel, an economist and
nonresident scholar at AEI. “The data they provide really tell us what’s
going on in the economy. This shouldn’t be a political issue.”
Philips is an associate editor for Bloomberg Businessweek.
--
Ed Christopher
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)
FHWA RC-TST-PLN
4749 Lincoln Mall Drive, Suite 600
Matteson, IL 60443
Could anyone please shed light on the reason for eliminating ACS?
I was disappointed with the fact that Decennial Census got rid of the
Long Form. ACS is good because it is annual, but it is not as precise
for smaller geographies (e.g. block) as Decennial Census. If smaller
geography is not the main purpose of the ACS, then there are already
many population level surveys that collect data on demographics and
economy. What we need is both: ACS and the Long Form on the Decennial
Census, and no less.
Gyanesh Lama, Ph.D.
EAST-WEST GATEWAY COUNCIL OF GOVERNMENTS
One Memorial Drive, Ste. 1600
St. Louis, MO 63102-2451
Ph: 314-421-4220
Fx: 314-231-6120
>>> Ed Christopher <edc(a)berwyned.com> 05/11/2012 8:03 AM >>>
I got this from long time friend Terri Ann Lowenthal who has been my
expert contact to Census Legislative issues. Terri Ann is a consultant
for the Census Project and below is what the latest is on the ACS and
Census Bureau cuts.
-----------------------------
Thursday, May 10 @ 11:30PM
Census Project colleagues:
A quick update now that the House has passed its version of the
Commerce, Justice, and Science Appropriations bill.
First, in the chaos over the votes to make ACS response voluntary and
then eliminate the survey entirely, we missed another amendment,
sponsored by Rep. Corrine Brown (D-FL), that shifted $20M from the
Periodic Censuses account to a Justice Department local law enforcement
program. That's on top of the $4 million cut through the Lynch
amendment.
Combined with the Appropriations Committee cut to the Periodics
account,
the Census Bureau says (in the new Bloomberg BusinessWeek article
below)
that the Economic Census is at risk again, as is planning for the 2020
Census.
With regard to the vote to eliminate the ACS entirely, I know some
folks
think that the final C-J-S funding bill would never include such a
provision. That is probably correct, but it also is possible (and, I
am
told, the Census Bureau fears) that the vote will be used as a
bargaining chip in conference. House Republicans will agree to fund
the
ACS if conferees make response voluntary. And if that happens, the
Census Bureau obviously won't have the additional funds ($60M???)
needed
to ensure reliable small area data, so stakeholders will lose census
tract data and possibly more. The situation is not good, folks,
despite
the fact that it appears right now that members of the House (all of
them!) were playing politics with the census.
The Census Project is drafting a sign-on letter to all Senators,
expressing strong (STRONG!) opposition both to the House funding cuts
and, of course, the votes to make the ACS voluntary and then eliminate
the survey. We will circulate the letter sometime on Friday. If the
Senate takes up the Commerce Appropriations bill next week, we will
have to put a short deadline on it again. If consideration is put off
until after Memorial Day, as some are now saying, then we have extra
time.
Unlike past sign-on letters, we will try to get a very large number of
organizational (not individual) signers from the national, state, and
local level, and will list them all simply alphabetically.
If you have state and local affiliates that want to get more involved
(in addition to signing the letter), please refer them first to the
Census Project website. They can look at past letters and fact sheets,
as well as the blog, for basic information on the key issues at hand.
We (at the Census Project) are pedaling as fast as we can but are
having
a hard time keeping up with requests for background information and
strategic advice this week. This is a modestly funded project, so
please be patient with us.
Thanks for all you are doing to step up to the plate in support of the
Census Bureau's programs and reliable data to guide policymaking and
resource allocation. There is no question the Census Bureau needs to
contain the cost of the 2020 Census, but pulling the rug out from under
them makes that goal less reachable.
Terri Ann
Terri Ann Lowenthal | Consultant | TerriAnn2K(a)aol.com
(h/o) 203-353-4364 | (c) 202-258-2425
---------------------------------------------------------------
Bloomberg BusinessWeek (on-line)
Economics
Killing the American Community Survey Blinds Business
By Matthew Philips on May 10, 2012
Last week we wrote about how funding for economic data-gathering
agencies such as the U.S. Census Bureau was under threat from House
Republicans looking for ways to cut spending. Apparently, they mean
business.
On May 9 the House voted to kill the American Community Survey, which
collects data on some 3 million households each year and is the largest
survey next to the decennial census. The ACS—which has a long
bipartisan
history, including its funding in the mid-1990s and full implementation
in 2005—provides data that help determine how more than $400 billion in
federal and state funds are spent annually. Businesses also rely
heavily
on it to do such things as decide where to build new stores, hire new
employees, and get valuable insights on consumer spending habits. Check
out this video of Target (TGT) executives talking about how much they
use ACS data.
Initially, it looked like the House might simply repealthe survey’s
mandatory requirement, something the Census Bureau has said would just
make it more expensive since they’d have to send more agents into the
field to collect the data manually, rather than being able to legally
require people who receive the survey to fill it out. Representative
Daniel Webster (R-Fla.) went a step further, leading the charge to
dismantle the ACS entirely on the grounds that it’s unconstitutional.
Webster gained his seat as part of the 2010 Tea Party revolution that
won Republicans control of the House. Apress release on his website
criticizes the ACS for invading people’s privacy by requiring them to
answer questions such as what time they leave for work, how long their
commute is, and whether they need help going shopping. Those who
receive
a survey and fail to respond are subject to fines of as much as
$5,000.
The fight over cutting funds for data-gathering agencies has opened up
a
rift in the deficit-hawk crowd. A handful of organizations that
generally support big fiscal spending cuts have voiced their support
for
fully funding the three main data-gathering agencies: Census, the
Bureau
of Labor Statistics, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
The Chamber of Commerce, for example, strongly advocates funding them,
since its members rely so much on the information they provide on basic
things such as household spending, per capita income, and population
estimates. The ACS is of particular value to them, says Martin Regalia,
Commerce’s chief economist. “It is especially important to some of our
bigger members for trying to understand geographic distinctions and
other granularity in the economy.”
Tom Beers, executive director of the National Association of Business
Economists, says that without good economic data, businesses would be
“flying blind.” He adds: “You end up in a guessing game about what’s
going on in the economy. The types of losses that result are far worse
than what you end up spending to fund these surveys.”
Webster says ending the ACS could save $2.5 billion over the next
decade. Asked to respond to concerns from the business community over
the impact of stopping the ACS, Webster’s communications staff referred
me to his comments on the House floor, which don’t address those
concerns.
Proponents of the ACS argue that the survey is particularly important
since it forms the basis of so much other data. “The loss of the
American Community Survey will cause chaos and inefficiency in the
operations of business and government in the U.S.,” says Andrew Reamer.
In 2010, Reamer published a report for the Brookings Institution
measuring the overall impact of the ACS.
In a statement released on May 10, the Census Bureau said eliminating
the ACS would “mark the first time in the country’s history that we
would not collect and share vital economic and demographic measures of
the country. These cuts would also keep us from conducting the 2012
economic census. Eliminating the American Community Survey would make
it
extremely difficult if not impossible to contain the costs of the 2020
census.”
Contacted last week, economists at conservative think tanks Cato
Institute, American Enterprise Institute, and the Heritage Foundation
all expressed support for the data-gathering agencies since all three
rely heavily on the statistics they produce to study the economy.
“Those
agencies are essential,” says Phillip Swagel, an economist and
nonresident scholar at AEI. “The data they provide really tell us
what’s
going on in the economy. This shouldn’t be a political issue.”
Philips is an associate editor for Bloomberg Businessweek.
--
Ed Christopher
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)
FHWA RC-TST-PLN
4749 Lincoln Mall Drive, Suite 600
Matteson, IL 60443
We are in the process of updating our 2000 Statewide Traffic Model here in Nebraska with the 2010 Census Data we received back from the Census Bureau. We delineated TAZ's for the state's counties in the spring of 2011. The old 2000 Census Data that was used in the Statewide Model for Nebraska back 10 years ago showed an attribute data field known as "Housing Units". Is this data no longer available through the Census? Our information that we received back contains a "workers" attribute but nothing about individual housing units.
Thanks
Kaine McClelland
Nebraska Department of Roads
Transportation Planner
1400 Highway 2
Lincoln, NE 68509
Phone: 402-479-3937
Hi all,
Here is a database application for those interested in creating "Deep Links"
to tables on AFF2.
The attached MS Access database features a form programmed in VBA to
assemble Deep Links to the American Factfinder 2. You will have to allow VBA
macros or else MS Access will disable the program. The application is a work
in progress so if you are handy with VBA feel free to improve it.
Use the dropdown menus to select the program, dataset, table and geography
of interest. The "Category" menu is optional and serves to filter tables in
the "Table" menu. After the menu selections are ready, click the "Add
Components" button. The hyperlink will appear in the textbox below.
Caveat: AFF2 may not have some of the menu items and some are only be
available for specific summary levels. As data is released in the future
(annual ACS, SF2, etc.), new records will have to be added the database
tables that reference the proper bookmarking codes and aliases (for menu
items).
Multiple geographies (same summary level) for a single table may be added to
the hyperlink (e.g. a second county) by clicking the "Add Components" button
without resetting the link. Individual census tracts may be added using the
6 digit FIPS number (use a comma delimiter for multiple tracts).
Currently the database can create links to decennial census and ACS tables
at the State, County, and Tract summary levels. The database has places for
Arizona only. To add more places to the menu, go to the "Places" table in
the "Data" group and append your place records following the table
template.
The AFF deep linking guide was helpful in designing this program, but I also
resorted to AFF2 bookmarks to determine correct coding and syntax for some
tables and datasets.
Have fun!
____________________________
Eric W. Kramer, Ph.D., AICP
Senior Land-Use Modeler
PAG_logotype
177 N. Church Ave, Suite 405
Tucson, AZ 85701
(520) 792-1093 x506 (tel)
(520) 620-6981 (fax)
www.pagnet.org
ekramer(a)pagnet.org
FYI
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Census sign-on letter to Senate
Date: Fri, 11 May 2012 15:01:36 -0400
From: Terri Ann Lowenthal <terriann2k(a)AOL.COM>
Reply-To: Terri Ann Lowenthal <terriann2k(a)AOL.COM>
To: <CENSUS-PROJECT(a)MAIL.AMSTAT.ORG>
5/11/12 @ 3:00PM
Census Project colleagues:
A quick note to encourage everyone to let their affiliates at the state
and local levels, as well as other potential census data supporters,
about this sign-on letter. We will accept all relevant organizational
(not individual) signers, including university departments.
I am attaching the letter once again in the event your organization is
not on the CCMC Census Project e-mail list. Please note that we will
slightly tweak the letter before finalizing. There a couple of typos;
we will add a reference to the use of citizenship data for
redistricting; and we will tweak the language referring to bilingual
voting assistance based on suggestions on experts in the field. We will
not make any substantive changes, don't worry.
Thanks again for all of your work on such short notice. In the
meantime, please see the Census Bureau director's blog on this issue
(www.census.gov). And look for some press coverage on-line today and in
the weekend newspapers, including the New York Times.
Have a good weekend.
Terri Ann
*Terri Ann Lowenthal* | Consultant | TerriAnn2K(a)aol.com
(h/o) 203-353-4364 | (c) 202-258-2425
----------------------------------------------------------
--
Ed Christopher
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)
FHWA RC-TST-PLN
4749 Lincoln Mall Drive, Suite 600
Matteson, IL 60443
All,
Good morning. Wanted to solicit ideas, tools, resources that others may be aware of in analyzing historical census data to develop growth trends that can be used in forecasting socioeconomic data for our travel demand model's traffic analysis zones (TAZs). Thoughts? At this point I have gathered Census tract geospatial data for our region (Hampton Roads) as far back as 1960, Census Block Group geospatial data from 1990 onwards, and Census Block geospatial data from 2000 onwards. The hope is to do a geospatial analysis with these data sets to geospatially identify growth patterns across our region. Thanks for your time in your thoughts on this. I'll be cross-posting this on the TMIP listserv as well.
[Description: Description: Description: HRTPO logo - small]
Benito O. Pérez, AICP
Transportation Engineer
Hampton Roads Transportation Planning Organization
The Regional Building 723 Woodlake Drive Chesapeake Virginia 23320
bperez(a)hrpdcva.gov<mailto:bperez@hrpdcva.gov>| http://www.hrtpo.org<http://www.hrtpo.org/>| Phone: 757.420.8300 | Fax: 757.523.4881
All email correspondence to and from this address is subject to the Virginia Freedom of Information Act
and to the Virginia Public Records Act, which may result in monitoring and disclosure to third parties, including law enforcement.
The May 2012 issue of the newsletter the "CTPP Status Report" is now
posted at http://www.trbcensus.com/
The direct link to it is
http://www.trbcensus.com/newsltr/sr0512.pdf
--
Ed Christopher
708-283-3534 (V)
708-574-8131 (cell)
FHWA RC-TST-PLN
4749 Lincoln Mall Drive, Suite 600
Matteson, IL 60443
Please share this with your colleagues. Some of you have been forwarded messages from CTPP listserv, but are not members of the list itself. You must be a member to post to the list.
Here is the link to JOIN, or change your listserv settings:
http://www.trbcensus.com/maillist.html
This page includes a link to the archive of messages. I highly recommend that you read the posts related to DEEP LINKING with ACS tables from Mara Kaminowitz. We will have a short webinar on Deep Linking in the near future. Thanks again for your interest in CTPP and Census data issues. And a big Thank You again to Ed Christopher who set up the listserv in the first place!
Elaine Murakami
FHWA Office of Planning
206-220-4460 (in Seattle)
This just illustrates the effort that all data
intermediaries (those who help others access and
use the data) need to go to with Congress. Call
your Rep. and express your views!
Patty Becker
At 11:52 AM 5/10/2012, you wrote:
>Content-Language: en-US
>Content-Type: multipart/related;
>
>boundary="_004_FF2CCB68E19616409E046FD48592C54F0537B1B1DDDFW1MBX02mex0_";
> type="multipart/alternative"
>
>No more ACS? The House doesnt like it ..
>
>
>
>John Sharp
>Description: Description: cid:image001.jpg@01C8E746.B2403B20
>
>Program Coordinator
>Transportation & Planning Services
>Association of Central Oklahoma Governments
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patricia C. (Patty) Becker 248/354-6520
APB Associates/SEMCC FAX 248/354-6645
28300 Franklin Road Home 248/355-2428
Southfield, MI 48034 pbecker(a)umich.edu