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Geography 2.3.1. The times, they are a changin’. Today’s Geography Lesson. What we’ll cover The answers to the question everyone is asking – how do these geography tables work? New areas and area types What happens to time series? WILD CARD #1 – Census EEO geography
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Geography 2.3.1 The times, they are a changin’
Today’s Geography Lesson • What we’ll cover • The answers to the question everyone is asking – how do these geography tables work? • New areas and area types • What happens to time series? • WILD CARD #1 – Census EEO geography • WILD CARD #2 – New England geography
GEOG and SUBGEOG • Why are these table SO important? • What data are in the tables? • How they should be populated.
Next, a trip back through time • The year is 1949: • Bruce Springsteen, John Belushi, Aiswarya (Queen of Nepal) and Linda Tripp were born • Richard Strauss and Leadbelly passed away • EDSAC, first stored-program computer runs at Cambridge • Boxer Joe Louis retired • Standard Metropolitan Areas (SMA) were first defined
Something Old, Something New • Modern History • Standard Metropolitan Area (SMA, 1949) • Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA, 1959) • Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA, 1983) • Metropolitan Area (MA: MSA, CMSA, PMSA, 1990) • Core Based Statistical Area (CBSA: Metropolitan, Micropolitan, 2000)
Recent Update • OMB Bulletin #03-04, June 6, 2003 (see www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/b03-04.html) • Revised Metropolitan area definitions • 49 new Metropolitan Statistical Areas • Created Micropolitan Statistical Areas; Combined Statistical Areas; New England City and Town Areas
ALMIS Database Changes • New AREATYPE values • 21: Metropolitan Statistical Area (2003 revision) • 22: Micropolitan Statistical Area (2003 revision) • 23: Metropolitan Divisions (2003 revision) • 24: Combined Statistical Areas • New prototype content • ftp://ftp.xwalkcenter.org/almis/ver23 contain GEOG and SUBGEOG files in the lookup directories for FOX26 and TXT versions
More Recent Update • OMB Bulletin #04-03, February 18, 2004 (see http:www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/fy04/b04-03.html) • 13 new Micropolitan Statistical Areas • 1 deleted Metropolitan Statistical Area • 9 new Combined Statistical Areas • 3 new components to existing Combined Statistical Areas • 1 deleted component from existing Combined Statistical Area • 2 deleted Combined Statistical Areas • 1 new New England City and Town Area • One new Combined New England City and Town Area • 1 change to principal city and title of Metropolitan New England City and Town Area • 8 new principal cities for Metropolitan or Micropolitan Statistical Areas • 6 deleted principal cities for Metropolitan or Micropolitan Statistical Areas • 2 changes in the order of principal cities • 5 other title changes
Most Recent Update • OMB Bulletin #05-02, February 22, 2005 (see http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/fy05/b05-02.html) • 2 new Micropolitan Statistical Areas • 2 new components to existing Combined Statistical Areas • 3 new principal cities in Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas and Metropolitan Divisions • 1 deleted principal city for a Metropolitan Statistical Area • 4 changes in the order of principal cities
What the…? • Geographic definitions have become more fluid • OMB: Definitions “take effect immediately.” • Check for OMB updates at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/index.html • Subscribe to the NCSC RSS feed (see http://www.xwalkcenter.org/xw_rss.html)
Why worry? • Questions raised by OMB Bulletin 04-03 • What happened to the Bristol VA Metropolitan Statistical Area? • Where did the Greenville-Spartanburg-Anderson, SC Combined Statistical area come from?
Prior MSA Revisions • June 1999 • June 1993 • June 1990 • June 1983 • June 1981 • April 1973 • February 1971 • October 1963 • November 1960 • October 1950
How about data? • BLS series • LAUS: 2000 definitions with January 2005 • CES: 2000 definitions with January 2005 • OES: Tentative Spring 2006 • Other selected series • BEA: Back to 1969 on 2004 definitions (2002-2003 on 2005 definitions) • Census: 2000 Census data – 1999 definitions
Wild Card #1 Census EEO Geography • Different than any other geography • No areas with less than 50,000 population • Counties of 50,000 or more might not be presented separately – if they are combined with one or more smaller counties • Individual state EEO geography files can be found in CENLAB00.ZIP file found in state directories at: ftp://ftp.xwalkcenter.org/almis/states
Wild Card #2 New England Geography • New England is: all states north and east of New York • Counties are defined, but generally not used • Individual states may have developed their own systems – may be best source • NCSC prototype New England Geography: • Based on content taken from http://www.census.gov/population/www/estimates/metrodef.html • Used AREATYPE 05 – Minor Civil Division • Files available on NCSC FTP server. See ftp://ftp.xwalkcenter.org/almis/nonstd/readme.txt
What’s next • Still planning • Tentative resource list • GEOG and SUBGEOG sets for each OMB Bulletin • Archive of OMB change documents • RSS and e-mail notification of changes