2001 American Community Survey Profile
Hollywood city
American Community Survey Logo

TABLE 3. PROFILE OF SELECTED ECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS
  Estimate Lower
Bound
Upper
Bound
EMPLOYMENT STATUS
Population 16 years and over
109,430
105,348
113,512
In labor force
71,692
67,848
75,537
Civilian labor force
71,468
67,640
75,296
Employed
64,765
61,315
68,215
Unemployed
6,703
5,017
8,389
Percent unemployed
9.4
7.3
11.5
Armed Forces
224
46
402
Not in labor force
37,738
34,905
40,571
 
Females 16 years and over
57,165
54,687
59,643
In labor force
34,569
32,002
37,136
Civilian labor force
34,569
32,002
37,136
Employed
30,615
28,383
32,847
 
Own children under 6 years
8,810
7,252
10,368
All parents in family in labor force
6,617
5,211
8,023
 
Own children 6 to 17 years
19,987
17,073
22,901
All parents in family in labor force
14,592
11,967
17,217
 
Population 16 to 19 years
6,020
4,852
7,188
Not enrolled in school and not a H.S. graduate
489
172
806
Unemployed or not in the labor force
270
0
567
 
COMMUTING TO WORK
Workers 16 years and over
63,191
59,787
66,595
Car, truck, or van -- drove alone
46,481
43,117
49,845
Car, truck, or van -- carpooled
9,671
7,826
11,516
Public transportation (including taxicab)
1,828
1,021
2,635
Walked
1,409
668
2,150
Other means
1,591
779
2,403
Worked at home
2,211
1,335
3,087
Mean travel time to work (minutes)
25.4
23.9
26.9
 
Employed civilian population 16 years and over
64,765
61,315
68,215
OCCUPATION
Management, professional, and related occupations
20,682
18,808
22,556
Service occupations
10,537
9,007
12,067
Sales and office occupations
20,281
18,276
22,286
Farming, fishing, and forestry occupations
124
7
241
Construction, extraction, and maintenance occupations
6,898
5,548
8,248
Production, transportation, and material moving occupations
6,243
4,849
7,637
 
INDUSTRY
Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting, and mining
123
6
240
Construction
5,249
3,987
6,511
Manufacturing
5,113
4,065
6,161
Wholesale trade
3,010
2,111
3,909
Retail trade
7,388
6,126
8,650
Transportation and warehousing, and utilities
3,849
2,818
4,880
Information
1,884
1,297
2,471
Finance, insurance, real estate, and rental and leasing
5,172
4,152
6,192
Professional, scientific, management, administrative, and waste management services
7,917
6,288
9,546
Educational, health, and social services
12,723
10,910
14,536
Arts, entertainment, recreation, accommodation, and food services
5,743
4,649
6,837
Other services (except public administration)
4,303
3,214
5,392
Public administration
2,291
1,705
2,877
 
CLASS OF WORKER
Private wage and salary workers
52,774
49,540
56,008
Government workers
7,768
6,280
9,256
Self-employed workers in own not incorporated business
4,089
2,914
5,264
Unpaid family workers
134
5
263
 
INCOME AND BENEFITS (IN 2001 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)
Total households
58,590
56,622
60,558
Less than $10,000
6,533
5,469
7,597
$10,000 to $14,999
4,707
3,727
5,687
$15,000 to $24,999
10,212
8,816
11,608
$25,000 to $34,999
6,554
5,312
7,796
$35,000 to $49,999
9,028
7,635
10,421
$50,000 to $74,999
9,774
8,550
10,998
$75,000 to $99,999
5,368
4,432
6,304
$100,000 to $149,999
4,555
3,743
5,367
$150,000 to $199,999
731
368
1,094
$200,000 or more
1,128
767
1,489
Median household income (dollars)
36,463
34,481
38,445
Mean household income (dollars)
50,056
47,002
53,110
 
With earnings
44,681
42,807
46,555
Mean earnings (dollars)
52,013
48,596
55,430
With Social Security
16,919
15,444
18,394
Mean Social Security income (dollars)
11,770
11,127
12,414
With retirement income
7,730
6,775
8,685
Mean retirement income (dollars)
15,661
13,448
17,874
 
With public assistance income or noncash benefit(s)
8,145
6,855
9,435
With Supplemental Security Income
2,275
1,495
3,055
Mean Supplemental Security Income (dollars)
6,306
5,174
7,438
With cash public assistance income
398
131
665
Mean cash public assistance income (dollars)
3,098
649
5,547
With Food Stamp benefits in the past 12 months
3,222
2,348
4,097
With free or reduced price school meal benefits in the past 12 months
4,219
3,250
5,188
 
Families
33,113
31,349
34,877
Less than $10,000
1,619
1,103
2,135
$10,000 to $14,999
2,661
1,803
3,519
$15,000 to $24,999
4,990
3,906
6,074
$25,000 to $34,999
3,229
2,293
4,165
$35,000 to $49,999
5,648
4,613
6,683
$50,000 to $74,999
6,087
5,059
7,115
$75,000 to $99,999
4,185
3,418
4,952
$100,000 to $149,999
3,039
2,415
3,663
$150,000 to $199,999
651
278
1,024
$200,000 or more
1,004
641
1,367
Median family income (dollars)
45,089
42,357
47,821
Mean family income (dollars)
60,242
55,285
65,199
 
Per capita income (dollars)
22,276
20,898
23,654
 
Nonfamily households
25,477
23,271
27,683
Median nonfamily income (dollars)
24,784
22,471
27,097
Mean nonfamily income (dollars)
35,339
32,574
38,104
 
Median earnings (dollars):
24,790
23,422
26,158
Male full-time, year-round workers
35,726
33,824
37,628
Female full-time, year-round workers
26,306
25,095
27,517
 
NUMBER BELOW POVERTY IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS
Families
3,999
3,133
4,865
With related children under 18 years
2,900
2,174
3,626
With related children under 5 years only
755
222
1,288
 
Families with female householder, no husband present
2,431
1,623
3,240
With related children under 18 years
1,966
1,266
2,666
With related children under 5 years only
482
60
904
 
Individuals
21,907
17,998
25,816
18 years and over
14,534
11,963
17,105
65 years and over
2,746
2,061
3,431
Related children under 18 years
7,080
4,991
9,169
Related children 5 to 17 years
5,034
3,161
6,907
Unrelated individuals 15 years and over
7,111
5,712
8,510
 
PERCENT BELOW POVERTY IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS
Individuals
16.1
13.5
18.7
18 years and over
13.7
11.4
16.0
65 years and over
12.9
9.8
16.0
Related children under 18 years
23.6
18.0
29.2
Related children under 5 years
26.5
17.4
35.6
Related children 5 to 17 years
22.5
16.1
28.9
Unrelated individuals 15 years and over
20.5
16.9
24.1
 

The 2001 American Community Survey universe is limited to the household population and excludes the population living in institutions, college dormitories, and other group quarters. Data are based on a sample and are subject to sampling variability. The degree of uncertainty for an estimate is represented through the use of a confidence interval. The confidence interval computed here is a 90 percent confidence interval and can be interpreted roughly as providing 90 percent certainty that the true number falls between the lower and upper bounds.

The number of householders does not necessarily equal the number of households because of differences in the weighting schemes for the population and occupied housing units.

Employment and unemployment estimates may vary from the official labor force data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics because of differences in survey design and data collection.

Industry categories adhere to the guidelines issued in Clarification Memorandum No. 2, "NAICS Alternate Aggregation Structure for Use By U. S. Statistical Agencies," issued by the Office of Management and Budget.

Free or reduced price school meal benefits figures only include households with children under 18 years.

1. An '*' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that too few sample observations were available to compute a standard error and thus the lower and upper bounds. A statistical test is not appropriate.
2. An '**' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that no sample observations were available to compute a standard error and thus the lower and upper bounds. A statistical test is not appropriate.
3. An '-' entry in the estimate column indicates that no sample observations were available to compute an estimate.
4. An '-' following a median estimate means the median falls in the lowest interval of an open-ended distribution.
5. An '+' following a median estimate means the median falls in the upper interval of an open-ended distribution.
6. An '***' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that the median falls in the lowest interval or upper interval of an open-ended distribution. A statistical test is not appropriate.
7. An '*****' entry in the lower and upper bound columns indicates that the estimate is controlled. A statistical test is not appropriate.
8. An 'N' entry in the estimate, lower bound, and upper bound columns indicates that data for this geographic area cannot be displayed because the number of sample cases is too small.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau
American Community Survey Office

Created: Wednesday May 29, 2002
Last revised: Thursday August 23, 2007