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IV. Geographic
Areas
Census geography provides the framework for interpreting, analyzing, and
understanding census data. The Census Bureau classifies all geographic
entities into two broad categories: legal and administrative entities,
and statistical entities.
Legal/Administrative entities generally originate from charters,
laws, treaties, resolutions or court decisions. They include:
- Congressional District. One of the 435 areas from which
people are elected to the U.S. House of Representatives.
- County. The primary legal division of every state except
Alaska and Louisiana. A number of geographic entities are not legally
designated as a county, but are recognized by the Census Bureau as equivalent
to a county for data presentation purposes. These include the boroughs,
city and boroughs, municipality, and census areas in Alaska; parishes
in Louisiana; and cities that are independent of any county in Maryland,
Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia. They also include the municipios in
Puerto Rico, districts and islands in American Samoa, municipalities
in the Northern Mariana Islands, and islands in the Virgin Islands of
the United States. Because they contain no primary legal divisions,
the Census Bureau treats the District of Columbia and Guam each as equivalent
to a county (as well as equivalent to a state) for data presentation
purposes. In American Samoa, a county is a minor civil division.
- Incorporated Place (cities, towns, villages, etc.).
A type of governmental unit, incorporated under state law as a city,
town (except in New England, New York, and Wisconsin), borough (except
in Alaska and New York), or village, generally to provide a wide array
of specific governmental services for a concentration of people within
legally prescribed boundaries. New for Census 2000 are "city and borough"
and "municipality," which serve as both place- and county-level entities
in Alaska.
- Minor Civil Division (MCD). The primary governmental
or administrative division of a county or statistically equivalent entity
in many states and statistically equivalent entities. MCDs are identified
by a variety of terms, such as township, town (in eight states), or
district. The Census Bureau recognizes MCDs in 28 states, the
District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas. In 20 states
and American Samoa, all or many MCDs are active general-purpose governmental
units. Many MCDs are not general-purpose governmental units, and therefore
do not have elected officials to carry out legal functions; instead,
they serve as nonfunctioning administrative entities.
- State. A primary governmental division of the United
States. The Census Bureau treats the District of Columbia as the equivalent
of a state for data presentation purposes. It also treats a number of
entities that are not legal divisions of the United States (e.g. Island
Areas) as the equivalent of states for data presentation purposes.
- United States. The 50 states and the District of Columbia.
- Voting District (VTD). The generic name for a geographic
entity - such as an election district,
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precinct, or ward -
established by state, local, and tribal governments for the purpose
of conducting elections. Some reviewing officials adjusted the
boundaries of the voting districts (VTDs) they submitted to conform
to census block boundaries for data presentation purposes, and
therefore a VTD for which Census 2000 provides data might not
exactly represent the legal entity; the Census Bureau refers to
such VTDs as pseudo-voting districts (pseudo-VTDs).
Such VTDs, as well as any others for which state officials did
not specify a status, are identified by a "P" in the VTD indicator
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the Public Law (PL) data file.
Statistical entities usually evolve from practice, custom, usage,
or need, and generally the Census Bureau develops criteria and guidelines
for their identification and delineation. They include:
- Block Group (BG). A statistical subdivision of a census
tract. A BG consists of all tabulation blocks whose numbers begin with
the same digit in a census tract. BGs generally contain between
300 and 3,000 people, with an optimum size of 1,500 people. The BG is
the lowest-level geographic entity for which the Census Bureau tabulates
sample data from a decennial census.
- Census Block. An area bounded on all sides by visible
and/or nonvisible features shown on a map prepared by the Census Bureau.
A block is the smallest geographic entity for which the Census Bureau
tabulates decennial census data. The census blocks were completely
renumbered for Census 2000.
- Census County Division (CCD). A statistical subdivision
of a county, established and delineated cooperatively by the Census
Bureau and state, local, and tribal officials for data presentation
purposes. CCDs have been established in 21 states.
- Census Designated Place (CDP). A geographic entity that serves
as the statistical counterpart of an incorporated place for the purpose
of presenting census data for an area with a concentration of population,
housing, and commercial structures that is identifiable by name, but
is not within an incorporated place. CDPs usually are defined cooperatively
with state, local, and tribal officials based on Census Bureau guidelines.
For Census 2000, for the first time, CDPs did not have to meet
minimum population threshold to qualify for the tabulation of census
data.
Note: A CDP in Puerto Rico is called a comunidad or zona urbana.
- Census Regions and Division. The 50 states and the District
of Columbia have been grouped into four regions, each containing two
or three divisions.
- Census Tract. A small, relatively permanent statistical
subdivision of a county or statistically equivalent entity, delineated
for data presentation purposes by a local group of census data users
or the geographic staff of a regional census center in accordance with
Census Bureau guidelines. Census tracts generally contain between 1,000
and 8,000 people. Census tract boundaries are delineated with the intention
of being stable over many decades, so they generally follow relatively
permanent visible features. However, they may follow governmental unit
boundaries and other invisible features in some instances; the boundary
of a state or county is always a census tract boundary. Block
Numbering Areas (BNAs) are now called census tracts.
- Metropolitan Area (MA). A large population nucleus,
together with adjacent communities that have a high degree of economic
and social integration with that nucleus. (Some MAs are defined around
two or more nuclei.) MA is a collective term, established by the federal
Office of Management and Budget in 1990, to refer to metropolitan statistical
areas (MSAs), consolidated metropolitan statistical areas (CMSAs), and
primary metropolitan statistical areas (PMSAs).
- Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) – an MSA is
a metropolitan area (MA) that is not closely associated with another
MA. An MSA consists of one or more counties, except in New England,
where MSAs are defined in terms of county subdivisions (primarily cities
and towns).
- Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area (PMSA) - If an area that
qualifies as a metropolitan area (MA) has a population of one million
or more, two or more primary metropolitan statistical areas (PMSAs)
may be defined within it if they meet official standards and local governments
favor that designation. When PMSAs are established within an MA, that
MA is designated a consolidated metropolitan statistical area.
- Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area (CMSA) - An area
becomes a CMSA if it qualifies as a metropolitan area, has a population
of 1,000,000 or more, has component parts that qualify as primary metropolitan
statistical areas (PMSAs) based on official standards, and local governments
favor the designation. CMSAs consist of whole counties except in New
England, where they consist of county subdivisions (primarily cities
and towns).
- Public Use Microdata Area (PUMA). A geographic entity
for which the US Census Bureau provides specially selected extracts
of raw data from a small sample of long-form census records that are
screened to protect confidentiality of census records. The extract files
are referred to as public use microdata samples (PUMS). Public use microdata
areas (PUMAs), which must have a minimum census population of 100,000
and cannot cross a state line, receive a 5-percent sample of the long-form
records; these records are presented in state files. These Pumas are
aggregated into super-Pumas, which must have a minimum census
population of 400,000 and receive a 1-percent sample in a national file.
Pumas and super-Pumas are mutually exclusive, that is, they use different
records to create each sample. Data users can use these files
to create their own statistical tabulations and data summaries.
- Rural. All territory, population, and housing units located
outside of urbanized areas and urban clusters.
- Urban. All territory, population, and housing units located
within urbanized areas and urban clusters.
- Urbanized Area (UA). Densely settled area that has a
census population of at least 50000. The geographic core of block
groups or blocks must have a population density of at least 1,000 people
per square mile, and adjacent block groups and blocks with at least
500 people per square mile.
- Urban Cluster (UC). Consists of a geographic core of
block groups or blocks must have a population density of at least 1,000
people per square mile, and adjacent block groups and blocks with at
least 500 people per square mile that together encompass a population
of at least 2,500 people, but fewer than 50,000 people.
- ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA ). A statistical entity
developed by the Census Bureau to approximate the delivery area for
a US Postal Service 5-digit or 3-digit ZIP Code in the US and Puerto
Rico. A ZCTA is an aggregation of census blocks that have the same predominant
ZIP Code associated with the mailing addresses in the Census Bureau’s
Master Address File. Thus, the Postal Service's delivery areas have
been adjusted to encompass whole census blocks so that the Census Bureau
can tabulate census data for the ZCTAs. ZCTAs do not include all ZIP
Codes used for mail delivery.
There are both legal and statistical American Indian, Alaska Native,
and native Hawaiian entities for which the Census Bureau provides data
for Census 2000. The legal entities consist of federally recognized
American Indian reservations and off-reservation trust land areas, the tribal
subdivisions that can divide these entities, state recognized American Indian
reservations, Alaska Native Regional Corporations, and Hawaiian home lands.
The statistical entities are Alaska Native village statistical areas, Oklahoma
tribal statistical areas, tribal designated statistical areas, and state
designated American Indian statistical areas. Tribal subdivisions
can exist within the statistical Oklahoma tribal statistical areas.
For more information on these areas, as well as other census geography,
see the Geographic Changes for Census 2000 + Glossary http://www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/glossary.html
which provides good background for Census 2000 users including changes
from 1990 geography and new terms. The Geographic Areas Reference
Manual (1994) http://www.census.gov/geo/www/garm.html
has excellent background and user aids.
The geographic areas may work in a hierarchical fashion, with smaller
areas nesting in larger ones (e.g., blocks in block groups, in census
tracts in counties, etc.). Some areas, like ZIP Code Tabulation
Areas, are given only as subsets of the nation (See Figure 4).
Figure 4. Geographic Hierarchy for the 2000 Decennial Census
One easy way to understand the relationships of the geographic areas
is to use the American FactFinder (AFF). An address search shows
a series “Geographies Containing” that address. Users can click
on block, block group, census tract, etc., and press the “map it” button
to explore the different levels of geography.
When you look up the “National Zoo,” AFF displays the census geographies
for that area (see Figure 5).

After selecting the tract number (5.01) and clicking the “map it” button,
the map shown in Figure 6 is displayed.
Figure 6 – Map of Census Tract 5.01, Washington D.C.
The labels show you the city, county, and state (or in this case, the
equivalents), tract numbers, and more.
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