Talk:Bronx Community Board 10: Difference between revisions

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Created page with 'The demographics noted come from the 2000 census, but there are three different ways to compute racial/Hispanic acestry data from the census that year, which will y...'
 
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The demographics noted come from the 2000 census, but there are three different ways to compute racial/Hispanic acestry data from the census that year, which will yeild different percentages. You might want to include all of the catagories offically listed on the different census.gov pages related to the neighborhood or 10461, 10465, and 10475 (all of which are fully or almost fully in community board ten. You can get a profile on every zip code, county, city and state. For example: depending on how you calculate the numbers the "white" population of New York City is 35%, 45% or 47% in the 2000 census. The "black" population also varies if you include hispanic blacks, which I suspect you have included under the phrase "black-non-hispanic" which is never a catagory in the offical reports online. Many Hispanics are counted twice in the system you are using. This is presumingly an attempt to make up for when many Hispanics were loted in with the White population since they checked "other" prior to census 1980.
The demographics noted come from the 2000 census, but there are three different ways to compute racial/Hispanic acestry data from the census that year, which will yeild different percentages. You might want to include all of the catagories offically listed on the different census.gov pages related to the neighborhood or 10461, 10465, and 10475 (all of which are fully or almost fully in community board ten. You can get a profile on every zip code, county, city and state. For example: depending on how you calculate the numbers the "white" population of New York City is 35%, 45% or 47% in the 2000 census. The "black" population also varies if you include hispanic blacks. Offically online, reports never include the phrases black-non-hispanic, other-non-hispanic, or of-two-or-more-races-non-hispanic. Only White-non hispanic is an offical catagory. Many Hispanics are counted twice in the system you are using. This is presumingly an attempt to make up for when many Hispanics were loted in with the White population since they checked "other" prior to census 1980.
[[User:Rock2003|Rock2003]] 02:35, 3 September 2007 (UTC) 23:34 9/2/07
[[User:Rock2003|Rock2003]] 02:35, 3 September 2007 (UTC) 23:34 9/2/07

Revision as of 02:49, 3 September 2007

The demographics noted come from the 2000 census, but there are three different ways to compute racial/Hispanic acestry data from the census that year, which will yeild different percentages. You might want to include all of the catagories offically listed on the different census.gov pages related to the neighborhood or 10461, 10465, and 10475 (all of which are fully or almost fully in community board ten. You can get a profile on every zip code, county, city and state. For example: depending on how you calculate the numbers the "white" population of New York City is 35%, 45% or 47% in the 2000 census. The "black" population also varies if you include hispanic blacks. Offically online, reports never include the phrases black-non-hispanic, other-non-hispanic, or of-two-or-more-races-non-hispanic. Only White-non hispanic is an offical catagory. Many Hispanics are counted twice in the system you are using. This is presumingly an attempt to make up for when many Hispanics were loted in with the White population since they checked "other" prior to census 1980. Rock2003 02:35, 3 September 2007 (UTC) 23:34 9/2/07[reply]