Hello Marie --
Well, you learn something new everyday. I have never heard of a migpuma
before!
I agree with you that PUMA geography and the PUMS are not just for
academic research. We are happy that the CB now includes residence PUMA
as a tabulation geography as part of the 2005 ACS standard tabulations.
This benefits large cities, like Chicago. Maybe Table B07204 or C07204
"residence 1 year ago: State/County/place level" would be useful to
you?
Right now, in the ACS PUMS dataset, POW-PUMA is not a "real" PUMA. It is
generally limited to County, as the "basic" workplace coding completed
at the CB is to County-Place. In order to have a "real" POW-PUMA, the
Census Bureau will need to complete extended workplace allocation
(imputation) process for responses with ungeocoded workplace addresses.
This is because to assign workers to a "real" PUMA, the coding needs to
be complete to the census block level. Ungeocoded records continue to
be between 20-25 % of workers, similar to the Census 2000. I hope that
the extended workplace allocation will be established and part of the
NEXT CTPP, so that we can have PUMA-to-PUMA flows where the POW-PUMA is
not a county.
There has been some informal discussion among the CTPP Technical Working
Group about whether a "special" ACS PUMS file with the POW-PUMAs after
extended allocation has been completed would be possible, as part of
CTPP. We would have to take this to the CB's Disclosure Review Board
(as ALL tabulation and products go through the same review) for their
consideration.
This link is the ACS list of the POW-PUMAs. For example, 04890 includes
nearly 100 places and the "remainder" of Los Angeles County; 08100
includes 47 places and the remainder of San Diego County. I don't know
how many "real" PUMAs there are in Los Angeles County, but it is
probably nearly 100. I didn't look at Chicago, but I'm sure it has a
similar scale of loss of geographic detail.
http://www.census.gov/acs/www/Products/PUMS/C2SS/CodeList/2005/POWPUMA20
05lookup.htm
here is the list for the ACS MIG-PUMAs.
http://www.census.gov/acs/www/Products/PUMS/C2SS/CodeList/2005/MIGPUMA20
05lookup.htm
We understand that the Census Bureau staff are generally not allowed to
post messages to listservs, but I'm sure they will read your message and
consider your ideas for ACS PUMS files.
Elaine Murakami
FHWA Office of Planning
-----Original Message-----
From: ctpp-news-bounces(a)chrispy.net
[mailto:ctpp-news-bounces@chrispy.net] On Behalf Of
mbousfield(a)cityofchicago.org
Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2007 1:34 PM
To: Ed Christopher
Cc: ctpp-news maillist
Subject: Re: [CTPP] Brainstorming about INCOME variable for the
futureCTPP(using ACS records)
To CTPP-News Maillist and Other Census Groupies,
Comments about Elaine Murakami's email and Ed Christopher's email
both dated 5/31/07 with subject: [Brainstorming] about income
variable....
Elaine lists four presumed-wanted flows: county to county, place to
place, county to place, and place to county. These are insufficient for
many subregional analyses when the principal city is part of one or more
counties. In these cases, we need city to county remainder data and
county remainder to city data.
In 1980 and 1990, the City of Chicago was a migpuma This allowed us
to do city to county remainder and county remainder to city analyses.
For instance, using the PUMS file we analyzed inmigration and
outmigration by characteristic between the City of Chicago and its
suburbs.
In 2000, the City of Chicago was not a migpuma even though many smaller
areas were migpumas. The Census Bureau person Ms. Showalter told me that
no city of any size was a migpuma unless it coincided with one or more
counties such as the City of New York. As a consequence, we were not
able to determine in and outmigration between the City of Chicago and
the suburbs for the 1995-2000 period.
In the future ACS-PUMS are large cities like the City of Chicago
identified as migpumas and powpumas? I noticed that the 2004 ACS PUMS
has only MIGSTATE (allowing to determine the state of origin of movers.)
Can we please restore large cities as migpumas and powpumas and
identify the pumas, migpumas, and powpumas on the ACS-PUMS.
On their website, the Census Bureau claims that the ACS-PUMS file is
used for academic research. But my experience as a city demographer
shows that the PUMS files are very important tools in city management.
Please help if you are in a position to do so. Thank you,
Marie Bousfield, Demographer
City of Chicago
Department of Planning and Development
City Hall, Room 703
121 North LaSalle Street
Chicago, Illinois 60602
Tel. (312) 744-6536
Fax. (312) 744-0759
Email mbousfield(a)cityofchicago.org
http://www.cityofchicago.org
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