The Dynamic Tab Component displays full page content under each tab. Users navigate between the tabs to access the page content. The component displays one page per tab.
The difference between this component and the Manual Tab Component, is this component uses the standard sorting choices (building the tab order) of publication date, collection year or month, and reference year or month.
The Dynamic Tab Component is useful when you need to organize related content into separate views without overwhelming the user.
In contrast to the Manual Tab Component, the Dynamic Tab Component does not rely on the author to manually order the tabs; instead, it offers preset manners by which to order the tabs. Tabs can be built by collection month/year, by reference month/year, or by publication date and can be sorted manually or from oldest to newest or newest to oldest.
Content authors should use the Dynamic Tab Component when they have a set of pages, releases, or data that tends to be organized by a preset order to parse items.
View on public site:
DEC. 8, 2021 — Today the U.S. Census Bureau released a list of 331 jurisdictions (counties and minor civil divisions) across the nation and three states that are required under the Voting Rights Act to provide language assistance during elections for citizens who are unable to speak or understand English adequately enough to participate in the electoral process. The Census Bureau made these determinations in accordance with specifications in the Voting Rights Act, as amended in July 2006.
The list, published in the Federal Register, identifies the jurisdictions that are covered by Section 203 of the Voting Rights Act and must provide language assistance for “persons who are American Indian, Asian American, Alaska Natives, or of Spanish heritage.”
The 331 covered jurisdictions make up 4.1% of the 2,920 counties and 5,120 minor civil divisions that constitute the political subdivisions in the United States that were calculated for the Section 203 determinations.
The 2021 determinations found:
The Census Bureau has made these determinations following each decennial census since Section 203 was first enacted in 1975. In 2006, Congress specified that the Census Bureau use statistics from the American Community Survey (ACS) following the 2010 Census to conduct these determinations every 5 years. The determinations released today use data from the 2015-2019 ACS 5-year estimates.
A complete list of which jurisdictions are covered, including which language minority groups are included, is available in the Federal Register Notice.
In support of this Federal Register Notice, and as done with past publications of the Section 203 language determinations, the Census Bureau is releasing a set of public files presenting the underlying data used to construct these determinations. These files and information about these files can be downloaded from the Census Redistricting Data Program website.
No news release associated with this product. Tip sheet only.
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The configure dialog allows the content author to define multiple tabs. See below for more about the Tab Component dialog.
Individual pages that are in tabs should have redirects to their tabbed versions. While not required for these pages it is strongly recommended. This way users can only see the tabbed version of the page. To have this redirect added, submit a ticket to CNMP Web Support.
Expand the section below to see the Tabbed Page Component HTML output.
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</p><p><b>SEPT. 30, 2021</b> — The U.S. Census Bureau today released new data from the sixth phase of the <a href="https://www.census.gov/data/experimental-data-products/small-business-pulse-survey.html">Small Business Pulse Survey</a> (SBPS). Data collection began August 16. Results will be released weekly August 26 to October 21. New content in the SBPS Phase 6 covers difficulties hiring employees, new workplace norms, changes in demand for goods or services, and price changes from suppliers. In addition, Phase 6 will include information consistent with previous phases regarding location closings and openings, changes in employment, workplace vaccine and testing requirements, supply chain disruptions, and expectations concerning future operations.</p>
<p>Weekly data are available at the national, sector, state and metropolitan statistical area (MSA) level for the largest MSAs and Puerto Rico through the <a href="https://portal.census.gov/pulse/data/">SBPS interactive tool</a> and <a href="https://portal.census.gov/pulse/data/#downloads">downloadable files</a>. Sector and subsector data are also available. The SBPS collects near real-time data on the effects of the coronavirus pandemic on small businesses. These data inform federal and state decision-making.</p>
<p>No news release associated with this product. Tip sheet only.<br>
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