Guy-
I saw your August 24 email RE: "We haven't heard about this from our State Data
Center or anyone else so I'm not sure if we're supposed to be involved with it
or not, seems like we should be."
Right. Census Bureau has put Census State Data Centers (SDCs) in the driver's seat
of PUMA delineations.
When your state's SDC Lead Agency reaches out depends on how attentive they are to
in-state partnerships. *
* fun footnote: Until end of 2019, I was a board member and then chairman of the national
network of
SDCs<https://www.census.gov/about/partners/sdc/member-network/steering-c…ml>.
What I learned from it: Some states' SDCs are well-resourced, high-performing as
partners. Others, less so. But in all cases Census Bureau provides zero funding to the
SDCs - never has - so anything a state's SDC is doing (or not) is ultimately
discretionary & guided by its own agenda or purpose.
Your state's SDC should call Atlanta Regional Council. + same in other states.
But if the whole month of September goes by, and Oct. 1st rolls around, you may need to
call them, take the initiative. Here is the list of State Lead contacts in all states:
https://www.census.gov/about/partners/sdc/member-network.html
In my opinion, any MPO serving a region where individual counties have > 200,000
population should be involved.
And specifically: enlist the MPO analysts who were involved 2+ years ago in the
re-tracting initiative (what Census calls the Participant Statistical Areas Program). They
will be really well-prepared for this task... If that describes you, contact your Census
State Data Center this fall.
Hope that helps.
--Todd Graham
[Metropolitan Council Logo]
Todd Graham
Principal Forecaster | Research
Metropolitan Council
390 North Roberrt Street, St. Paul, MN 55101
Ph. 651-602-1322
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facebook<https://www.facebook.com/MetropolitanCouncil> |
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From: Guy Rousseau <GRousseau(a)atlantaregional.org>
Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2021 3:48 PM
To: Graham, Todd <todd.graham(a)metc.state.mn.us>us>; ChristopherEd
<edc(a)berwyned.com>om>; Charles Purvis <clpurvis(a)att.net>
Cc: Weinberger Penelope <pweinberger(a)aashto.org>
Subject: RE: Defining PUMAs for Census 2020
Thanks Todd, Ed and Chuck for the suggestions. We haven't heard about this from our
State Data Center or anyone else so I'm not sure if we're supposed to be
involved with it or not, seems like we should be. I don't remember MPOs having to
delineate PUMAs in the past, especially for 2010's set, though it's possible I
missed that, as I wasn't directly involved with that work back then, so I don't
think we've been involved with the delineation before. Anyhow, we've got the
2020 Census geography in a geodatabase (GDB), however we don't yet have all the
population data, just the tracts. We're still waiting on the tables to join for the
blocks and block groups.
We looked at the PUMAs (borders in white) in relation to our ARC Super Districts
(multicolored) and it looks like most counties have more super-districts than PUMAs in
them. We will also look at how the 2020 tracts nest within the 2010 PUMAs and what the
2020 population is.
[Map Description automatically generated with low confidence]
From: Graham, Todd
<todd.graham@metc.state.mn.us<mailto:todd.graham@metc.state.mn.us>>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2021 4:01 PM
To: The Census Transportation Products Program Community of Practice/Users discussion and
news list
<ctpp@listserv.transportation.org<mailto:ctpp@listserv.transportation.org>>
Subject: [CTPP News] Re: Defining PUMAs for Census 2020
Hi Chuck-
Thanks for the heads-up. Yes, that is the way to think of PUMAs = as
"super-districts" or sub-state regions.
Here are my "pro-tips" learned in PUMA drawing 10 years ago:
1. Do not group together fractional pieces of counties when you could keep a county
whole, or when you could group multiple whole counties together in a PUMA.
2. When splitting counties into multiple PUMAs, try to arrange for the split lines to
be stable city/town boundaries. This means you're looking to create PUMAs where
city/town boundaries are aligned with Tract boundaries. (Because Census Geog Dept will
require that tracts be the basic units of PUMA assembly.)
The reason I emphasize parsimony with counties in point #1 is: The PUMAs you draw will
enable or limit the detail of MIGPUMAs as well. (MIGPUMA= Migration origination geographic
units) Census Bureau will create MIGPUMAs as the least common denominator grouping of
counties that is entirely coincident with a group of PUMAs. So don't split counties
unnecessarily.
The reason I emphasize city/town boundaries in point #2 -- even though Census Geog
discusses tracts as the basic units - is this: The PUMAs you draw will enable or limit the
detail of POWPUMAs. (POWPUMAs = Place of Work geographic units) Census Bureau will create
POWPUMAs as the least common denominator grouping of counties + places that is entirely
coincident with a group of PUMAs.
Stated differently: Census looks for combinations of county + place to uniquely nest
within a POWPUMA.
Why is this the standard for POWPUMAs? It's because of the questions asked on ACS:
ACS asks specifically for the county + place of one's work location. The PUMA final
criteria document
https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/geography/guidance/geo-areas/pumas/…
does say all this, but you'd have to read all the way to the last 3 pages of that
document to find it.
That's all my advice. Good luck!
--Todd Graham
[Map Description automatically generated]
[Metropolitan Council Logo]
Todd Graham
Principal Forecaster | Research
Metropolitan Council
390 North Roberrt Street, St. Paul, MN 55101
Ph. 651-602-1322
metrocouncil.org<https://gcc02.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=htt…
|
facebook<https://gcc02.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F…
|
twitter<https://gcc02.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%…
From: Charles Purvis <clpurvis@att.net<mailto:clpurvis@att.net>>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2021 12:32 PM
To: ctpp@listserv.transportation.org<mailto:ctpp@listserv.transportation.org>
Subject: [CTPP News] Defining PUMAs for Census 2020
The Census Bureau is ramping up efforts for Census 2020 PUMA delineation. PUMAs are
"Public Use Microdata Areas." They are large, contiguous areas of 100,000+
population, built up from census tracts and counties.
Here's the main Census Bureau page on PUMA 2020:
https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/geography/guidance/geo-areas/pumas/…
The Census Bureau will be kicking off the program in September 2021 (next month!). This
will be an announcement to each State Data Center points of contact.
If you're an MPO, you might be part of your state's State Data Center Network
(as an affiliate data center, regional data center, etc.) Get in touch with your
state's SDC. It will be each SDC that provides proposed PUMAs to the Census Bureau.
The actual work on defining the new Census 2020 based PUMAs will be November 2021 through
January 2022, with the "final" 2020 PUMAs published by summer 2022.
My key point: the PUMAs are NOT just for use in the Public Use Microdata Sample, but are
used as STANDARD tabulations for the American Community Survey, both the 1-year and 5-year
products. As such, the PUMAs can be thought of as "Regional Analysis Districts"
or "Superdistricts" or "Regional Districts." They can be SUPER useful
in MPO transportation planning analyses.
Here is the Census Bureau's statement on the usefulness of PUMAs, from the
"Final Criteria" document:
"In addition to PUMS data publication, as the ACS was developed and implemented after
the 2000
Census, standard PUMAs were adopted as a basic tabulation geographic entity to present
summary
data. This was in response to concerns raised by SDCs and other stakeholders that the
minimum
population thresholds for tabulation and dissemination of 1-year and 3-year ACS data
(65,000 and
20,000 persons, respectively) would limit the availability of data for the predominantly
rural portions of
states as well as for many counties. PUMAs met these population size requirements for all
ACS data
tabulations and their adoption resulted in a substantially larger community of PUMA data
users, many
of whom do not use PUMS files. This sustained interest in PUMA geography and associated
data is
expected to continue, therefore the PUMA criteria and guidelines for the 2020 Census are
intended to
help maintain a stable and comparable dataset."
[from: Final Criteria for Public Use Microdata Area for the 2020 Census and the American
Community Survey]
Note that the current set of Census 2020 PL 94-171 data files do NOT have PUMAs as a
standard summary level. This is because the Census 2020 includes the 2020 Census Tracts,
and the current PUMAs are based on the 2010 Census Tracts.
My recommendation for MPO staffs. To me this is a GIS-heavy process:
1. Map the Census 2010 Census Tracts and PUMAs.
2. Map the Census 2020 Census Tracts. Ideally the 2020 tracts nest within the 2010 tracts,
but boundaries do indeed change.
3. Develop an equivalency between 2020 Census Tracts and 2010 PUMAs.
4. Use PL 94-171 data to get Census 2020 census tracts, and aggregated to approximate the
2010 PUMAs.
5. If the county is > 200,000 population, consider how to best re-draw PUMA
boundaries.
6. It's a jigsaw puzzle, where none of the potential PUMAs can be less than 100,000.
Consider this as "redistricting for MPOs"
7. Involve local actors who are interested: counties, cities, academics, nonprofits, etc.
8. Consider the Bureau's advice on "stable and comparable dataset"...
Sometimes you may just keep the old PUMAs!
Hope this is of interest:
Chuck Purvis, Hayward, California