The Federal Register notice from the Census Bureau is now posted.
The due date for comments is November 22.
You may want to listen to Mike Ratcliffe's web presentation from June 11, 2010 that is
available at:
http://ctpp.transportation.org/Pages/webinardirectory.aspx
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The Census Bureau announces publication of the "Proposed Urban Area
Criteria for the 2010 Census" in the Federal Register of August 24, 2010,
available on the Federal Register's website at
<http://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/>. The Census Bureau is seeking public
comment on these proposed criteria. Comments, suggestions, or
recommendations regarding the criteria should be submitted in writing, no
later than November 22, 2010, to Timothy Trainor, Chief, Geography
Division, U.S. Census Bureau, Washington, DC 20233-7400.
The Census Bureau's urban-rural classification is fundamentally a
delineation of geographical areas, identifying individual urbanized areas
of 50,000 or more people and urban clusters of at least 2,500 and less than
50,000 people; "rural" encompasses all population and territory not
included in urban areas. The Census Bureau's urban areas represent densely
developed territory, and encompass residential, commercial, and other
non-residential urban land uses. Additional information about the Census
Bureau's urban-rural classification is available on the Census Bureau's
website at <http://www.census.gov/geo/www/ua/urbanruralclass.html>.
The proposed urban area criteria for the 2010 Census as well as summaries
of the proposed changes, are available on the Census Bureau's website at <
http://www.census.gov/geo/www/ua/2010urbanruralclass.html>gt;.
Changes proposed for the 2010 Census include:
· Use of census tracts as analysis units in the initial phase of
delineation
· Potential return to a maximum jump distance of 1.5 miles (the
distance was increased to 2.5 miles in the Census 2000 criteria).
· Use of land use/land cover data to identify territory containing
non-residential urban land uses or land cover that restricts urban
development, such as marshland and wetlands.
· Lowering the minimum number of enplanements (departing passengers)
from 10,000 to 2,500 to qualify airports for inclusion in urban
areas.
· Elimination of the central place concept.
· Requirement that, in addition to at least 2,500 total population, an
area must contain at least 1,500 persons residing outside
institutional group quarters to qualify as urban.
· Splitting urban agglomerations of 1,000,000 or more population based
on metropolitan statistical area boundaries, or, in New England,
along metropolitan New England city and town area boundaries.
For further information about the Census Bureau urban-rural classification,
or the proposed criteria for the 2010 Census, please contact Vincent Osier,
Chief, Geographic Standards and Criteria Branch, Geography Division, U.S.
Census Bureau, via e-mail at vincent.osier(a)census.gov or telephone at
301-763-9039.