http://www.census.gov/acs/www/Special/Alerts/Latest.htm#News1
In case you are not subscribed to the ACS-Alert, just a
reminder to be prepared:
The reasons that 2005 ACS is important is because 2005 is
the first year of “full implementation.” This means that
surveys were conducted in ALL counties in the
As you know, the media gets access to the data a few days
early as “embargoed data.” This means that they can get
articles ready in advance but cannot release any data until the embargoed
date/time is met. For the August 15 release, they will get access to the
data on August 8. In addition to the media, the State Data Centers are
also included as recipients. Here is the link to find YOUR SDC,
http://www.census.gov/sdc/www/
They will NOT be able to release the data to you in advance, but you can
communicate with them in case they can develop some materials that will make
your life easier when August 15 arrives.
What is Elaine (FHWA Office of Planning) working on?
Elaine is working with Nanda
Srinivasan (Cambridge Systematics) and Ed Christopher (
We plan to include: 1990
Census, 2000 Census, and 2005 ACS data.
Geographic coverage: National
total (will include 2000 ACS (aka C2SS)) in the table
States (all 50)
MSAs over 1 million population (using Census 2000 to figure out which ones to
include--this is about 50 MSAs- see our JTW Trends report)
Cities over 1 million population (using Census 2000)
Topics to include:
1. Total
Population
2. Total
workers
3. Travel
mode to Work
4. Travel
time to work
a. distribution
b. mean travel time
5. Vehicles
available
6. Income
Other reminders: The
geographies that will show the greatest differences from decennial census are
areas that have high seasonal population shifts. The ACS is collected
over all 12 months of the year, not “April 1”.
My product goal is
SPREADSHEETs.
We know that the TRANSIT share for
MODE TO WORK is going to be one of the KEY ITEMS of interest.
I will be vacation in
Also, Ed and Nandu are working on
some web-based training to get people familiar with using American Fact Finder
to access the 2005 ACS tables. But, I don’t think we have the dates
set yet. Of course, you can go to American Fact Finder on your own and
review the 2004 ACS tables as a starting point.
If I have made any mistakes in this
email about Census Bureau products, I hope that someone from the CB will post
corrections to the listserv!
Elaine Murakami
206-220-4460