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It's 2019. The 2020 US census will be underway in a few months. We'll probably start getting data in mid-2021 (less than two years from now). How many of the 2010 folks are around, and who else might be interested in helping out with the new version? Two years from now is not too early to be thinking about what should happen. WhatamIdoing ( talk) 21:02, 6 October 2019 (UTC)
Please see Wikipedia:US Census Migration. -- RoySmith (talk) 15:36, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
Please see Wikipedia:US Census Migration#United States Census 2000 demographics. Yours aye, Buaidh talk contribs 04:09, 19 December 2020 (UTC)
Members of WikiProject U.S. Census should place one of the following lines of Wikitext on their user page:
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[[Category:WikiProject U.S. Census members]] | none | linked pages | ||
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Template:User WP U.S. Census}}
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Yours aye, Buaidh talk contribs 05:40, 19 December 2020 (UTC)
Greetings and felicitations. The 2010 Census contains the boilerplate "XX.X% were non-families. YY.Y% of all households were made up of individuals" (e.g., here). This violates MOS:NUMNOTES (which is based on general English usage—see The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th Ed., 9.5 "Number beginning a sentence" (p. 545)). I fix them manually to read "...Of all households, YY.Y% were made up of individuals", but I'd like to avoid the necessity with the next version. Can we come to a consensus about this? — DocWatson42 ( talk) 10:34, 28 January 2021 (UTC)
I worked on the 2020 Census and have been looking for the release of data I helped collect in remote Alaska villages, but all I can seem to find is data based on the 2019 American Community Survey. Has the data not been released yet? Beeblebrox ( talk) 21:26, 14 June 2021 (UTC)
The 2020 Redistricting Data will be available on data.census.gov no later than September 30th. The redistricting legacy format summary files are now available on the FTP site. Support materials and additional information are available on the Redistricting Data Program's summary file webpage
I have had a number of pages for CDPs that cover a university merged into the page for the university. (see Kean University, New Jersey (CDP) https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Kean_University%2C_New_Jersey_%28CDP%29&type=revision&diff=1090473926&oldid=1090451709) which has been redirected to Kean University. I think that they should be separate. A CDP wikipage for a university/college campus is different from the entry for the actual university and should be separate. That is why we use a different infobox for CDPs which provides census-specific information including geographic information, a map with neighboring communities, coordinates, coordinates, elevation, population density, a FIPS code, and a GNIS ID (which enable bots to identify the geography and update certain parameters). The population of a CDP does not correspond to the composition of the student body at the university; rather it only refers to those who are permanent residents on campus. For geographic entities, the demographic composition of "residents" has little to do with the university and is best held on another page. I looked for guidance but I did not see any discussion in the help pages (in fact I cannot see any CDPs for universities in New Jersey other then the ones I created). Sometimes CDP geographies are different from the subject to CDP (e.g. military bases, islands...etc). It is best to keep a standard format with standard entries and refer back to the CDP page from the subject page. Patapsco913 ( talk) 19:23, 29 May 2022 (UTC)
White Deer Hole Creek is a FA and is being reviewed for meeting FA criteria ( Larrys Creek was a FA, and was delisted recently as part of the same review of older FAs). Both articles had watershed information from here, which included information like the watershed's area, population in the previous US census, and area / percentages of the watershed by forest or agriculture. This information is no longer available from the Chesapeake Bay program website, and the WebArchive links are to "URL not found" pages. Many year ago I emailed the Chesapeake Bay program asking where they got the information. Their reply was basically it was easy to get without giving me a source. My hope is that there is a database somewhere or website that I am not aware of, but someone here knows about. Anyone have any ideas? WikiProject Rivers let me know of a source for the percent forest etc., so now the most important missing piece of information would be 2020 census population of the watershed. Does anyone know how to get this data? Thanks! - Ruhrfisch ><>°° 00:55, 22 November 2022 (UTC)
Hi! It's 2024 now, and I haven't seen any 2020 census data on any articles that I've looked at; just the 2000 and 2010 census data at most. Is there any plan to add 2020 census data? I'm guessing not, given that it hasn't happened yet, but it'd be nice if someone could confirm that. AlphaPyro ( talk) 06:34, 2 February 2024 (UTC)
United States Project‑class | |||||||
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Statistics Project‑class | |||||||
|
|
|
It's 2019. The 2020 US census will be underway in a few months. We'll probably start getting data in mid-2021 (less than two years from now). How many of the 2010 folks are around, and who else might be interested in helping out with the new version? Two years from now is not too early to be thinking about what should happen. WhatamIdoing ( talk) 21:02, 6 October 2019 (UTC)
Please see Wikipedia:US Census Migration. -- RoySmith (talk) 15:36, 10 February 2020 (UTC)
Please see Wikipedia:US Census Migration#United States Census 2000 demographics. Yours aye, Buaidh talk contribs 04:09, 19 December 2020 (UTC)
Members of WikiProject U.S. Census should place one of the following lines of Wikitext on their user page:
Wikitext | userbox | where used | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
[[Category:WikiProject U.S. Census members]] | none | linked pages | ||
{{
Template:User WP U.S. Census}}
|
|
linked pages |
Yours aye, Buaidh talk contribs 05:40, 19 December 2020 (UTC)
Greetings and felicitations. The 2010 Census contains the boilerplate "XX.X% were non-families. YY.Y% of all households were made up of individuals" (e.g., here). This violates MOS:NUMNOTES (which is based on general English usage—see The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th Ed., 9.5 "Number beginning a sentence" (p. 545)). I fix them manually to read "...Of all households, YY.Y% were made up of individuals", but I'd like to avoid the necessity with the next version. Can we come to a consensus about this? — DocWatson42 ( talk) 10:34, 28 January 2021 (UTC)
I worked on the 2020 Census and have been looking for the release of data I helped collect in remote Alaska villages, but all I can seem to find is data based on the 2019 American Community Survey. Has the data not been released yet? Beeblebrox ( talk) 21:26, 14 June 2021 (UTC)
The 2020 Redistricting Data will be available on data.census.gov no later than September 30th. The redistricting legacy format summary files are now available on the FTP site. Support materials and additional information are available on the Redistricting Data Program's summary file webpage
I have had a number of pages for CDPs that cover a university merged into the page for the university. (see Kean University, New Jersey (CDP) https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Kean_University%2C_New_Jersey_%28CDP%29&type=revision&diff=1090473926&oldid=1090451709) which has been redirected to Kean University. I think that they should be separate. A CDP wikipage for a university/college campus is different from the entry for the actual university and should be separate. That is why we use a different infobox for CDPs which provides census-specific information including geographic information, a map with neighboring communities, coordinates, coordinates, elevation, population density, a FIPS code, and a GNIS ID (which enable bots to identify the geography and update certain parameters). The population of a CDP does not correspond to the composition of the student body at the university; rather it only refers to those who are permanent residents on campus. For geographic entities, the demographic composition of "residents" has little to do with the university and is best held on another page. I looked for guidance but I did not see any discussion in the help pages (in fact I cannot see any CDPs for universities in New Jersey other then the ones I created). Sometimes CDP geographies are different from the subject to CDP (e.g. military bases, islands...etc). It is best to keep a standard format with standard entries and refer back to the CDP page from the subject page. Patapsco913 ( talk) 19:23, 29 May 2022 (UTC)
White Deer Hole Creek is a FA and is being reviewed for meeting FA criteria ( Larrys Creek was a FA, and was delisted recently as part of the same review of older FAs). Both articles had watershed information from here, which included information like the watershed's area, population in the previous US census, and area / percentages of the watershed by forest or agriculture. This information is no longer available from the Chesapeake Bay program website, and the WebArchive links are to "URL not found" pages. Many year ago I emailed the Chesapeake Bay program asking where they got the information. Their reply was basically it was easy to get without giving me a source. My hope is that there is a database somewhere or website that I am not aware of, but someone here knows about. Anyone have any ideas? WikiProject Rivers let me know of a source for the percent forest etc., so now the most important missing piece of information would be 2020 census population of the watershed. Does anyone know how to get this data? Thanks! - Ruhrfisch ><>°° 00:55, 22 November 2022 (UTC)
Hi! It's 2024 now, and I haven't seen any 2020 census data on any articles that I've looked at; just the 2000 and 2010 census data at most. Is there any plan to add 2020 census data? I'm guessing not, given that it hasn't happened yet, but it'd be nice if someone could confirm that. AlphaPyro ( talk) 06:34, 2 February 2024 (UTC)