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Looking toward An Information Basein the 21 Century : the american community survey

By: ABBOTT, Gregory J.; CHAMBERS, Cheryl V.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: New york : Elsevier , 2000Government Information Quarterly 17, 2, p. 223-231Abstract: Communities traditionally have relied on demographic and economic data from the decennial census for key decisions. Those same data are used by Congress and federal agencies to distribute billions of dollars, to administer federal programs, and to evaluate the results of federal policies. As the decade progresses, communities and their financial supports have had no alternative other than to live with the fiction that their areas have not changed since the last census. This article describes the American Community Survey, which the U.S. Census Bureau has designed to provide demographic, economic, and housing information to communities every year instead of every 10 years, providing them with a "video" of changes in their areas, rather than the current decennial "snapshot."
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Communities traditionally have relied on demographic and economic data from the decennial census for key decisions. Those same data are used by Congress and federal agencies to distribute billions of dollars, to administer federal programs, and to evaluate the results of federal policies. As the decade progresses, communities and their financial supports have had no alternative other than to live with the fiction that their areas have not changed since the last census. This article describes the American Community Survey, which the U.S. Census Bureau has designed to provide demographic, economic, and housing information to communities every year instead of every 10 years, providing them with a "video" of changes in their areas, rather than the current decennial "snapshot."

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