You are presumably using the Norfolk-etc., MSA as an example. Note that
there is a line break (space) between the line "Not in central city" and
the list of counties that are components of the MSA. The indent on the
"Not in central city" is at the same depth as those for the counties listed
after the line break. It is not that the counties listed are in the
portion of the metropolitan area outside the central cities. These are the
counties that are the components of the entire metro area. In Virginia,
independent cities are county equivalents, so the 5 central cities appear
as not only central cities but, because they are independent cities, they
must also appear as counties which are components of the MSA. If you look
at a table that has numbers rather than percentages, or even a simpler
metro area (like Ocala, FL) it may be more apparent as to what lines add up
to what.
-- Celia G. Boertlein
Journey-to-Work and Migration Statistics Branch
Population Division
U.S. Bureau of the Census
Washington, DC 20233-8800
phone: (301)763-2454
fax: (301)457-2481
email: Celia.G.Boertlein(a)Census.GOV
"Rob CASE"
<RCASE(a)hrpdc.org> To:
<ctpp-news(a)chrispy.net>
Sent by: cc:
owner-ctpp-news@c Subject: [CTPP] In central city vs not in
central city
hrispy.net
03/14/2003 11:27
AM
In one of the GCT-P12 tables on the census website, 5 of the localities
in our metro area are listed both under "in central city" and "not in
central city".
I also saw the same problem for other metro areas.
I think the census bureau may have made a mistake in this.
I thought at first that the bureau put PART of these 5 localities (say
the urbanized portion) under "in central city" and PART of them in "not
in central city", but the data listed next to both rows for each of the
5 is the same, so this explanation is not valid.
(Note: The table to which I'm referring is a companion table to the
table which was the subject of yesterday's post from Celia Boertlein.
To get to it:
Go to
http://www.census.gov
Click on "American FactFinder" in dark blue area on left.
Click on the words "Data Sets" mid-way down page in blue area.
Click on "Geographic Comparison Tables" on right.
Leave geographic type as "Nation".
Click on "United States and Puerto Rico -- Metropolitan Area, in
Central City, Not in Central City, County, and (in selected states)
County Subdivision" on table format below.
Click on "Next".
Click on "GCT-P12 -- Employment Status and Commuting to Work" table.
Click on "Show table".
It's a large table, so it takes a while to load.)
Do you agree that it's wrong for a locality to appear under both "in
central city" and "not in central city"?
Who should I contact at the bureau to get this fixed?
Rob
Robert B. Case, PE, PTOE
Principal Transportation Engineer
Hampton Roads Planning District Commission
723 Woodlake Dr., Chesapeake, Va. 23320
voice:757-420-8300; fax:757-523-4881
rcase(a)hrpdc.org