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
454,775
*****
*****
SEX AND AGE
Male
223,466
221,378
225,554
Female
231,309
229,221
233,397
Under 5 years
29,143
27,305
30,981
5 to 9 years
26,145
22,099
30,191
10 to 14 years
34,759
30,515
39,003
15 to 19 years
30,899
28,651
33,147
20 to 24 years
30,187
28,300
32,074
25 to 34 years
55,355
53,095
57,615
35 to 44 years
69,142
65,897
72,387
45 to 54 years
76,191
72,539
79,843
55 to 59 years
28,358
24,755
31,961
60 to 64 years
19,662
16,089
23,235
65 to 74 years
26,944
25,043
28,845
75 to 84 years
19,869
17,235
22,503
85 years and over
8,121
5,549
10,693
Median age (years)
37.9
37.2
38.6
18 years and over
346,025
345,184
346,866
21 years and over
329,953
327,284
332,622
62 years and over
65,292
61,977
68,607
65 years and over
54,934
53,157
56,711
Male
23,337
21,886
24,788
Female
31,597
30,216
32,978
RACE
One race
442,902
438,360
447,444
White
359,506
350,936
368,076
Black or African American
6,895
6,047
7,743
American Indian and Alaska Native
5,301
4,016
6,586
Asian
15,883
12,131
19,635
Asian Indian
4,960
774
9,146
Chinese (except Taiwanese)
3,872
1,011
6,733
Filipino
3,440
599
6,281
Japanese
1,580
303
2,857
Korean
0
0
482
Vietnamese
0
0
482
Other Asian
2,031
0
5,181
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
0
0
482
Native Hawaiian
N
N
N
Guamanian or Chamorro
N
N
N
Samoan
N
N
N
Other Pacific Islander
N
N
N
Some other race
55,317
46,043
64,591
Two or more races
11,873
7,331
16,415
Two races including Some other race
2,487
310
4,664
Two races excluding Some other race, and Three or more races
9,386
5,106
13,666
Race alone or in combination with one or more other races:
White
370,706
360,592
380,820
Black or African American
9,517
7,877
11,157
American Indian and Alaska Native
8,320
6,416
10,224
Asian
21,143
20,386
21,900
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
472
0
1,313
Some other race
57,804
48,648
66,960
HISPANIC ORIGIN AND RACE
Total population
454,775
*****
*****
Hispanic or Latino (of any race)
90,068
*****
*****
Mexican
75,100
67,686
82,514
Puerto Rican
935
0
2,459
Cuban
169
0
465
Other Hispanic or Latino
13,864
6,896
20,832
Not Hispanic or Latino
364,707
*****
*****
White alone
328,124
327,595
328,653
Black or African American alone
6,895
6,047
7,743
American Indian or Alaska Native alone
5,099
3,825
6,373
Asian alone
15,883
12,131
19,635
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone
0
0
482
Some other race alone
380
0
1,037
Two or more races:
8,326
4,117
12,535
Two races including Some other race
460
0
989
Two races excluding Some other race, and Three or more races
7,866
3,574
12,158
RELATIONSHIP
Household population
454,775
*****
*****
Householder
181,766
177,179
186,353
Spouse
91,344
85,563
97,125
Child
122,888
116,758
129,018
Other relatives
27,681
20,304
35,058
Nonrelatives
31,096
24,894
37,298
Unmarried partner
12,638
8,931
16,345
HOUSEHOLDS BY TYPE
Total households
174,264
170,509
178,019
Family households (families)
114,372
108,854
119,890
With own children under 18 years
56,927
51,644
62,210
Married-couple families
85,729
79,791
91,667
With own children under 18 years
41,056
36,291
45,821
Female householder, no husband present
18,218
14,348
22,088
With own children under 18 years
10,817
7,425
14,209
Nonfamily households
59,892
54,657
65,127
Householder living alone
43,958
39,158
48,758
65 years and over
18,441
14,846
22,036
Households with one or more people under 18 years
62,595
57,055
68,135
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.
[PDF] or
denotes a file in Adobe’s Portable Document Format.
To view the file, you will need the
Adobe® Acrobat® Reader available free from Adobe.
[Excel] or the letters [xls] indicate a document is in the Microsoft® Excel® Spreadsheet Format
(XLS). To view the file, you will need the
Microsoft®
Excel® Viewer
available for free from Microsoft®.