U.S. Census Bureau

U.S. Department of Commerce

and
U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Development
Joint Release

                        IMMEDIATE RELEASE
                     MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1997

Public Information Office                            CB97-H.03
301-457-3030/301-457-3670 (fax)
301-457-4067 (TTD)
e-mail: pio@census.gov

Ed Montfort
301-763-8551

                    Twenty-One Percent of the 
       New York-Nassau-Suffolk-Orange Metropolitan Area's 
        Households Give High Marks to Their Neighborhood,
                    Census Bureau Report Says

   About 21 percent of households in the New York-Nassau-Suffolk-Orange,
N.Y.  Metropolitan Area rated their neighborhood a perfect 10 and about 26
percent said their home was "the best place to live," according to a new
report released today by the Commerce Department's Census Bureau and the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). 

   In the report, American Housing Survey for the New
York-Nassau-Suffolk-Orange Metropolitan Area in 1995, H170/95-53,
respondents were asked to rate their neighborhood and their house or
apartment as a place to live based on scales of 1 to 10, where 10 is the
best and 1 is the worst. 

   Of the households in these neighborhoods, 14 percent reported problems
with crime, 8 percent reported problems with traffic and a comparable
proportion experienced problems with litter or housing deterioration. 

   Other findings about the New York-Nassau-Suffolk-Orange, N.Y.
Metropolitan Area: 

   -	The area had 4,577,300 housing units in 1995, of which 4,207,900 were
	occupied (45 percent by owners and 55 percent by renters). 

   -	Multi-family homes, at 67 percent of all occupied units, represented
	the predominant housing type in the area. 

   -	The median age of homes in New York City was 56 years, compared with
	38 years for the remaining area. 

   -	Homes in the area had a median of 2.1 bedrooms. 

   -	Occupied homes in the area had a median of 2.3 persons per unit and a
	median of 4.6 rooms per unit. 

   -	The median monthly housing costs for owners was $931 and for renters
	was $650. Monthly housing costs include mortgage payments or contract
	rent, utilities, fuels, insurance, real estate taxes (for owners)
	and other housing-related expenditures. 

   -	Monthly housing costs that were $1,000 or more accounted for 46
	percent of the owners and 16 percent of the renters. 

   -	The median household income for area homeowners was $57,400; for
	renters, it was $24,000. 

   -	Owners had monthly housing costs that represented a median of 22
	percent of their current income; for renters, it was 32 percent. 

   -	The median value of homeowners' residences in 1995 was $172,700, down
	11 percent from a 1995 constant dollar figure of $195,100 for
	1991. 

   -	Of the 22,500 owner-occupied homes built or purchased during the last
	four years, about 100 percent cost $100,000 or more; 69 percent of
	the owners of new homes used savings or cash-on-hand for their
	down payment. 

   Data in the report are shown separately for units with African American
and Hispanic householders. Since data in the report are from a survey,
they are subject to sampling variability. 
-X-
The Census Bureau pre-eminent collector and provider of timely, relevant,
and quality data about the people and economy of the United States. In
over 100 surveys annually and 20 censuses a decade, evolving from the
first census in 1790, the Census Bureau provides official information
about America's people, businesses, industries and institutions. 


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
301-763-3030

Last Revised: April 11, 2001 at 02:42:17 PM

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