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Before 2008, people who wanted basic information from the Census – data about housing, income, transportation, education, and ancestry, among other categories – had a problem. The Census Bureau only tallied such data once every 10 years, and the newest data generally wasnat least two years old. Enter the American Community Survey (ACS), a questionnaire sent to 3.5 million households every year.
The results are reported in two waves: Generally, a one-year sample released in late summer that reports the results from states, counties, cities, towns, and other jurisdictions with more than 65,000 people, and a five-year sample at the end of the year that provides data from the entire United States, down to a block group level, which can be an area populated by as few as 600 people.
Who uses the ACS? Government policymakers. Researchers. Community leaders. Nonprofit organizations. And certainly, businesses – its importance caused a coalition that included the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Retail Federation, International Council of Shopping Centers, and National Association of Home Builders to revolt in 2012 when Congress contemplated cutting the program, even as it was used to ensure that hundreds of billions of tax dollars were spent in places where they were needed.
Social Explorer has created award-winning, customizable, online tools to make the ACS easy to use. We’ll show some of its features in a future blog, including how to create zip code-level maps that display monthly homeowner costs, a table that shows the metropolitan statistical areas with the highest median household incomes, and a county-level map reporting the percentage of people living in poverty.
In the meantime, here’s a list of broad categories that the ACS includes:
Social
Ancestry
Citizen Voting-Age Population
Citizenship Status
Disability Status
Educational Attainment
Fertility
Grandparents as Caregivers
Language Spoken at Home
Marital History
Marital Status
Migration/Residence 1 Year Ago
Place of Birth
School Enrollment
Undergraduate Field of Degree
Veteran Status; Period of Military Service
Year of Entry
Housing
Bedrooms
Computer and Internet Use
House Heating Fuel
Kitchen Facilities
Occupancy/Vacancy Status
Occupants per Room
Plumbing Facilities
Rent
Rooms
Selected Monthly Owner Costs
Telephone Service Available
Tenure (Owner/Renter)
Units in Structure
Value of Home
Vehicles Available
Year Householder Moved Into Unit
Year Structure Built
Economic
Class of Worker
Commuting (Journey to Work) and Place of Work
Employment Status
Food Stamps/Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)