it would be nice to see or hear more about "who has done what" with
their county flow data. linked below is a piece i worked on focused on
the chicago area. one of the things that we here enjoy looking at, are
the flows that come into a county (imports), the ones that go out
(exports) and the ones that never leave (retains). analyzing how these
trend overtime certainly gives one a fuller appreciation of the dynamics
of our work travel and urban form. in 30 years we have seen the
character of an area (at the county level) change and go from a
collection of "bedroom communities" (exporter) to an area that is self
sustaining (importer and retainer) in its balance of trips. it will be
fun to look at this in more geographic detail "if and when" we ever get
our flow data.
http://www.berwyned.com/papers/co2cochgo.pdf
danielle.cervantes(a)uniontrib.com wrote:
This trend has been amply written about in San Diego.
I have the CTPP
data, and I was trained to explore it (thanks Steve and Paul!), but I
haven't had an opportunity yet. Generally, the "regular" Census
releases have answered our questions. Am I missing something?