Another example of using ACS data, and combining it with other data
These results are limited to county geography only.
Elaine
---------------
Thanks to FHWA Hawaii Division's Liz Fischer for sharing the interactive
online data tool below.
Brenda C. Kragh
Social Science Analyst
FHWA Office of Human Environment
Atlas of Rural and Small-Town America
This month's featured resource is the Atlas of Rural and Small-Town
America
<https://webmail3.dot.gov/exchweb/bin/redir.asp?URL=http://r20.rs6.net/t
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[
http://www.ers.usda.gov/data/ruralatlas/] , an interactive online data
tool maintained by the Economic Research Service of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. The Atlas highlights the value of the U.S. Census
Bureau's American Community Survey as a source of county data,
aggregating data from several different federal sources. Through its
interactive visual display, the Atlas assembles statistics on four broad
categories of socioeconomic factors including demographics, jobs,
agriculture indicators, and poverty trends. Users of this
information-rich tool have the option to view county-level maps; view
the entire country or zoom into specific regions, States, or county
areas; view a selected socioeconomic indicator; view a pop-up window
showing all the indicators for that county; print a version of the map
or save the image in a graphics-file format that may be added to
documents or presentations. A few clicks can provide a visual display of
trends affecting transportation use, such as the percentage of persons
over 65 living alone, retirement destinations projected to expand in the
next ten years, and the shape of employment changes throughout the
country.