Some good news:
There will be a six-month CR, funding the government at current levels through March 2013. No policy riders are included in the bill.
Some good news:
There will be a six-month CR, funding the government at current levels through March 2013. No policy riders are included in the bill.
Tags: appropriations, CR, Funding
Please join this public rally to save programs that benefit millions of Americans:
What: Rally to Restore Balance; Avoid Sequestration
When: Wednesday, July 25 @ 2pm (please gather 1:45 pm or earlier)
Where: Upper Senate Park (Area 2); Constitution and Delaware Avenues, adjacent to Russell Senate Office Building (for map, click here)
Featuring: The Honorable Tom Harkin, U.S. Senate
Joined by: Rita Ngabo, Working Parent
Other Invited Speakers (to be confirmed)
On January 2, 2013, the vast majority of federal nondefense discretionary (NDD) programs will face deep, across-the board cuts. These cuts will impact core government functions that support economic growth, strengthen safety and security, and enrich the lives of every American in every state and community across the nation. Affected programs include medical and scientific research, education and job training, transportation and infrastructure, public safety and law enforcement, public health, and weather monitoring and environmental protection, among others.
These indiscriminate cuts can be avoided—but only if Congress can come together and find a balanced approach to deficit reduction. Please lend us your voice in support of this effort!
To RSVP, contact Sean O’Shea at crdfellow@dc-crd.com, And forward this invitation far and wide!
Please also review the guidelines for participating in a rally, including specifications for signs, here.
Tags: Funding, Rally, Senate, Sequestration
Earlier in May, the House of Representatives passed a bill that contains the Census Bureau’s budget. The Bureau is receiving many questions from the press and stakeholders all across the country. In an effort to be responsive to these questions, Census Bureau Director Robert Groves wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post today. See link below.
Tags: Census Bureau, Rober Groves, Washington Post
From the U.S. Census Bureau
More than 66 percent of homeowners 65 and older own their own home without a mortgage. Find out more on Friday, July 20, at approximately 8:15 a.m. EDT as Census Bureau Director Robert Groves, discusses statistics about American businesses and households. Each Friday, C-SPAN’s “America By the Numbers” segment features information from the federal statistical system. The program highlights the trends and allows the public to call in or tweet to express their views. More information on previous C-SPAN programs is available at <http://www.census.gov/newsroom/cspan/>.
Tags: Robert Groves, U.S. Census Bureau
This month as we celebrate our nation’s Independence, we reflect on the original veterans who helped found this country. How do we know about today’s heroes? This new infographic provides a statistical snapshot of our veterans from the American Community Survey (conducted annually) and the Survey of Business Owners (from the five-year economic census).
See infographic here: http://www.census.gov/how/infographics/veterans.html
This summer, the Census Bureau will provide more infographics and interactive features that will answer the question, “How Do We Know?” Visit <http://www.census.gov/how> to learn more about “How Do We Know?” and follow @uscensusbureau on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube and Pinterest (#HowDoWeKnow) for updates.
Tags: Census Bureau, Infographic
This post is from the U.S. Census Bureau
If your organization has an interest in free Census Bureau training on accessing data please see the below trainings. Interested partners can also contact us to set up a webinar for their staff (2 months in advance, 8 person minimum).
Webinar: Accessing Statistics from Data Tools–Novice Users
Description: Learn how to access statistics from free tools at census.gov. Master how to get population, housing, geographic and economic information from QuickFacts, the Interactive Map, Population Finder and American FactFinder. View a demo of the tools and conduct hands-on exercises with the presenter.
Date: July 17, 2012
Time: 2:00-3:30 PM EST
Who Should Attend: Novice Users
Deadline to Register: July 12, 2012Complete form below- check the box for Webinar and click the Submit button
http://www.census.gov/mso/www/training/training_registration_form.html
Accessing Census Bureau Statistics 3-Day Class
Description: This seminar provides attendees with computer skills and hands-on exercises to access the data available from the U.S. Census Bureau. Attendees will explore data topics using Data Access Tools such as: Dataferrett, USA Counties, State and County QuickFacts, American FactFinder. The seminar is for the media, educators, state and local governments, non-profit organizations and those needing detailed census data.
Dates: September 17-19, 2012
Time: 9:00 AM-4:30 PM
Location: U.S. Census Bureau
4600 Silver Road
Suitland MD 20746Complete form below- check the box for Accessing Census Bureau Statistics and click the Submit button
http://www.census.gov/mso/www/training/training_registration_form.html
Be sure to follow us on Facebook and Twitter for the latest Census Bureau news and information. Keep watch for future updates and contact us by phone (800-923-8282), email (clmso.2010.census.partners.list@census.gov), or on the web at www.census.gov.
We look forward to a continued, sustained partnership with you throughout the decade, providing all the data you need to help make informed decisions.
Thank you
Tags: Census Bureau, Training
As our nation celebrate this Independence Day, the Census Bureau reflects on how our Founding Fathers enshrined the importance of statistics in our Constitution as a vital tool for measuring our people, places and economy. Since 1790, the U.S. Census has been much more than a simple head count; it has charted the growth and composition of our nation. The questions have evolved over time to address our changing needs. Today, the Decennial Census, the Economic Census and the American Community Survey give Congress and community leaders the information they need to make informed decisions that shape our democracy. These statistics are how we know how our country is doing.
This summer, the Census Bureau will launch more infographics and interactive features that will provide a look at “How Do We Know?” Visit <http://www.census.gov/how> to view today’s infographic and to learn more about “How Do We Know?” Follow @uscensusbureau on Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube and Pinterest (#HowDoWeKnow) for updates.
Tags: Census Bureau, Founding Fathers, statistics
It looks like the CJS Appropriations Bill, which funds many federal programs and agencies including the Census Bureau and NSF, is being delayed in the Senate. Apparently, Senator Snowe (R-ME) is holding the bill until Congress can look into the budget problems with NOAA and the National Weather Service. Reports indicate that the National Weather Service had shifted funds illegally among some of its accounts. It is likely that the CJS bill will be considered later in June.
Tags: Census Bureau, CJS, NSF, Senator Snowe
Despite increasing numbers of multiethnic neighborhoods in the United States, relatively few black or white families are actually moving into these types of communities, according to a new study in the June issue of the American Sociological Review.
“We pay a lot of attention to this proliferation of multiethnic neighborhoods, but they are still only a small part of the overall inter-neighborhood mobility picture for blacks and whites,” said Kyle Crowder, a Professor of Sociology at the University of Washington and lead author of the study. “Blacks tend to originate in neighborhoods with very high concentrations of blacks and, when they move, they tend to move to other places that have very high concentrations of blacks. Their typical destination is not a multiethnic neighborhood. The same is even more true for whites.”
Titled, “Neighborhood Diversity, Metropolitan Constraints, and Household Migration,” the study considers mobility patterns of 44,808 black families and 57,415 white families, some of whom moved several times between 1977 and 2005, the period covered by the analysis. The study, which looks at moves families made from one neighborhood in a metropolitan area to another neighborhood in the same metropolitan area, relies on multiple sources of data, including the Panel Study of Income Dynamics—a nationally representative, longitudinal survey of U.S. residents—and the 1980, 1990, and 2000 U.S. Censuses.
According to the study, of the 9,940 moves that black families made between 1977 and 2005, 43.7 percent (4,340) were to predominately black neighborhoods, 5 percent (494) were to predominately white neighborhoods, 17.7 percent (1,763) were to multiethnic neighborhoods (whose populations were at least 10 percent black, at least 10 percent Hispanic or Asian, and at least 40 percent white), and 33.6 percent (3,343) were to other types of neighborhoods detailed in the analysis. By comparison, of the 8,823 moves that white families made during the same time period, 56.8 percent (5,008) were to predominately white neighborhoods, 2 percent (179) were to predominately black neighborhoods, 5.6 percent (493) were to multiethnic neighborhoods, and 35.6 percent (3,143) were to other types of neighborhoods.
“Our study tells a somewhat pessimistic story, but it’s also a realistic story,” said Crowder, who coauthored the analysis with Jeremy Pais, an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Connecticut, and Scott J. South, a Professor of Sociology at the University of Albany, SUNY. “It’s a story that counters this idea that we should stop paying attention to residential segregation. The truth is, when it comes to eliminating residential segregation, we still have a long way to go. This becomes particularly clear when we look at the high percentage of black families from predominately black neighborhoods and the even higher percentage of white families from predominately white neighborhoods who wind up in homogeneous communities when they move.”
The study found that of the 3,684 moves that black families made from predominately black neighborhoods between 1977 and 2005, 60.9 percent (2,245) were to other predominately black neighborhoods, 2 percent (74) were to predominately white neighborhoods, 18.9 percent (696) were to multiethnic neighborhoods, and 18.2 percent (669) were to other types of neighborhoods. By comparison, of the 4,987 moves that white families made from predominately white neighborhoods during the same time period, 74.9 percent (3,734) were to other predominately white neighborhoods, 1.5 percent (73) were to predominately black neighborhoods, 2.4 percent (120) were to multiethnic neighborhoods, and just over 21 percent (1,060) were to other types of neighborhoods.
Crowder said it is important to note that—after controlling for other factors—the year in which black and white families moved had little or no impact on the kinds of neighborhoods to which they moved. “For black families, year of move is statistically non-significant and for white families it has a minimal impact,” Crowder said. “So, by itself, year doesn’t seem to be a very important indicator of where blacks and whites moved—and there wasn’t much change in where blacks and whites moved over time, once we account for other factors that affect destinations.”
Interestingly, the study also found that the tendency for white and black families to move between neighborhoods dominated by their own racial group varies significantly across metropolitan areas. “The mobility of black and white families into more integrated neighborhoods is shaped substantially by demographic, economic, political, and spatial features of the broader metropolitan area,” Crowder said.
According to the study, metropolitan area characteristics likely to limit residential integration for blacks and whites include: high levels of existing residential segregation and poverty as well as a significant percentage of the population living in the suburbs. “Lower levels of these characteristics promote integration,” Crowder said. “Additionally, mobility into more diverse neighborhoods is more common in metropolitan areas with large supplies of new housing and relatively large concentrations of racial and ethnic minorities.”
In terms of policy implications, Crowder said the study highlights the need for policymakers to continue working on ways to address residential segregation. “Residential segregation influences such things as the concentration and the propagation of crime as well as racial disparities in health and in exposure to pollution,” Crowder said. “When people say, ‘Segregation is going away’ and ‘We don’t need to worry about it anymore,’ those are messages that people will latch onto quickly. Unfortunately, those types of statements are just untrue.”
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About the American Sociological Association and the American Sociological Review The American Sociological Association (www.asanet.org), founded in 1905, is a non-profit membership association dedicated to serving sociologists in their work, advancing sociology as a science and profession, and promoting the contributions to and use of sociology by society. The American Sociological Review is the ASA’s flagship journal.
The research article described above is available by request for members of the media. For a copy of the full study, contact Daniel Fowler, ASA’s Media Relations and Public Affairs Officer, at (202) 527-7885 or pubinfo@asanet.org.
Tags: ASA Press Release, ASR, Jeremy Pais, Kyle Crowder, Scott South, U.S. Census Bureau
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