Census Block Group Program for the 2010 Census-Proposed Criteria, 17337-17343 [E7-6467]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 66 / Friday, April 6, 2007 / Notices
numerous geographic areas for which
the Census Bureau tabulates data from
its censuses and surveys.
Visible feature—A map feature that
can be seen on the ground such as a
road, railroad track, major above-ground
transmission line or pipeline, river,
stream, shoreline, fence, sharply defined
mountain ridge, or cliff. A nonstandard
visible feature is a feature that may not
be clearly defined on the ground (such
as a ridge), may be seasonal (such as an
intermittent stream), or may be
relatively impermanent (such as a
fence). The Census Bureau generally
requests verification that nonstandard
features used as boundaries for the
PSAP geographic areas pose no problem
in their location during field work.
Water body tract—Type of tract
encompassing territorial seas, coastal
water, the Great Lakes, or inland water
at least 100 square miles in area. If an
inland water body meets this criterion,
each county can delineate a tract for its
portion of the water body.
Executive Order 12866
This notice has been determined to be
not significant under Executive Order
12866.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This program notice does not
represent a collection of information
subject to the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
Charles Louis Kincannon,
Director, Bureau of the Census.
[FR Doc. E7–6466 Filed 4–5–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of the Census
[Docket Number 070126022–0723–01]
Census Block Group Program for the
2010 Census—Proposed Criteria
Bureau of the Census,
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of proposed program
revisions and request for comments.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Block groups are statistical
geographic divisions of a census tract,
defined for the tabulation and
dissemination of decennial census data.
Block groups also will be used to
tabulate and publish estimates from the
American Community Survey (ACS) 1
1 The ACS is conducted in the United States and
in Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico, the survey is called
the Puerto Rico Community Survey. For ease of
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after 2010. Each block group comprises
a reasonably compact and contiguous
cluster of census blocks; up to nine
block groups can be contained within a
single census tract.
Most provisions of the block group
criteria for the 2010 Census remain
unchanged from those used in
conjunction with Census 2000.
However, based on consultation with
data users and internal review, the
Bureau of the Census (Census Bureau) is
proposing the following changes for the
2010 Census: (1) Increasing the
minimum population and housing unit
counts for block groups; (2) using
housing unit counts (as an alternative to
population counts) in the delineation of
block groups; (3) applying the same
population and housing unit thresholds
to all types of populated block groups in
the United States,2 including block
groups delineated on American Indian
reservations and/or off-reservation trust
lands,3 the Island Areas,4 and
encompassing group quarters, military
installations, and institutions; (4)
allowing the delineation of block groups
for large water bodies with areas of
approximately 100 square miles or more
and special land uses (e.g., large airports
or public parks) with an official name;
and (5) allowing for geographic
frameworks of tribal block groups
(separate from the standard block
groups defined within counties and
standard census tracts) to be defined
within federally-recognized American
Indian reservations and/or offreservation trust lands.
In addition to the proposed criteria,
this notice includes a description of the
changes from the criteria used for
Census 2000 and a list of definitions of
key terms used in the criteria.
The Census Bureau is publishing this
notice in the Federal Register to request
discussion, throughout this document the term ACS
is used to represent both the survey that is
conducted in the United States and in Puerto Rico.
2 For Census Bureau purposes, the United States
includes the fifty states and the District of
Columbia.
3 The proposed criteria for the tribal statistical
areas program will be outlined in a separate Federal
Register notice. In the tribal statistical areas
program, federally recognized American Indian
tribes that have a reservation and/or off-reservation
trust land may delineate census designated places
and, if these areas have a population of 2,400 or
greater, may delineate tribal tracts and tribal block
groups for their reservation and off-reservation trust
land.
4 For Census Bureau purposes, the Island Areas
includes American Samoa, the Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, and the U.S. Minor Outlying Islands.
The U.S. Minor Outlying Islands is an aggregation
of nine U.S. territories: Baker Island, Howland
Island, Jarvis Island, Johnston Atoll, Kingman Reef,
Midway Islands, Navassa Island, Palmyra Atoll, and
Wake Island.
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17337
comments from the public and other
government agencies. The Census
Bureau will respond to the comments
received as part of the publication of
final criteria in the Federal Register.
After the final criteria are published in
the Federal Register, the Census Bureau
will offer designated governments or
organizations an opportunity to review
and, if necessary, suggest updates to the
boundaries and attributes of the block
groups in their geographic area under
the Participant Statistical Areas Program
(PSAP). In addition to block groups, the
program also encompasses the review
and update of census tracts, census
designated places, and census county
divisions.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted on or before July 5, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Please direct all written
comments on this proposed program to
the Director, U.S. Census Bureau, Room
8H001, Mail Stop 0100, Washington, DC
20233–0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information on
this proposed program should be
directed to Michael Ratcliffe, Chief,
Geographic Standards and Criteria
Branch, Geography Division, U.S.
Census Bureau, via e-mail at
geo.psap.list@census.gov or telephone at
301–763–3056.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. History of Block Groups
The Census Bureau first delineated
block groups as statistical geographic
divisions of census tracts for the 1970
Census, comprising contiguous
combinations of census blocks for data
presentation purposes. At that time,
census block groups only existed in
urbanized areas in which census blocks
were defined. Block groups were
defined without regard to political and
administrative boundaries, with an
average population of 1,000, and to be
approximately equal in area.
As census block, block group, and
census tract data were used increasingly
by data users, the Census Bureau
expanded these programs to cover
additional geographic areas, while
redefining the population threshold
criteria to more adequately suit data
users’ needs. The 1990 Census was the
first in which census blocks and block
groups were defined throughout the
entirety of the United States, Puerto
Rico, and the Island Areas. For Census
2000, as with census tracts, the Census
Bureau increased the number of
geographic areas whose boundaries
could be used as block group
boundaries, and allowed tribal
governments of federally recognized
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American Indian tribes with a
reservation and/or off-reservation trust
lands to delineate block groups without
regard to state and/or county
boundaries, provided the tribe had a
1990 Census population of at least
1,000.
II. General Principles and Criteria for
Block Groups for the 2010 Census
A. General Principles
1. Block groups are statistical
geographic divisions of a census tract,
defined by the Census Bureau in
cooperation with local officials and
organizations, for the tabulation and
dissemination of decennial census data
as well as period estimates of
demographic and housing
characteristics from the ACS.
2. Because block groups are used to
present and analyze sample-based
statistical data, the amount of
population or housing units within a
block group is an important
consideration. As a general rule,
estimates from programs providing
sample data, including the ACS, for
geographic areas with smaller
populations are subject to higher
variances than comparable estimates for
areas with larger populations. Aiming to
create block groups that fall between the
minimum and maximum thresholds
will improve the reliability and
availability of data, and local
governments and planners should
consider these factors when defining
their block groups.
3. Block groups form the geographic
framework within which the Census
Bureau defines census blocks for use in
tabulating and presenting decennial
census data. Census blocks are
numbered within block groups.
4. Geographic areas that are not
characterized by a residential
population, such as parks, large
industrial areas, and water bodies, and
which local participants may wish to
separate from populated census tracts
for analytical or cartographic purposes,
or both, may be identified as individual
block groups.
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B. Proposed Changes to the Block Group
Criteria for the 2010 Census
Most provisions of the block group
criteria for the 2010 Census would
remain unchanged from those used in
conjunction with Census 2000 with the
following exceptions:
1. The Census Bureau proposes to
increase the minimum population and
housing unit counts for block groups to
1,200 and 480, respectively, to support
block group sample data reliability and
availability and to lower the variance of
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the sample data. The sample size for the
ACS is smaller than the sample from the
decennial census long form of previous
censuses. As a general rule, estimates
from programs providing sample data,
including the ACS, for geographic areas
with smaller populations will be subject
to higher variances than comparable
estimates for areas with larger
populations. In addition, the Census
Bureau’s disclosure rules will have the
effect of restricting the availability and
amount of data for areas with small
populations. Aiming to create block
groups that fall between the minimum
and maximum thresholds will improve
the reliability and availability of data,
and local governments and planners
should consider these factors when
defining their block groups.
2. Housing unit counts may be used
instead of population counts in the
delineation of block groups. This change
seeks to accommodate seasonal
communities in which residents may
not be present on the date of the
decennial census, but will be present at
other times of the year and for which
data may be reflected in the ACS.
3. For Census 2000, minimum
population thresholds for block groups
varied. The minimum population
threshold for block groups delineated on
American Indian reservations and offreservation trust lands was 300. This
differed from the minimum threshold of
600 people for block groups defined
elsewhere in the United States, as well
as in Puerto Rico and the Island Areas.
The maximum population for a block
group in any of these areas was 3,000.
In addition, for Census 2000, block
groups that enclosed an institution, a
military installation, or other ‘‘special
place’’ had a minimum population
requirement of 300 inhabitants, with no
optimum or maximum population.
For the 2010 Census, the same
population and housing unit thresholds
(minimum: 1,200 inhabitants or 480
housing units; maximum: 3,000
inhabitants or 1,200 housing units)
would apply to all types of populated
block groups, including block groups
delineated for American Indian
reservations and off-reservation trust
lands, the Island Areas, and
encompassing group quarters, military
installations, and institutions. The
Census Bureau proposes this change in
order to aid in the availability and
reliability of data for all block groups
and to create a single national standard.
4. The delineation of block groups
would be permitted, and encouraged,
for the following specific types of
geographic areas:
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a. Large water bodies with areas of
approximately 100 square miles or
more.
b. Special land uses (e.g., large
airports, public parks, or public forests)
with an official name.
A single water body or special land
use block group will be delineated to be
coextensive with, or covering the same
territory as, the water body or special
land use tract in which it is located.
The Census Bureau would require
that block groups delineated to
encompass large water bodies and
special land uses have little or no
residential population. The Census
Bureau recognizes that some special
land use areas not generally intended
for residential population, such as
parks, may contain some population,
such as caretakers or the homeless. Our
intent is to allow for the delineation of
parks and other special land use areas
as separate block groups and, therefore,
will accept such areas as block groups
even if some residential population is
present. All such block groups would
meet all other block group criteria.
5. A geographic framework of tribal
block groups, separate from the standard
block groups defined within counties,
may be defined within federally
recognized American Indian
reservations and/or off-reservation trust
lands, subject to other population,
housing, and boundary criteria
contained in this document. This
represents a change from the practice for
Census 2000. The Census Bureau
proposes this change to better recognize
the unique statistical data needs of
federally recognized American Indian
tribes and their reservation and offreservation trust lands.
C. Block Group Criteria for the 2010
Census
The criteria proposed herein apply to
the United States, including federally
recognized American Indian
reservations and off-reservation trust
lands, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas.
In accordance with the final criteria, the
Census Bureau may modify and, if
necessary, reject any proposals for block
groups that do not meet the established
criteria. In addition, the Census Bureau
reserves the right to modify the
boundaries and attributes of block
groups as needed to meet the published
criteria and/or maintain geographic
relationships before the final tabulation
geography is set for the 2010 Census.
The Census Bureau proposes the
following criteria for use in delineating
2010 Census block groups.
1. A block group must comprise a
reasonable compact, contiguous land
area.
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Noncontiguous boundaries are
permitted only where a contiguous area
or inaccessible area would not meet
population or housing unit count
requirements for a separate block group,
in which case the noncontiguous or
inaccessible area must be combined
within an adjacent or proximate block
group. For example, an island that does
not meet the minimum population
threshold for recognition as a separate
block group should be combined with
other proximate land to form a single
block group. Each case will be reviewed
and accepted at the Census Bureau’s
discretion.
2. Block groups must not cross census
tract boundaries.
This criterion supersedes all
population and housing unit
requirements or guidelines. By
extension, because census tracts cannot
cross county and state boundaries,
neither can block groups. It is only
permissible to define a standard block
group with less than 1,200 people in a
county that has a population less than
1,200.
3. Block groups must cover the entire
land and water area of each census tract.
Because census tracts must cover the
entire area of a county, by definition
block groups also must cover the entire
area of each county. In counties
containing coastal waters, territorial sea,
and portions of the Great Lakes, and
very large, contiguous, inland water
bodies, a single water body tract and a
coextensive block group should be
created for each discrete water body to
provide for complete census block
group coverage.
4. Block group boundaries should
follow visible and identifiable features.
To make the location of block group
boundaries less ambiguous, wherever
possible, block group boundaries should
follow visible and identifiable features.
The Census Bureau also permits the use
of state and county boundaries in all
states and incorporated place and minor
civil division boundaries in states where
those boundaries tend to remain
unchanged over time (see Table 1). The
use of visible features also makes it
easier to locate and identify block group
boundaries over time as the locations of
many visible features in the landscape
tend to change infrequently.
The following features are preferred
as block group boundaries for the 2010
Census:
a. State, county, and census tract
boundaries must always be block group
boundaries. This criterion takes
precedence over all other criteria or
requirements.
b. American Indian reservation and
off-reservation trust land boundaries.
c. Visible, perennial natural and
cultural features, such as roads,
shorelines, rivers, perennial streams and
canals, railroad tracks, or above-ground
high-tension power lines.
d. Boundaries of legal and
administrative entities in selected states.
Table 1 identifies by state which minor
civil division (MCD) and incorporated
place boundaries may be used as block
group boundaries.
TABLE 1.—ACCEPTABLE MCD AND INCORPORATED PLACE BOUNDARIES
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Boundaries
All MCD
boundaries
Boundaries
of MCDs
not coincident with
the boundaries of incorporated
places that
themselves
are MCDs
All incorporated
place
boundaries
Only conjoint incorporated
place
boundaries
Alabama ...........................................................................................................................
Alaska ..............................................................................................................................
Arizona .............................................................................................................................
Arkansas ..........................................................................................................................
California ..........................................................................................................................
Colorado ..........................................................................................................................
Connecticut ......................................................................................................................
Delaware ..........................................................................................................................
Florida ..............................................................................................................................
Georgia ............................................................................................................................
Hawaii ..............................................................................................................................
Idaho ................................................................................................................................
Illinois ...............................................................................................................................
Indiana .............................................................................................................................
Iowa .................................................................................................................................
Kansas .............................................................................................................................
Kentucky ..........................................................................................................................
Louisiana ..........................................................................................................................
Maine ...............................................................................................................................
Maryland ..........................................................................................................................
Massachusetts .................................................................................................................
Michigan ...........................................................................................................................
Minnesota ........................................................................................................................
Mississippi ........................................................................................................................
Missouri ............................................................................................................................
Montana ...........................................................................................................................
Nebraska ..........................................................................................................................
Nevada .............................................................................................................................
New Hampshire ...............................................................................................................
New Jersey ......................................................................................................................
New Mexico .....................................................................................................................
New York .........................................................................................................................
North Carolina ..................................................................................................................
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X
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X
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X
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X
X
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X
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Xa
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X
X
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X
X
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Xb
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Xa
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X
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X
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X
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X
X
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X
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X
X
X
X
X
X
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X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
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X
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X
X
X
X
X
X
X
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X
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X
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TABLE 1.—ACCEPTABLE MCD AND INCORPORATED PLACE BOUNDARIES—Continued
Boundaries
All MCD
boundaries
Boundaries
of MCDs
not coincident with
the boundaries of incorporated
places that
themselves
are MCDs
All incorporated
place
boundaries
Only conjoint incorporated
place
boundaries
North Dakota ....................................................................................................................
Ohio .................................................................................................................................
Oklahoma .........................................................................................................................
Oregon .............................................................................................................................
Pennsylvania ....................................................................................................................
Rhode Island ....................................................................................................................
South Carolina .................................................................................................................
South Dakota ...................................................................................................................
Tennessee .......................................................................................................................
Texas ...............................................................................................................................
Utah .................................................................................................................................
Vermont ...........................................................................................................................
Virginia .............................................................................................................................
Washington ......................................................................................................................
West Virginia ....................................................................................................................
Wisconsin .........................................................................................................................
Wyoming ..........................................................................................................................
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X
X
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X
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X
X
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X
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X
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X
X
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X
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X
X
X
X
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X
X
X
X
X
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X
X
X
X
X
a Townships
only.
townships only.
b Governmental
e. Additionally, the following legally
defined, administrative boundaries
would be permitted as block group
boundaries:
i. Barrio, barrio-pueblo, and subbarrio
boundaries in Puerto Rico;
ii. Census subdistrict boundaries in
the U.S. Virgin Islands;
iii. County and island boundaries
(both MCD equivalents) in American
Samoa;
iv. Election district boundaries in
Guam;
v. Municipal district boundaries in
the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands; and
vi. Alaska Native regional corporation
boundaries in Alaska, at the discretion
of the Census Bureau, insofar as such
boundaries are unambiguous for
allocating living quarters as part of 2010
Census activities.
f. When acceptable visible and
governmental boundary features are not
available for use as block group
boundaries, the Census Bureau may, at
its discretion, approve other
nonstandard visible features, such as
ridge lines, above-ground pipelines,
intermittent streams, or fence lines. The
Census Bureau may also accept, on a
case-by-case basis, the boundaries of
selected nonstandard and potentially
nonvisible features, such as the
boundaries of military installations,
National Parks, National Monuments,
National Forests, other types of parks or
forests, airports, marine ports,
cemeteries, golf courses, penitentiaries/
prisons, glaciers, or the straight-line
extensions of visible features and other
lines-of-sight.
g. The boundaries of large water
bodies and special land use tracts,
including parks, forests, and military
installations, provided the boundaries
are clearly marked or easily recognized.
5. Population, Housing Unit, and Area
Thresholds
The Census Bureau proposes the
following population, housing unit, and
area threshold criteria for census block
group (as suggested in Table 2). Any
block group that does not meet the
minimum population or housing unit
threshold must be revised.
TABLE 2.—BLOCK GROUP THRESHOLDS
Block group type
Threshold type
Standard & tribal block groups .....................................
Population threshold .....................................................
Housing Unit threshold .................................................
Area threshold (square miles) ......................................
Area threshold for an urban area (square miles) .........
Area threshold outside an urban area (square miles)
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Water body block groups .............................................
Special land use block groups .....................................
a. Census 2000 population counts
should be used in census block group
review in most cases. Housing unit
counts should be used for block groups
in seasonal communities that have no or
low population on census day (April 1).
Locally produced population and
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housing unit estimates can be used
when reviewing and updating block
groups, especially in areas that have
experienced considerable growth since
Census 2000.
b. The housing unit thresholds are
based on a national average of 2.5
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Minimum
1,200
480
100
1
10
Maximum
3,000
1,200.
none
none
none
persons per household. The Census
Bureau recognizes that there are
regional variations to this average, and
will take this into consideration when
reviewing all census block group
proposals.
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c. For the 2010 Census, the Census
Bureau encourages the delineation of
special use census tracts, hence special
use block groups, in specific types of
areas:
i. A special land use block group must
be designated as a specific land use type
(e.g. state park), must have an official
name (e.g., Jay Cooke State Park), have
little or no residential population, and
must not create a noncontiguous block
group. In some instances, multiple areas
can be combined to form a single special
land use block group if the land
management characteristics are similar,
such as a special land use block group
comprising adjacent federal and state
parks. If the special land use block
group is delineated in a densely
populated, urban area, the block group
must have an area of approximately one
square mile or more. If the special land
use block group is delineated
completely outside an urban area, the
block group must have an area of
approximately 10 square miles or more.
ii. A water body block group must
encompass all or part of a territorial sea,
coastal water, a Great Lake, or an inland
water body at least 100 square miles in
area. If an inland water body meets this
criterion and is in more than one
county, each county can delineate a
block group for its portion of the water
body. Any islands within a qualifying
water body should be included within
a separate block group.
6. Identification of Block Groups
a. A block group encompasses a
cluster of census blocks. Each block
group is identified using a single-digit
number that will correspond to the first
digit in the number of each block that
comprises it. For example, census block
group 3 includes all census blocks
numbered in the 3000 range within a
single census tract.
b. The range of acceptable block group
numbers is 1 through 9. Block group
numbers must always be unique within
a census tract.
7. Block Group Types
TABLE 3.—TABLE 3 BELOW CONTAINS A SUMMARY OF THE TYPES OF BLOCK GROUPS (WITH THEIR RESPECTIVE POPULATION, HOUSING UNIT AND AREA CHARACTERISTICS) THAT THE CENSUS BUREAU PROPOSES TO USE FOR THE 2010
CENSUS. SUMMARY OF BLOCK GROUP TYPES
Housing unit thresholds
How distinct from standard block groups
Standard & tribal
block groups.
Water body block
groups.
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Special land use block
groups.
Population thresholds
Tribal block groups are conceptually similar
and equivalent to census block groups defined within the standard state-countytract-block group geographic hierarchy
used for tabulating and publishing statistical data.
A block group coextensive with a water body
tract, encompassing all or part of a territorial sea, coastal water, a Great Lake, or
an inland water body at least 100 square
miles area.
A block group coextensive with a special
land use tract, encompassing a large airport, public park, or public forest with little
or no population or housing units. In a
densely populated, urban area, a special
land use block group must be approximately one square mile in area or greater.
If delineated completely outside an urban
area, a special land use block group must
have an area of ten square miles or greater.
Minimum: 1,200; Maximum: 3,000.
Minimum: 480; Maximum: 1,200.
none.
Zero ............................
Zero ............................
100 square miles if an
inland water body.
Little or none ..............
Little or none ..............
one square mile within
an urban area/ten
square miles outside an urban area.
D. Tribal Block Groups
Tribal block groups are statistical
geographic entities defined by the
Census Bureau in cooperation with
tribal officials to provide meaningful,
relevant, and reliable data for small
geographic areas within the boundaries
of federally recognized American Indian
reservations and/or off-reservation trust
lands. As such, they recognize the
unique statistical data needs of federally
recognized American Indian tribes. The
delineation of tribal block groups allows
for an unambiguous presentation of
statistical data specific to a federally
recognized reservation and/or offreservation trust lands without the
imposition of state or county
boundaries, which might artificially
separate American Indian populations
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located within a single reservation and/
or off-reservation trust land. To this end,
the American Indian tribal participant 5
may define tribal block groups that cross
county or state boundaries, or both.
Tribal block groups must be delineated
to meet all other census block group
criteria, and must be numbered
uniquely so as to clearly distinguish
5 For federally recognized American Indian tribes
with reservations and/or off-reservation trust lands
that have more than 2,400 residents, the Census
Bureau will offer the tribal government the
opportunity to delineate tribal block groups and
other tribal statistical geography on their
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land. For
federally recognized tribes with an American Indian
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land that
have fewer than 2,400 residents, the Census Bureau
will define one tribal tract and one tribal block
group coextensive with the American Indian
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land.
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Area thresholds
them from county-based block groups.
Tribal block group boundaries will be
held as census block boundaries. Census
blocks, however, will be numbered
uniquely within county-based block
groups. Tribal block groups are
conceptually similar and equivalent to
census block groups defined within the
standard state-county-tract-block group
geographic hierarchy used for tabulating
and publishing statistical data.
In order to provide meaningful
statistical geographic areas within the
reservation and/or off-reservation trust
land, as well as make meaningful and
reliable data available for these areas
and their populations, the Census
Bureau proposes that for the 2010
Census, standard block groups be
delineated nationwide, and the tribal
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block group geography be maintained
separately, and defined through a
separate program designed specifically
for tribal statistical geography. This
differs from the procedure for Census
2000 in which tribal block groups were
defined for federally recognized
American Indian reservations and/or
off-reservation trust lands, and standard
block groups were identified by
superimposing county and state
boundaries onto the tribal block groups.
For Census 2000 products in which
data were presented by state and
county, the standard state-countycensus tract-block group hierarchy was
maintained, even for territory contained
within an American Indian reservation
and/or off-reservation trust land. In such
instances, the state/county portions of
tribal block groups were identified as
individual block groups, and these
standard block groups may not have met
the minimum population or housing
unit thresholds, potentially limiting
sample data reliability or availability for
both the tribal block group and the
derived standard block groups. The
proposed change in the tribal block
group program for the 2010 Census,
creating standard block groups
nationwide and maintaining tribal block
groups as a completely separate set of
geography from standard block groups
in both geographic and data
presentation purposes, seeks to
eliminate, in part, these data issues from
Census 2000.
As with standard block groups
submitted through the program, the
tribal block groups would be submitted
to the Census Bureau, and would be
subject to review to ensure compliance
with the final published criteria. Tribal
block groups will be defined as part of
a separate Tribal Statistical Areas
Program (TSAP) for the 2010 Census.
Detailed criteria pertaining to tribal
block groups will be published in a
separate Federal Register notice
pertaining to all American Indian
statistical areas defined through the
TSAP.
III. Definitions of Key Terms
Alaska Native regional corporation
(ANRC)—A corporate geographic area
established under the Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act (Pub. L. 92–203),
to conduct both, the business and
nonprofit affairs of Alaska Natives.
Twelve ANRCs cover the entire State of
Alaska except for the Annette Island
Reserve.
American Indian off-reservation trust
land (ORTL)—A federally recognized
American Indian land area located
outside the boundaries of an American
Indian reservation whose boundaries are
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established by deed and over which a
federally recognized American Indian
tribal government has governmental
authority.
American Indian reservation (AIR)—A
federally recognized American Indian
land area with boundaries established
by final treaty, statute, executive order,
and/or court order and over which a
federally recognized American Indian
tribal government has governmental
authority. Along with reservation,
designations such as colonies,
communities, pueblos, rancherias, and
reserves apply to AIRs.
Coastal water—Water bodies between
territorial seas and inland water, the
encompassing headlands being more
than one mile apart and less than 24
miles apart.
Conjoint—A description of a
boundary shared by two adjacent
geographic entities.
Contiguous—A description of areas
sharing common boundaries, such that
the areas, when combined, form a single
piece of territory. Noncontinuous areas
form disjoint pieces.
Great Lakes’ waters—Water area
beyond one mile wide headland
embayments located in any of the five
Great Lakes: Erie, Huron, Michigan,
Ontario, or Superior.
Group quarters (GQ)—A place where
people live or stay, in a group living
arrangement, that is owned or managed
by an entity or organization providing
housing and/or services for the
residents. This is not a typical
household-type living arrangement.
These services may include custodial or
medical care, as well as other types of
assistance, and residency is commonly
restricted to those receiving these
services. People living in group quarters
are usually not related to each other.
Group quarters include such places as
college residence halls, residential
treatment centers, skilled nursing
facilities, group homes, military
barracks, correctional facilities, and
workers’ dormitories.
Incorporated place—A type of
governmental unit, incorporated under
state law as a city, town (except in New
England, New York, and Wisconsin),
borough (except in Alaska and New
York), or village, generally to provide
governmental services for a
concentration of people within legally
prescribed boundaries.
Inland water—Water bodies entirely
surrounded by land or at the point
where their opening to coastal waters,
territorial seas, or the Great Lakes is less
than one mile across.
Minor civil division (MCD)—The
primary governmental or administrative
division of a county in 28 states and the
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Island Areas having legal boundaries,
names, and descriptions. MCDs
represent many different types of legal
entities with a wide variety of
characteristics, powers, and functions
depending on the state and type of
MCD. In some states, some or all of the
incorporated places also constitute
MCDs.
Nonvisible feature—A map feature
that is not visible on the ground, such
as a city or county boundary through
space, a property line, line-of-sight
extension of a road.
Special land use block group—Block
group delineated coextensive with, or
covering the same area as, the special
land use tract.
Special land use tract—Type of
census tract that must be designated as
a specific land use type (e.g. state park)
and have an official name (e.g., Jay
Cooke State Park), must have little or no
residential population or housing units,
and must not create a noncontiguous
census tract. If delineated in a densely
populated, urban area, a special land
use tract must have an area of
approximately one square mile or more.
If delineated completely outside an
urban area, a special land use tract must
have an area of approximately 10 square
miles or more.
Territorial seas—Water bodies not
included under the definition for inland
water, coastal water, or Great Lakes’
waters, see above.
TIGER—Topologically Integrated
Geographic Encoding and Referencing
database developed by the Census
Bureau to support its mapping needs for
the Decennial Census and other Census
Bureau programs. The topological
structure of the TIGER database defines
the location and relationship of
boundaries, streets, rivers, railroads, and
other features to each other and to the
numerous geographic areas for which
the Census Bureau tabulates data from
its censuses and surveys.
Visible feature—A map feature that
can be seen on the ground, such as a
road, railroad track, major above-ground
transmission line or pipeline, river or
stream, shoreline, fence, sharply defined
mountain ridge, or cliff. A nonstandard
visible feature is a feature that may not
be clearly defined on the ground (such
as a ridge), may be seasonal (such as an
intermittent stream), or may be
relatively impermanent (such as a
fence). The Census Bureau generally
requests verification that nonstandard
features used as boundaries for the
PSAP geographic areas pose no problem
in their location during field work.
Water body block group—Block group
delineated coextensive with, or covering
the same area as, the water body tract.
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Water body tract—Type of census
tract encompassing territorial seas,
coastal water, the Great Lakes, or inland
water at least 100 square miles in area.
If an inland water body meets this
criteria, each county can delineate a
census tract for its portion of the water
body.
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Executive Order 12866
This notice has been determined to be
not significant under Executive Order
12866.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This program notice does not
represent a collection of information
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17343
subject to the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
Charles Louis Kincannon,
Director, Bureau of the Census.
[FR Doc. E7–6467 Filed 4–5–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–07–P
E:\FR\FM\06APN2.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 66 (Friday, April 6, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17337-17343]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-6467]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of the Census
[Docket Number 070126022-0723-01]
Census Block Group Program for the 2010 Census--Proposed Criteria
AGENCY: Bureau of the Census, Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of proposed program revisions and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Block groups are statistical geographic divisions of a census
tract, defined for the tabulation and dissemination of decennial census
data. Block groups also will be used to tabulate and publish estimates
from the American Community Survey (ACS) \1\ after 2010. Each block
group comprises a reasonably compact and contiguous cluster of census
blocks; up to nine block groups can be contained within a single census
tract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The ACS is conducted in the United States and in Puerto
Rico. In Puerto Rico, the survey is called the Puerto Rico Community
Survey. For ease of discussion, throughout this document the term
ACS is used to represent both the survey that is conducted in the
United States and in Puerto Rico.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Most provisions of the block group criteria for the 2010 Census
remain unchanged from those used in conjunction with Census 2000.
However, based on consultation with data users and internal review, the
Bureau of the Census (Census Bureau) is proposing the following changes
for the 2010 Census: (1) Increasing the minimum population and housing
unit counts for block groups; (2) using housing unit counts (as an
alternative to population counts) in the delineation of block groups;
(3) applying the same population and housing unit thresholds to all
types of populated block groups in the United States,\2\ including
block groups delineated on American Indian reservations and/or off-
reservation trust lands,\3\ the Island Areas,\4\ and encompassing group
quarters, military installations, and institutions; (4) allowing the
delineation of block groups for large water bodies with areas of
approximately 100 square miles or more and special land uses (e.g.,
large airports or public parks) with an official name; and (5) allowing
for geographic frameworks of tribal block groups (separate from the
standard block groups defined within counties and standard census
tracts) to be defined within federally-recognized American Indian
reservations and/or off-reservation trust lands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ For Census Bureau purposes, the United States includes the
fifty states and the District of Columbia.
\3\ The proposed criteria for the tribal statistical areas
program will be outlined in a separate Federal Register notice. In
the tribal statistical areas program, federally recognized American
Indian tribes that have a reservation and/or off-reservation trust
land may delineate census designated places and, if these areas have
a population of 2,400 or greater, may delineate tribal tracts and
tribal block groups for their reservation and off-reservation trust
land.
\4\ For Census Bureau purposes, the Island Areas includes
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,
Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and the U.S. Minor Outlying Islands.
The U.S. Minor Outlying Islands is an aggregation of nine U.S.
territories: Baker Island, Howland Island, Jarvis Island, Johnston
Atoll, Kingman Reef, Midway Islands, Navassa Island, Palmyra Atoll,
and Wake Island.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the proposed criteria, this notice includes a
description of the changes from the criteria used for Census 2000 and a
list of definitions of key terms used in the criteria.
The Census Bureau is publishing this notice in the Federal Register
to request comments from the public and other government agencies. The
Census Bureau will respond to the comments received as part of the
publication of final criteria in the Federal Register. After the final
criteria are published in the Federal Register, the Census Bureau will
offer designated governments or organizations an opportunity to review
and, if necessary, suggest updates to the boundaries and attributes of
the block groups in their geographic area under the Participant
Statistical Areas Program (PSAP). In addition to block groups, the
program also encompasses the review and update of census tracts, census
designated places, and census county divisions.
DATES: Written comments must be submitted on or before July 5, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Please direct all written comments on this proposed program
to the Director, U.S. Census Bureau, Room 8H001, Mail Stop 0100,
Washington, DC 20233-0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Requests for additional information on
this proposed program should be directed to Michael Ratcliffe, Chief,
Geographic Standards and Criteria Branch, Geography Division, U.S.
Census Bureau, via e-mail at geo.psap.list@census.gov or telephone at
301-763-3056.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. History of Block Groups
The Census Bureau first delineated block groups as statistical
geographic divisions of census tracts for the 1970 Census, comprising
contiguous combinations of census blocks for data presentation
purposes. At that time, census block groups only existed in urbanized
areas in which census blocks were defined. Block groups were defined
without regard to political and administrative boundaries, with an
average population of 1,000, and to be approximately equal in area.
As census block, block group, and census tract data were used
increasingly by data users, the Census Bureau expanded these programs
to cover additional geographic areas, while redefining the population
threshold criteria to more adequately suit data users' needs. The 1990
Census was the first in which census blocks and block groups were
defined throughout the entirety of the United States, Puerto Rico, and
the Island Areas. For Census 2000, as with census tracts, the Census
Bureau increased the number of geographic areas whose boundaries could
be used as block group boundaries, and allowed tribal governments of
federally recognized
[[Page 17338]]
American Indian tribes with a reservation and/or off-reservation trust
lands to delineate block groups without regard to state and/or county
boundaries, provided the tribe had a 1990 Census population of at least
1,000.
II. General Principles and Criteria for Block Groups for the 2010
Census
A. General Principles
1. Block groups are statistical geographic divisions of a census
tract, defined by the Census Bureau in cooperation with local officials
and organizations, for the tabulation and dissemination of decennial
census data as well as period estimates of demographic and housing
characteristics from the ACS.
2. Because block groups are used to present and analyze sample-
based statistical data, the amount of population or housing units
within a block group is an important consideration. As a general rule,
estimates from programs providing sample data, including the ACS, for
geographic areas with smaller populations are subject to higher
variances than comparable estimates for areas with larger populations.
Aiming to create block groups that fall between the minimum and maximum
thresholds will improve the reliability and availability of data, and
local governments and planners should consider these factors when
defining their block groups.
3. Block groups form the geographic framework within which the
Census Bureau defines census blocks for use in tabulating and
presenting decennial census data. Census blocks are numbered within
block groups.
4. Geographic areas that are not characterized by a residential
population, such as parks, large industrial areas, and water bodies,
and which local participants may wish to separate from populated census
tracts for analytical or cartographic purposes, or both, may be
identified as individual block groups.
B. Proposed Changes to the Block Group Criteria for the 2010 Census
Most provisions of the block group criteria for the 2010 Census
would remain unchanged from those used in conjunction with Census 2000
with the following exceptions:
1. The Census Bureau proposes to increase the minimum population
and housing unit counts for block groups to 1,200 and 480,
respectively, to support block group sample data reliability and
availability and to lower the variance of the sample data. The sample
size for the ACS is smaller than the sample from the decennial census
long form of previous censuses. As a general rule, estimates from
programs providing sample data, including the ACS, for geographic areas
with smaller populations will be subject to higher variances than
comparable estimates for areas with larger populations. In addition,
the Census Bureau's disclosure rules will have the effect of
restricting the availability and amount of data for areas with small
populations. Aiming to create block groups that fall between the
minimum and maximum thresholds will improve the reliability and
availability of data, and local governments and planners should
consider these factors when defining their block groups.
2. Housing unit counts may be used instead of population counts in
the delineation of block groups. This change seeks to accommodate
seasonal communities in which residents may not be present on the date
of the decennial census, but will be present at other times of the year
and for which data may be reflected in the ACS.
3. For Census 2000, minimum population thresholds for block groups
varied. The minimum population threshold for block groups delineated on
American Indian reservations and off-reservation trust lands was 300.
This differed from the minimum threshold of 600 people for block groups
defined elsewhere in the United States, as well as in Puerto Rico and
the Island Areas. The maximum population for a block group in any of
these areas was 3,000. In addition, for Census 2000, block groups that
enclosed an institution, a military installation, or other ``special
place'' had a minimum population requirement of 300 inhabitants, with
no optimum or maximum population.
For the 2010 Census, the same population and housing unit
thresholds (minimum: 1,200 inhabitants or 480 housing units; maximum:
3,000 inhabitants or 1,200 housing units) would apply to all types of
populated block groups, including block groups delineated for American
Indian reservations and off-reservation trust lands, the Island Areas,
and encompassing group quarters, military installations, and
institutions. The Census Bureau proposes this change in order to aid in
the availability and reliability of data for all block groups and to
create a single national standard.
4. The delineation of block groups would be permitted, and
encouraged, for the following specific types of geographic areas:
a. Large water bodies with areas of approximately 100 square miles
or more.
b. Special land uses (e.g., large airports, public parks, or public
forests) with an official name.
A single water body or special land use block group will be
delineated to be coextensive with, or covering the same territory as,
the water body or special land use tract in which it is located.
The Census Bureau would require that block groups delineated to
encompass large water bodies and special land uses have little or no
residential population. The Census Bureau recognizes that some special
land use areas not generally intended for residential population, such
as parks, may contain some population, such as caretakers or the
homeless. Our intent is to allow for the delineation of parks and other
special land use areas as separate block groups and, therefore, will
accept such areas as block groups even if some residential population
is present. All such block groups would meet all other block group
criteria.
5. A geographic framework of tribal block groups, separate from the
standard block groups defined within counties, may be defined within
federally recognized American Indian reservations and/or off-
reservation trust lands, subject to other population, housing, and
boundary criteria contained in this document. This represents a change
from the practice for Census 2000. The Census Bureau proposes this
change to better recognize the unique statistical data needs of
federally recognized American Indian tribes and their reservation and
off-reservation trust lands.
C. Block Group Criteria for the 2010 Census
The criteria proposed herein apply to the United States, including
federally recognized American Indian reservations and off-reservation
trust lands, Puerto Rico, and the Island Areas. In accordance with the
final criteria, the Census Bureau may modify and, if necessary, reject
any proposals for block groups that do not meet the established
criteria. In addition, the Census Bureau reserves the right to modify
the boundaries and attributes of block groups as needed to meet the
published criteria and/or maintain geographic relationships before the
final tabulation geography is set for the 2010 Census.
The Census Bureau proposes the following criteria for use in
delineating 2010 Census block groups.
1. A block group must comprise a reasonable compact, contiguous
land area.
[[Page 17339]]
Noncontiguous boundaries are permitted only where a contiguous area
or inaccessible area would not meet population or housing unit count
requirements for a separate block group, in which case the
noncontiguous or inaccessible area must be combined within an adjacent
or proximate block group. For example, an island that does not meet the
minimum population threshold for recognition as a separate block group
should be combined with other proximate land to form a single block
group. Each case will be reviewed and accepted at the Census Bureau's
discretion.
2. Block groups must not cross census tract boundaries.
This criterion supersedes all population and housing unit
requirements or guidelines. By extension, because census tracts cannot
cross county and state boundaries, neither can block groups. It is only
permissible to define a standard block group with less than 1,200
people in a county that has a population less than 1,200.
3. Block groups must cover the entire land and water area of each
census tract.
Because census tracts must cover the entire area of a county, by
definition block groups also must cover the entire area of each county.
In counties containing coastal waters, territorial sea, and portions of
the Great Lakes, and very large, contiguous, inland water bodies, a
single water body tract and a coextensive block group should be created
for each discrete water body to provide for complete census block group
coverage.
4. Block group boundaries should follow visible and identifiable
features.
To make the location of block group boundaries less ambiguous,
wherever possible, block group boundaries should follow visible and
identifiable features. The Census Bureau also permits the use of state
and county boundaries in all states and incorporated place and minor
civil division boundaries in states where those boundaries tend to
remain unchanged over time (see Table 1). The use of visible features
also makes it easier to locate and identify block group boundaries over
time as the locations of many visible features in the landscape tend to
change infrequently.
The following features are preferred as block group boundaries for
the 2010 Census:
a. State, county, and census tract boundaries must always be block
group boundaries. This criterion takes precedence over all other
criteria or requirements.
b. American Indian reservation and off-reservation trust land
boundaries.
c. Visible, perennial natural and cultural features, such as roads,
shorelines, rivers, perennial streams and canals, railroad tracks, or
above-ground high-tension power lines.
d. Boundaries of legal and administrative entities in selected
states. Table 1 identifies by state which minor civil division (MCD)
and incorporated place boundaries may be used as block group
boundaries.
Table 1.--Acceptable MCD and Incorporated Place Boundaries
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boundaries
of MCDs not
coincident
with the All Only
All MCD boundaries incorporated conjoint
Boundaries boundaries of place incorporated
incorporated boundaries place
places that boundaries
themselves
are MCDs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Alaska.................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Arizona................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Arkansas................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
California.............................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Colorado................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Connecticut............................................. X ............ X ............
Delaware................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Florida................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Georgia................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Hawaii.................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Idaho................................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Illinois................................................ ............ X \a\ ............ X
Indiana................................................. X ............ ............ X
Iowa.................................................... ............ X ............ X
Kansas.................................................. ............ X ............ X
Kentucky................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Louisiana............................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Maine................................................... X ............ X ............
Maryland................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Massachusetts........................................... X ............ X ............
Michigan................................................ ............ X ............ X
Minnesota............................................... ............ X ............ X
Mississippi............................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Missouri................................................ ............ X \b\ ............ X
Montana................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Nebraska................................................ ............ X \a\ ............ X
Nevada.................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
New Hampshire........................................... X ............ X ............
New Jersey.............................................. X ............ X ............
New Mexico.............................................. ............ ............ ............ X
New York................................................ X ............ X ............
North Carolina.......................................... ............ ............ ............ X
[[Page 17340]]
North Dakota............................................ ............ X ............ X
Ohio.................................................... ............ X ............ X
Oklahoma................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Oregon.................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
Pennsylvania............................................ X ............ X ............
Rhode Island............................................ X ............ X ............
South Carolina.......................................... ............ ............ ............ X
South Dakota............................................ ............ X ............ X
Tennessee............................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Texas................................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Utah.................................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Vermont................................................. X ............ X ............
Virginia................................................ ............ ............ ............ X
Washington.............................................. ............ ............ ............ X
West Virginia........................................... ............ ............ ............ X
Wisconsin............................................... ............ X ............ X
Wyoming................................................. ............ ............ ............ X
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Townships only.
\b\ Governmental townships only.
e. Additionally, the following legally defined, administrative
boundaries would be permitted as block group boundaries:
i. Barrio, barrio-pueblo, and subbarrio boundaries in Puerto Rico;
ii. Census subdistrict boundaries in the U.S. Virgin Islands;
iii. County and island boundaries (both MCD equivalents) in
American Samoa;
iv. Election district boundaries in Guam;
v. Municipal district boundaries in the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands; and
vi. Alaska Native regional corporation boundaries in Alaska, at the
discretion of the Census Bureau, insofar as such boundaries are
unambiguous for allocating living quarters as part of 2010 Census
activities.
f. When acceptable visible and governmental boundary features are
not available for use as block group boundaries, the Census Bureau may,
at its discretion, approve other nonstandard visible features, such as
ridge lines, above-ground pipelines, intermittent streams, or fence
lines. The Census Bureau may also accept, on a case-by-case basis, the
boundaries of selected nonstandard and potentially nonvisible features,
such as the boundaries of military installations, National Parks,
National Monuments, National Forests, other types of parks or forests,
airports, marine ports, cemeteries, golf courses, penitentiaries/
prisons, glaciers, or the straight-line extensions of visible features
and other lines-of-sight.
g. The boundaries of large water bodies and special land use
tracts, including parks, forests, and military installations, provided
the boundaries are clearly marked or easily recognized.
5. Population, Housing Unit, and Area Thresholds
The Census Bureau proposes the following population, housing unit,
and area threshold criteria for census block group (as suggested in
Table 2). Any block group that does not meet the minimum population or
housing unit threshold must be revised.
Table 2.--Block Group Thresholds
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Block group type Threshold type Minimum Maximum
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard & tribal block groups................ Population threshold............ 1,200 3,000
Housing Unit threshold.......... 480 1,200.
Water body block groups....................... Area threshold (square miles)... 100 none
Special land use block groups................. Area threshold for an urban area 1 none
(square miles).
Area threshold outside an urban 10 none
area (square miles).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Census 2000 population counts should be used in census block
group review in most cases. Housing unit counts should be used for
block groups in seasonal communities that have no or low population on
census day (April 1). Locally produced population and housing unit
estimates can be used when reviewing and updating block groups,
especially in areas that have experienced considerable growth since
Census 2000.
b. The housing unit thresholds are based on a national average of
2.5 persons per household. The Census Bureau recognizes that there are
regional variations to this average, and will take this into
consideration when reviewing all census block group proposals.
[[Page 17341]]
c. For the 2010 Census, the Census Bureau encourages the
delineation of special use census tracts, hence special use block
groups, in specific types of areas:
i. A special land use block group must be designated as a specific
land use type (e.g. state park), must have an official name (e.g., Jay
Cooke State Park), have little or no residential population, and must
not create a noncontiguous block group. In some instances, multiple
areas can be combined to form a single special land use block group if
the land management characteristics are similar, such as a special land
use block group comprising adjacent federal and state parks. If the
special land use block group is delineated in a densely populated,
urban area, the block group must have an area of approximately one
square mile or more. If the special land use block group is delineated
completely outside an urban area, the block group must have an area of
approximately 10 square miles or more.
ii. A water body block group must encompass all or part of a
territorial sea, coastal water, a Great Lake, or an inland water body
at least 100 square miles in area. If an inland water body meets this
criterion and is in more than one county, each county can delineate a
block group for its portion of the water body. Any islands within a
qualifying water body should be included within a separate block group.
6. Identification of Block Groups
a. A block group encompasses a cluster of census blocks. Each block
group is identified using a single-digit number that will correspond to
the first digit in the number of each block that comprises it. For
example, census block group 3 includes all census blocks numbered in
the 3000 range within a single census tract.
b. The range of acceptable block group numbers is 1 through 9.
Block group numbers must always be unique within a census tract.
7. Block Group Types
Table 3.--Table 3 Below Contains a Summary of the Types of Block Groups (With Their Respective Population,
Housing Unit and Area Characteristics) That the Census Bureau Proposes To Use for the 2010 Census. Summary of
Block Group Types
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How distinct from
standard block Population Housing unit Area thresholds
groups thresholds thresholds
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Standard & tribal block groups.. Tribal block Minimum: 1,200; Minimum: 480; none.
groups are Maximum: 3,000. Maximum: 1,200.
conceptually
similar and
equivalent to
census block
groups defined
within the
standard state-
county-tract-
block group
geographic
hierarchy used
for tabulating
and publishing
statistical data.
Water body block groups......... A block group Zero.............. Zero.............. 100 square miles
coextensive with if an inland
a water body water body.
tract,
encompassing all
or part of a
territorial sea,
coastal water, a
Great Lake, or an
inland water body
at least 100
square miles area.
Special land use block groups... A block group Little or none.... Little or none.... one square mile
coextensive with within an urban
a special land area/ten square
use tract, miles outside an
encompassing a urban area.
large airport,
public park, or
public forest
with little or no
population or
housing units. In
a densely
populated, urban
area, a special
land use block
group must be
approximately one
square mile in
area or greater.
If delineated
completely
outside an urban
area, a special
land use block
group must have
an area of ten
square miles or
greater.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Tribal Block Groups
Tribal block groups are statistical geographic entities defined by
the Census Bureau in cooperation with tribal officials to provide
meaningful, relevant, and reliable data for small geographic areas
within the boundaries of federally recognized American Indian
reservations and/or off-reservation trust lands. As such, they
recognize the unique statistical data needs of federally recognized
American Indian tribes. The delineation of tribal block groups allows
for an unambiguous presentation of statistical data specific to a
federally recognized reservation and/or off-reservation trust lands
without the imposition of state or county boundaries, which might
artificially separate American Indian populations located within a
single reservation and/or off-reservation trust land. To this end, the
American Indian tribal participant \5\ may define tribal block groups
that cross county or state boundaries, or both. Tribal block groups
must be delineated to meet all other census block group criteria, and
must be numbered uniquely so as to clearly distinguish them from
county-based block groups. Tribal block group boundaries will be held
as census block boundaries. Census blocks, however, will be numbered
uniquely within county-based block groups. Tribal block groups are
conceptually similar and equivalent to census block groups defined
within the standard state-county-tract-block group geographic hierarchy
used for tabulating and publishing statistical data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ For federally recognized American Indian tribes with
reservations and/or off-reservation trust lands that have more than
2,400 residents, the Census Bureau will offer the tribal government
the opportunity to delineate tribal block groups and other tribal
statistical geography on their reservation and/or off-reservation
trust land. For federally recognized tribes with an American Indian
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land that have fewer than
2,400 residents, the Census Bureau will define one tribal tract and
one tribal block group coextensive with the American Indian
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In order to provide meaningful statistical geographic areas within
the reservation and/or off-reservation trust land, as well as make
meaningful and reliable data available for these areas and their
populations, the Census Bureau proposes that for the 2010 Census,
standard block groups be delineated nationwide, and the tribal
[[Page 17342]]
block group geography be maintained separately, and defined through a
separate program designed specifically for tribal statistical
geography. This differs from the procedure for Census 2000 in which
tribal block groups were defined for federally recognized American
Indian reservations and/or off-reservation trust lands, and standard
block groups were identified by superimposing county and state
boundaries onto the tribal block groups.
For Census 2000 products in which data were presented by state and
county, the standard state-county-census tract-block group hierarchy
was maintained, even for territory contained within an American Indian
reservation and/or off-reservation trust land. In such instances, the
state/county portions of tribal block groups were identified as
individual block groups, and these standard block groups may not have
met the minimum population or housing unit thresholds, potentially
limiting sample data reliability or availability for both the tribal
block group and the derived standard block groups. The proposed change
in the tribal block group program for the 2010 Census, creating
standard block groups nationwide and maintaining tribal block groups as
a completely separate set of geography from standard block groups in
both geographic and data presentation purposes, seeks to eliminate, in
part, these data issues from Census 2000.
As with standard block groups submitted through the program, the
tribal block groups would be submitted to the Census Bureau, and would
be subject to review to ensure compliance with the final published
criteria. Tribal block groups will be defined as part of a separate
Tribal Statistical Areas Program (TSAP) for the 2010 Census. Detailed
criteria pertaining to tribal block groups will be published in a
separate Federal Register notice pertaining to all American Indian
statistical areas defined through the TSAP.
III. Definitions of Key Terms
Alaska Native regional corporation (ANRC)--A corporate geographic
area established under the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (Pub. L.
92-203), to conduct both, the business and nonprofit affairs of Alaska
Natives. Twelve ANRCs cover the entire State of Alaska except for the
Annette Island Reserve.
American Indian off-reservation trust land (ORTL)--A federally
recognized American Indian land area located outside the boundaries of
an American Indian reservation whose boundaries are established by deed
and over which a federally recognized American Indian tribal government
has governmental authority.
American Indian reservation (AIR)--A federally recognized American
Indian land area with boundaries established by final treaty, statute,
executive order, and/or court order and over which a federally
recognized American Indian tribal government has governmental
authority. Along with reservation, designations such as colonies,
communities, pueblos, rancherias, and reserves apply to AIRs.
Coastal water--Water bodies between territorial seas and inland
water, the encompassing headlands being more than one mile apart and
less than 24 miles apart.
Conjoint--A description of a boundary shared by two adjacent
geographic entities.
Contiguous--A description of areas sharing common boundaries, such
that the areas, when combined, form a single piece of territory.
Noncontinuous areas form disjoint pieces.
Great Lakes' waters--Water area beyond one mile wide headland
embayments located in any of the five Great Lakes: Erie, Huron,
Michigan, Ontario, or Superior.
Group quarters (GQ)--A place where people live or stay, in a group
living arrangement, that is owned or managed by an entity or
organization providing housing and/or services for the residents. This
is not a typical household-type living arrangement. These services may
include custodial or medical care, as well as other types of
assistance, and residency is commonly restricted to those receiving
these services. People living in group quarters are usually not related
to each other. Group quarters include such places as college residence
halls, residential treatment centers, skilled nursing facilities, group
homes, military barracks, correctional facilities, and workers'
dormitories.
Incorporated place--A type of governmental unit, incorporated under
state law as a city, town (except in New England, New York, and
Wisconsin), borough (except in Alaska and New York), or village,
generally to provide governmental services for a concentration of
people within legally prescribed boundaries.
Inland water--Water bodies entirely surrounded by land or at the
point where their opening to coastal waters, territorial seas, or the
Great Lakes is less than one mile across.
Minor civil division (MCD)--The primary governmental or
administrative division of a county in 28 states and the Island Areas
having legal boundaries, names, and descriptions. MCDs represent many
different types of legal entities with a wide variety of
characteristics, powers, and functions depending on the state and type
of MCD. In some states, some or all of the incorporated places also
constitute MCDs.
Nonvisible feature--A map feature that is not visible on the
ground, such as a city or county boundary through space, a property
line, line-of-sight extension of a road.
Special land use block group--Block group delineated coextensive
with, or covering the same area as, the special land use tract.
Special land use tract--Type of census tract that must be
designated as a specific land use type (e.g. state park) and have an
official name (e.g., Jay Cooke State Park), must have little or no
residential population or housing units, and must not create a
noncontiguous census tract. If delineated in a densely populated, urban
area, a special land use tract must have an area of approximately one
square mile or more. If delineated completely outside an urban area, a
special land use tract must have an area of approximately 10 square
miles or more.
Territorial seas--Water bodies not included under the definition
for inland water, coastal water, or Great Lakes' waters, see above.
TIGER--Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing
database developed by the Census Bureau to support its mapping needs
for the Decennial Census and other Census Bureau programs. The
topological structure of the TIGER database defines the location and
relationship of boundaries, streets, rivers, railroads, and other
features to each other and to the numerous geographic areas for which
the Census Bureau tabulates data from its censuses and surveys.
Visible feature--A map feature that can be seen on the ground, such
as a road, railroad track, major above-ground transmission line or
pipeline, river or stream, shoreline, fence, sharply defined mountain
ridge, or cliff. A nonstandard visible feature is a feature that may
not be clearly defined on the ground (such as a ridge), may be seasonal
(such as an intermittent stream), or may be relatively impermanent
(such as a fence). The Census Bureau generally requests verification
that nonstandard features used as boundaries for the PSAP geographic
areas pose no problem in their location during field work.
Water body block group--Block group delineated coextensive with, or
covering the same area as, the water body tract.
[[Page 17343]]
Water body tract--Type of census tract encompassing territorial
seas, coastal water, the Great Lakes, or inland water at least 100
square miles in area. If an inland water body meets this criteria, each
county can delineate a census tract for its portion of the water body.
Executive Order 12866
This notice has been determined to be not significant under
Executive Order 12866.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This program notice does not represent a collection of information
subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35.
Dated: April 3, 2007.
Charles Louis Kincannon,
Director, Bureau of the Census.
[FR Doc. E7-6467 Filed 4-5-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-07-P