Note: The 2003 American Community Survey universe is limited to the household population and excludes the population living in institutions, college dormitories, and other group quarters.
TABLE 1. GENERAL DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS
Estimate
Lower Bound
Upper Bound
Total population
663,721
*****
*****
SEX AND AGE
Male
330,754
330,418
331,090
Female
332,967
332,631
333,303
Under 5 years
52,271
52,139
52,403
5 to 9 years
54,326
51,815
56,837
10 to 14 years
56,481
53,951
59,011
15 to 19 years
47,418
46,408
48,428
20 to 24 years
40,286
39,299
41,273
25 to 34 years
86,573
86,363
86,783
35 to 44 years
112,355
112,114
112,596
45 to 54 years
98,292
98,057
98,527
55 to 59 years
36,158
34,752
37,564
60 to 64 years
23,723
22,324
25,122
65 to 74 years
32,058
31,446
32,670
75 to 84 years
19,214
18,382
20,046
85 years and over
4,566
3,826
5,306
Median age (years)
34.5
34.3
34.7
18 years and over
470,168
*****
*****
21 years and over
443,805
442,155
445,455
62 years and over
67,470
66,388
68,552
65 years and over
55,838
55,835
55,841
Male
24,481
24,477
24,485
Female
31,357
31,353
31,361
RACE
One race
650,356
647,787
652,925
White
528,251
522,622
533,880
Black or African American
42,246
39,988
44,504
American Indian and Alaska Native
2,001
501
3,501
Asian
33,296
32,319
34,273
Asian Indian
7,665
6,001
9,329
Chinese (except Taiwanese)
7,888
5,818
9,958
Filipino
8,444
6,578
10,310
Japanese
1,598
867
2,329
Korean
5,813
3,953
7,673
Vietnamese
268
0
627
Other Asian
1,620
792
2,448
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
0
0
489
Native Hawaiian
N
N
N
Guamanian or Chamorro
N
N
N
Samoan
N
N
N
Other Pacific Islander
N
N
N
Some other race
44,562
38,934
50,190
Two or more races
13,365
10,796
15,934
Two races including Some other race
2,902
1,796
4,008
Two races excluding Some other race, and Three or more races
10,463
7,966
12,960
Race alone or in combination with one or more other races:
White
540,724
534,878
546,570
Black or African American
47,553
46,264
48,842
American Indian and Alaska Native
4,852
3,059
6,645
Asian
37,360
36,644
38,076
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
0
0
489
Some other race
47,512
41,643
53,381
HISPANIC ORIGIN AND RACE
Total population
663,721
*****
*****
Hispanic or Latino (of any race)
111,883
*****
*****
Mexican
91,047
87,928
94,166
Puerto Rican
6,780
4,955
8,605
Cuban
924
301
1,547
Other Hispanic or Latino
13,132
10,156
16,108
Not Hispanic or Latino
551,838
*****
*****
White alone
465,764
465,326
466,202
Black or African American alone
41,640
39,435
43,845
American Indian or Alaska Native alone
650
349
951
Asian alone
33,216
32,264
34,168
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone
0
0
489
Some other race alone
1,268
625
1,911
Two or more races:
9,300
7,022
11,578
Two races including Some other race
405
97
713
Two races excluding Some other race, and Three or more races
8,895
6,621
11,169
RELATIONSHIP
Household population
663,721
*****
*****
Householder
236,521
233,583
239,459
Spouse
143,996
141,400
146,592
Child
227,668
224,156
231,180
Other relatives
32,544
28,396
36,692
Nonrelatives
22,992
19,534
26,450
Unmarried partner
10,174
8,586
11,762
HOUSEHOLDS BY TYPE
Total households
226,074
224,274
227,874
Family households (families)
166,516
163,516
169,516
With own children under 18 years
89,506
86,705
92,307
Married-couple families
138,302
135,065
141,539
With own children under 18 years
74,000
71,081
76,919
Female householder, no husband present
19,779
17,786
21,772
With own children under 18 years
11,840
10,142
13,538
Nonfamily households
59,558
56,685
62,431
Householder living alone
49,325
46,623
52,027
65 years and over
14,087
12,933
15,241
Households with one or more people under 18 years
94,550
91,577
97,523
Households with one or more people 65 years and over
Footnotes The 2003 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.
For more information on understanding race and Hispanic origin data, please see the Census 2000 Brief entitled, Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin, issued March 2001. (pdf format)
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.
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