US Census Bureau
Skip top of page navigation

PeopleBusinessGeographyNewsroomSubjects A to Z Search@Census

Newsroom
Skip this top of page navigation
US Census Bureau Newsroom masthead
 
US Census Bureau News Release
Public Information Office                                   CB01-CN.190
301-457-3691/301-457-3620 (fax)
301-457-1037 (TDD)
e-mail: 2000usa@census.gov

Grace Moe
301-457-2899

Radio Soundbites
Press Kit

             Census Bureau Releases Long Form-Type Data 
                 for Large U.S. Cities and Counties

                                
                                
  The Census Bureau will release the most comprehensive and detailed data
on American families in 64 cities across the country today. The Census
2000 Supplementary Survey (C2SS) data detail housing, language, income and
other statistics.

  "These data are a sampling of the interesting and important information
that will be available annually when the American Community Survey is
operating coast to coast," said Kathleen B. Cooper, the Commerce
Department's under secretary for economic affairs. "The Census Bureau is
developing new and innovative ways to tell us more about America and
Americans."

  The C2SS, which used the American Community Survey (ACS) methodology and
questionnaire, is the largest survey ever conducted by the Census Bureau
outside a decennial census. As part of a re-engineering of the 2010
census, the ACS would eliminate the need for a census long form in the
future by producing up-to-date data on communities and population groups
every year.

  The 700,000-household survey demonstrates that long-form type data can
be collected simultaneously, but separately from a decennial census. The
Census Bureau plans to conduct the ACS nationwide beginning in 2003 if
Congress approves funding.

  Today's C2SS estimates are based on a rotating monthly sample in 2000 of
about 58,000 households in 1,203 counties, plus additional households in
36 ACS test counties. Another 700 tables from the supplementary survey,
which include versions by race for the nation, states, District of
Columbia and nearly all cities and counties of 250,000 or more, are
scheduled for release this winter.

  The C2SS data illustrate how some aspects of the country changed during
the 1990s at the national and state levels.  However, the Census Bureau
demographers recommended that comparisons not be made at the substate
levels between C2SS estimates and the 1990 census because the impact of
methodological differences and the omission of group quarters populations
from C2SS is magnified for substate areas. Rather, cities or counties of
250,000 people or more should be compared within the C2SS data set, they
said, either with estimates for their state or with other substate areas
released today. An important next step in Census Bureau testing will be to
study these data in relation to Census 2000 long-form findings, which will
be released next summer.

  C2SS data can be accessed through the Census Bureau's new search-and-retrieval 
database, American FactFinder, at http://factfinder.census.gov.  
C2SS operational information, narrative and tabular profiles for all 
summary levels and rankings at the state, county and place levels also may 
be found at http://www.census.gov/c2ss/www.

  Statistics from sample surveys are subject to sampling and nonsampling
error.  The Census 2000 Supplementary Survey uses the 2000 Master Address
File (MAF) as the base for its sample.

 
[PDF] or PDF denotes a file in Adobe’s Portable Document Format. To view the file, you will need the Adobe® Acrobat® Reader This link to a non-federal Web site does not imply endorsement of any particular product, company, or content. available free from Adobe.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau | Public Information Office |  Last Revised: August 09, 2007