To All
I think Paul’s results are worth replicating in each of our cities or regions. The
misattribution of the minority population has implications for equity in transportation
and other planning. This also raises a red flag about how to redistrict in a way that
ensures equal representation, particularly given the volatility at the block level. As
for the housing results, such wide swings in occupancy rates would make data much less
useful for a range of planning purposes. I don’t know how the Census Bureau would square
the occupancy rate Paul found in the Chelsea tract with ACS data that presumably is more
reflective of facts on the ground. The average household size example borders on the
indefensible and perhaps crosses that line.
Cliff Cook
Clifford Cook
Senior Planning Information Manager
Cambridge Community Development Department
344 Broadway, Cambridge, MA. 02139
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From: ctpp-news <ctpp-news-bounces(a)chrispy.net> On Behalf Of Paul Reim
Sent: Tuesday, November 5, 2019 11:49 AM
To: ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net
Subject: Re: [CTPP] 2010 Demonstration Data Products
Thanks for pointing this out, Ed.
I downloaded the redistricting dataset (PL94) and ran some comparisons to 2010 SF1
numbers. The first thing that jumps out to me is that housing and population data are
apparently adjusted independently of one another. Here’s a sample block group from the
city of Chelsea, MA:
2010 Census Counts
Demonstration Data
Difference
City
Chelsea
STATE
25
Housing Units (HU)
1,005
1,005
0
COUNTY
25
Households (Occupied HU)
946
573
-373
COUSUB
13205
Occupancy Rate
94.2%
57.0%
-37.2%
TRACT
160601
BLKGRP
1
Total Population
2,158
2,142
-16
Group Quarters Population
0
0
0
Population in Households
2,158
2,142
-16
Average Household Size
2.28
3.74
1.46
In this example, the significant reduction in occupied housing units (households) is not
matched by a reduction in population. The changes to housing occupancy rate and average
household size are significant.
Looking at all 2,438 block groups in our 97-city MPO region:
211 block groups (8.7%) have occupied housing unit changes of at least +/- 100.
Only 3 block groups have population changes of at least +/- 100.
The shifts in households serve to fill some block groups at the expense of others. The
number of block groups with 100% housing unit occupancy increases from 14 to 1,319. The
number of block groups with less than 75% occupancy increases from 21 to 166.
222 block groups have a change in average household size of more than +/- 0.5.
The changes at the TAZ level are more significant given that our TAZs are loosely based on
block boundaries (there are a number of split blocks) and the block data is more volatile.
Over 300 out of 2,727 TAZs contain fewer than 10 blocks.
Here are two examples from Boston and Chelsea:
2010 Census Counts
Demonstration Data
Difference
City
Boston
TAZ
74
Housing Units (HU)
13
13
0
Households (Occupied HU)
12
12
0
Occupancy Rate
92.3%
92.3%
0.0%
Total Population
1,644
1,903
259
Group Quarters Population
1,624
1,633
9
Population in Households
20
270
250
Average Household Size
1.67
22.50
20.83
City
Chelsea
Housing Units (HU)
660
660
0
TAZ
472
Households (Occupied HU)
619
315
-304
Occupancy Rate
93.8%
47.7%
-46.1%
Total Population
2,123
2,128
5
Group Quarters Population
0
0
0
Population in Households
2,123
2,128
5
Average Household Size
3.43
6.76
3.33
In the Boston example, the increase in household population results in an average
household size of 22.5!
Looking at the 1,901 TAZs within our MPO region:
116 TAZs (10.5%) have occupied housing unit changes of at least +/- 100.
144 TAZs have population changes of at least +/- 100.
The number of TAZs with 100% housing unit occupancy increases from 64 to 815. The number
of block groups with less than 75% occupancy increases from 41 to 102.
222 TAZs have a change in average household size of more than +/- 0.5.
Another point of concern is with minority population data. Here are a couple of examples
from Boston:
2010 Census Counts
Demonstration Data
Difference
City
Boston
TAZ
199
Total Population
1,085
991
-94
Minority Population
326
210
-116
Minority Percentage
30.1%
21.2%
-8.9%
City
Boston
TAZ
74
Total Population
1,644
1,903
259
Minority Population
256
569
313
Minority Percentage
15.6%
29.9%
14.3%
For our MPO region:
* The minority population percentage in both datasets is 28.2%. TAZs with minority
population percentages higher than this are flagged as minority TAZs.
* 116 of 1,901 TAZs (including both seen in the example) would have a change in
minority status: 46 from minority to non-minority and 70 from non-minority to minority.
* 287 TAZs have a change in minority population percentage of at least +/- 5%.
The changes are not as significant at the block group level.
We will be redrawing TAZ boundaries following the 2020 Census, and the starting point for
TAZs will likely be block groups. Given the volatility of the block-level data after
application of differential privacy, we’ll require data from some other source where we
need to divide block groups into multiple TAZs. I think the block group population numbers
we’ll get post-differential privacy will be workable. But the household numbers are a
problem. We can’t be confident in our trip generation results if we don’t know how many
households are in each TAZ.
Since the 2006-2010 ACS was first released in 2011, we have used population and household
counts from the 2010 Census as the controls for normalizing ACS statistics. We envision
doing the same with 2020 Census and 2016-2020 ACS data when they are available. But,
again, we need accurate population and household controls.
Another area where the minority population numbers are a concern is in the Environmental
Justice (EJ) component of project scoring for our Transportation Improvement Program. We
create a half mile buffer around project locations and summarize block-level population
data for the buffers in order to score each project. The uncertainty in the minority
population statistics, and in other EJ population statistics drawn from the ACS, could
raise questions as to whether our universe of projects is distributed equitably.
I look forward to hearing from others who have an opportunity to look at this data.
Paul Reim
Paul Reim | Chief Planner
CENTRAL TRANSPORTATION PLANNING STAFF
857.702.3688 | preim@ctps.org<mailto:preim@ctps.org>
www.ctps.org/bostonmpo<https://gcc01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?u…
[
https://docs.google.com/uc?export=download&id=0B9edLsc4tnwxeEU0M3hmMEVw…]
From: ctpp-news
<ctpp-news-bounces@chrispy.net<mailto:ctpp-news-bounces@chrispy.net>> On
Behalf Of Ed Christopher
Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2019 10:53 AM
To: ctpp-news@chrispy.net<mailto:ctpp-news@chrispy.net>
Subject: [CTPP] 2010 Demonstration Data Products
This may be of interest to some:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Yesterday the Census Bureau released the 2010 Demonstration Data Products to help data
users understand how differential privacy may or may not impact data products they are
used to receiving. The products include the 2010 Demonstration Public Law 94-171 (P.L.
94-171) Redistricting Data Summary File and the Demographic and Housing Demonstration
File, which is similar to Summary File 1.
Documentation and resources related to these products are available on the Census Bureau’s
website:
https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census/2020-census/planni…
The Census Bureau is working on an FAQ document to provide additional information about
these data. You can also direct questions to the Census Bureau via email:
dcmd.2010.demonstration.data.products@census.gov<mailto:dcmd.2010.demonstration.data.products@census.gov>.
--
Ed Christopher
Transportation Planning Consultant
708-269-5237
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§ 10.