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US Census Bureau News Release

RELEASED: 12:01 A.M. EST, NOVEMBER 14, 2006 (TUESDAY)


New Population Profiles Released by Census Bureau
American Community Survey Data Iterated by Race, Hispanic origin,
Ancestry and Age

     The U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) provides the latest detailed look at the nation’s rapidly changing and diverse population with the release of new population profiles by race, Hispanic origin, ancestry and age.

     The 2005 ACS data provide key socioeconomic and housing characteristics for about 200 selected population groups at the national and state levels. They allow for easy comparisons across groups and access to a range of data from age, marital status and fertility, to language spoken at home and educational attainment.

     Selected highlights include:

    White Alone, Not Hispanic

     Black or African-American Alone

      American Indian and Alaska Native Alone

      Asian Alone

     (These tables can also be viewed for many ancestries within population groups, such as Japanese. Among Japanese age 25 and over, 93 percent were at least high school graduates and 44 percent had a bachelor’s degree or higher.)

      Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander Alone

     Hispanic

     For more information on how your community compares with the nation, a state or another city, county or congressional district, visit American FactFinder at www.census.gov.

-X-

     As part of the Census Bureau’s reengineered 2010 Census, the data collected by the ACS helps federal officials determine where to distribute more than $200 billion back to state and local governments each year, and responses to the survey are strictly confidential and protected by law.

     The 2005 ACS estimates are based on an annual, nationwide household sample of about 250,000 addresses per month, or 2.5 percent of the population a year. Geographic areas for which data are available are based on total populations of 65,000 or more. The ACS estimates released are for the household population, which may be smaller than its total population. As is the case with all surveys, statistics from sample surveys are subject to sampling and nonsampling error.

* Implied comparisons: Providing the estimates of the same characteristics for each of the race groups is an implied comparison, and these have to be tested for statistical significance. These are the implied comparisons that need some statement of significance: Median Age: Black (31.3) and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (30.6) are not significantly different. Percent Married Couple: White non-Hispanic (53) and Hispanic (49) are not significantly different from Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (50). Percent Female Householder no Husband present: Asian (9) and White non-Hispanic (9) are significantly different even though they round to the same value. Percent women with a birth who are married: White non-Hispanic (78) and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander (77) are not significantly different.

 
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Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: November 19, 2007