Year: 2019

Latest Census Numbers Show County Population Estimates by Age, Sex, Race and Hispanic Origin

  • August 20th, 2019

The U.S. Census Bureau today issued its first county population estimates by age, sex, race, and Hispanic origin since Census 2000, pinpointing at the county level where increases and decreases in various population groups are occurring.

The estimates for the state’s 67 counties are as of July 1, 2002, said Annette Watters, manager of the Alabama State Data Center at The University of Alabama. “The race data and the Hispanic origin data cover two distinctly different concepts. The federal government considers Hispanic origin to be an ethnicity rather than a race. Hispanic persons may be of any race,” Watters explained.

The following findings highlight some of the changing demographics in Alabama:

Total Population
Counties in Alabama that were population gainers in the 20th century continue to be the hot counties in the 21st century. Between 2000 and 2002 Shelby County gained 10,539 people, the biggest gain of any county in the state. Madison County took the second spot with 9,200 additional people between the date of the 2000 Census and July 1, 2002. Growth was very uneven across the regions of the state and also uneven within specific demographics. Jefferson County had an overall population loss but a big gain within the African American population. Baldwin County had fewer than 400 additional school-aged children in that time period but more than 1,500 new residents over the age of 65.

Children under 5
Babies are more popular in some Alabama counties than others. In 38 of Alabama’s 67 counties, the number of children under the age of 5 either stayed about the same or declined in the time between 2000 and 2002. Jefferson County, which already had the biggest number of infants and toddlers, is the county that also gained the most over the 2000-2002 period.

Children 5 to 17
Between 2000 and 2002 Alabama lost 19,000 school-aged children. Some large counties (Shelby, Madison, St. Clair, Elmore, Baldwin, and Blount) included in a metro area were part of a contrary trend and gained in number of children between the ages of 5 and 17. All other counties in the state held about steady in number of residents in that age range, or they lost in that demographic. Metro status did not guarantee population gain among children. Some counties that lost the most number of school-aged children are also metro counties (Calhoun, Montgomery, Mobile, Jefferson).

People age 65 and over
Twenty-four of the 67 Alabama counties gained 100 or more persons aged 65 or older between 2000 and 2002. Most counties held about steady in that population group, gaining or losing less than 100 over the two-year period. Exceptions were Madison, Baldwin and Shelby Counties, which each gained more than 1,300 seniors, and Jefferson County, which lost more than 1,000.

People age 85 and over
In two years time, Alabama gained more than 4,000 persons who are older than 85 years old. Some might have moved to the state, but most are long-time residents who simply aged into this category. Nearly every county has more and more very elderly residents. Only some rural counties have fewer people 85 and older now than they did at the time of the 2000 census.

Blacks
Jefferson County had the largest population of Black people in 2000 (260,608) and 2002 (266,481), and also the largest numerical increase (5,873). Other counties with a gain of more than 1,000 African Americans over the two-year period were Montgomery, Mobile, Madison, Tuscaloosa, Shelby, and Lee.

Hispanics
Jefferson and Marshall Counties showed increases in their Hispanic population of more than 1,000 each, followed closely by DeKalb County, which gained about 975 Hispanics between 2000 and 2002. Shelby, Madison, Marshall, and Baldwin each gained more than 500 persons of Spanish origin. Several counties showed little or no change in their Hispanic population, although 16 counties showed a gain of between 100 and 500. Some counties believe their Census 2000 count of Hispanics was artificially low, making comparisons of change within the decade a little problematic.

Tables for every county in the state may be found on the CBER website. The Census Bureau makes county population estimates using administrative records in “a demographic-change model.” The estimates of population changes since the most recent census use data on births, deaths, and migration.

Alabama’s Population Tops 4.5 Million in 2003, According to Census Bureau

  • August 20th, 2019

Alabama’s population grew by 21,856 people between 2002 and 2003, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s most recent population estimates. Alabama ranks 30th of 51 (including the District of Columbia) in number of residents added during that time period.

According to Annette Watters, manager of the Alabama State Data Center and a member of the National Steering Committee of the Census Bureau’s State Data Center organization, the South had the largest numerical increase in population (1.3 million), while the West recorded the fastest rate of growth (1.5 percent). Texas, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia rank in the top 10 states for population growth, she said.

“Although Alabama is not one of the nation’s fastest growing states, it has netted more than 53,600 additional people since the Census was taken in 2000,” Watters said. “Population will increase when people move to the state or are born here. Population is subtracted when people move away or die. Most of Alabama’s population growth comes from natural increase. That is, there are more people born in Alabama than people who die in any given year.”

According to Watters, for two of the last three years, Alabama has had negative internal migration numbers.

“In other words, more people have moved away from Alabama than residents of other states have moved in,” she said. “We do not yet have new figures estimating the age, race, or educational attainment of these movers.”

From April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2003, Alabama’s net internal migration was a negative 9,826. The trend began to reverse itself between 2002 and 2003. “Last year we had 4,525 more people who moved here from other states than Alabamians who left,” Watters noted.

International migration is important to the state’s population growth, but it does not contribute as much to Alabama’s increase as it does to some other states, Watters noted. She said Alabama ranked 34th of 51 in 2003 for population change attributed to international migration.

Last year, Alabama picked up about 5,000 new residents from outside international borders, but other states in the South gained many more. For example, Florida gained 107,300 from net international migration; Georgia added 38,900; and Texas 135,000.

In recent years, Watters said, Shelby, Madison, and Baldwin Counties have been the primary recipients Alabama’s population increase. The county-by-county statistics for 2003 will be released in the spring of 2004.

Information about any county in Alabama can be obtained at http://cber.cba.ua.edu.

The University of Alabama’s Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration, founded in 1919, first began offering graduate education in 1923. Its Center for Business and Economic Research was created in 1930, and since that time has engaged in research programs to promote economic development in the state while continuously expanding and refining its base of socioeconomic information.

Census Bureau Boundary and Annexation Survey

  • August 20th, 2019
Cities and towns frequently change their boundaries by annexation and sometimes by deannexation. These new boundaries will usually change the population of the town because people live in the annexed areas. In order for a town’s population estimates to be correct, the Census Bureau needs to know the correct boundaries. Between decennial censuses, the Bureau conducts a survey of towns and cities, asking for new information about boundary changes that may have happened.

The Boundary and Annexation Survey (BAS) collects information about the inventory of the legal boundaries for and the legal actions affecting the boundaries of:
• Counties
• Incorporated places
• Minor civil divisions (for states that have this kind of active governmental unit)
• Federally recognized legal American Indian areas.

This information is used for
• Conducting the decennial and economic censuses
• Ongoing surveys
• Preparing population estimates
• Supporting other statistical programs of the Census Bureau
• Other legislative programs of the federal government.

Each government is asked to review materials for its jurisdiction to verify the correctness of the information. Each government is asked to
• Update the boundaries
• Supply information documenting each legal boundary change
• Provide changes in the inventory of governments.

The Census Bureau has a schedule for conducting the BAS:
1. Counties and American Indian reservations are included in every survey.

2. In the years ending in 8, 9, and 0, the BAS also includes all incorporated places.
These three years coincide with the Census Bureau’s preparation for the decennial census.

3. In the years ending in 1, 3, 4, and 6, the BAS includes only incorporated places that have a population of 5,000 or greater.

4. In the years ending with 2 and 7, the BAS includes incorporated places that have a population of 2,500 or greater.

In addition, the Census Bureau will include in the BAS each newly incorporated place in the year following notification of its incorporation.

In the years ending with 1 through 7, the Census Bureau will make boundary changes to places with populations smaller than 5,000 if the county indicates those changes on its returned BAS forms. In some cases, the Census Bureau has entered into agreements with individual states to modify the universe of incorporated places to include additional entities that are known in that state to have had boundary changes, without regard to population size. That is, for certain states, the state notifies the Census Bureau about boundary changes, no matter how large or small the incorporated place. Georgia has such an agreement with the Census Bureau, but Alabama does not.

No other federal agency collects these data, nor is there a standard collection of this information at the state level.

Method of Collection
A BAS package that includes the following items is provided to each respondent:
1. An introductory letter from the Census Bureau.
2. The appropriate forms.
3. A unique user name and password so respondents can respond electronically via the Internet.
4. A BAS Users Guide.
5. A set of maps.
6. A return envelope and postcards for respondents.

Electronic Data Collection
The Census Bureau has developed an electronic response option. During the 2003 survey, respondents were issued a user name and password and given the opportunity to update the BAS forms via the Internet. During 2003 they also tested an application in a pilot program that allowed respondents to update both their forms and maps using the Internet. The feasibility of that is still under development. The third electronic response option is the Digital BAS. This option will provide a way for governments to submit digital files that represent their boundaries and associated information. This option is also still under development.

Signature Needed
An official in each government is asked to verify the legal boundaries and provide the boundary changes. The official is then asked to sign the materials and verify the forms and return the information to the Census Bureau. In Alabama, unless a town’s highest elected official pays attention to the forms he/she receives, fills them out, and sends them back, no one will ever officially know about or be able to act on any changes that have happened to the boundaries of that town or city. The highest elected official, usually a mayor or a county commissioner, may get help from a city clerk, a city planning department, or a regional planning agency, but the responsibility for signing and returning the forms rests with the local elected official.

For Further Information
Readers can find a complete description of the Boundary and Annexation Survey program in the Federal Register Vol. 60, No. 28, Wednesday, February 11, 2004. You may also visit the Census Bureau’s Boundary and Annexation Survey (BAS) website at http://www.census.gov/geo/www/bas/bashome.html

 

UA’s State Data Center Looks at the Latest Census Estimated Breakdown for the State

  • August 20th, 2019

The U.S. Census Bureau has just released its estimated breakdown of Alabama’s population and some interesting numbers have emerged, says a University of Alabama census expert.

Boys outnumber girls in the state’s schools, but that number reverses dramatically when looking at the state’s senior citizen population. Males make up 51.3 percent of school-aged children, but men are only 40.5 percent of the population aged 65 and over. The difference is even more striking when looking at the very elderly. Men make up only 28 percent of the over-85 population.

“These new estimates have important uses for policy-makers, planners, government officials, and agencies whose clients include special age groups, such as schools, health-care providers or employers,” said Annette Jones Watters, manager of the State Data Center at The University of Alabama and a member of the Census Bureau’s National Steering Committee of the Census Bureau’s State Data Center, whose nine-member board serves as an advisory group to the Census Bureau.

In 2003, Watters said, there were nearly 3.9 million people in Alabama aged 18 and over. There were more than 592,000 people aged 65 and over.

“But the number of school-aged children is far greater than the number of seniors. There were 810,609 children in the state between the ages of 5 and 17,” Watters said. “School-aged children represent 18.0 percent of the state’s total population. Persons aged 65 and over represent 13.2 percent of the population.”

Watters also pointed out that the number of women of child-bearing age has actually been decreasing in Alabama throughout the decade.

In 2000 there were more than 970,000 women in Alabama between the ages of 15 and 44. By 2003, that number was 952,087. The number of men in that age group has been declining as well, she said.

“There are also fewer high school aged students in Alabama now than there were in 2003,” Watters said. “These are the ages of people who are finishing their education, entering the labor force, and moving into their prime earning years.”

The State Data Center is part of the Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration’s Center for Business and Economic Research. The Center was created in 1930, and since that time has engaged in research programs to promote economic development in the state while continuously expanding and refining its base of socioeconomic information.

Guidance on Uses of Statistical Area Definitions

  • August 20th, 2019

All Agencies Should Use the Most Recent Definitions. All agencies that conduct statistical activities to collect and publish data for Metropolitan, Micropolitan, and Combined Statistical Areas, and New England City and Town Areas should use the most recent definitions of these areas established by OMB.

The Definitions Are for Statistical Purposes Only. OMB establishes and maintains the definitions of Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas, Combined Statistical Areas, and New England City and Town Areas solely for statistical purposes. This classification is intended to provide nationally consistent definitions for collecting, tabulating, and publishing federal statistics for a set of geographic areas.

Inquiries. Inquiries concerning the Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Area Standards and the statistical uses of their definitions should be directed to Suzann Evinger (202-395-3093) at OMB. Inquiries about uses of the statistical area definitions in program administration or regulation should be directed to the appropriate agency.

Metropolitan Is Not the Same as Urban. The Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Area Standards do not equate to an urban-rural classification; many counties included in Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and many other counties, contain both urban and rural territory and populations.

Nonstatistical Program Uses of the Statistical Area Definitions. In periodically reviewing and revising the definitions of these areas, OMB does not take into account or attempt to anticipate any nonstatistical uses that may be made of the definitions, nor will OMB modify the definitions to meet the requirements of any nonstatistical program. Thus, OMB cautions that Metropolitan Statistical Area and Micropolitan Statistical Area definitions should not be used to develop and implement federal, state, and local nonstatistical programs and policies without full consideration of the effects of using these definitions for such purposes.

Metro and Micro Areas May Not be Suitable for Program Funding Formulas. These areas are not intended to serve as a general-purpose geographic framework for nonstatistical activities, and they may or may not be suitable for use in program funding formulas. OMB recognizes that some legislation specifies the use of Metropolitan Statistical Areas for program purposes, including the allocation of federal funds, and will continue to work with the Congress to clarify the foundations of these definitions and the resultant, often unintended consequences of their use for nonstatistical purposes.

It Is the Sponsoring Agency’s Responsibility to Know What Is Appropriate. In cases where there is no statutory requirement and an agency elects to use the Metropolitan, Micropolitan, or Combined Statistical Area definitions in nonstatistical programs, it is the sponsoring agency’s responsibility to ensure that the definitions are appropriate for such use. When an agency is publishing for comment a proposed regulation that would use the definitions for a nonstatistical purpose, the agency should seek public comment on the proposed use.

An agency using the statistical definitions in a nonstatistical program may modify the definitions, but only for the purposes of that program. In such cases, any modifications should be clearly identified as deviations from the OMB statistical area definitions in order to avoid confusion with OMB’s official definitions of Metropolitan, Micropolitan, and Combined Statistical Areas.

In addition, in light of recent changes to the statistical area definitions, OMB urges federal agencies that use the statistical areas for allocating program funds to provide information to the public on their plans and schedules for using the new definitions.

New Terminology—Be Careful! The 2000 standards changed the terminology used for classifying the areas. Under the 1980 and 1990 standards there were two types of areas:
(1) Metropolitan Statistical Areas and
(2) Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas that consisted of Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas.
The terms “Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Area” and “Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area” are now obsolete.

“Metropolitan Division” Replaces “Primary Metropolitan Statsitical Area.” Under the 2000 standards, “Metropolitan Statistical Area” and “Micropolitan Statistical Area” are the terms used for the basic set of county-based areas defined under this classification. In addition, the term “Metropolitan Division” is used to refer to a county or group of counties within a Metropolitan Statistical Area that has a population core of at least 2.5 million. A Metropolitan Division is most generally comparable in concept, and equivalent to, the now obsolete Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area.

While a Metropolitan Division is a subdivision of a larger Metropolitan Statistical Area, it often functions as a distinct social, economic, and cultural area with the larger region. Metropolitan Divisions retain their separate statistical identities. Federal agencies will continue to provide detailed data for each Metropolitan Division, just as they did in the past for the Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas.

If federal agencies have been using the Primary Metropolitan Statistical Area for program administrative and fund allocation purposes, they should now consider using the Metropolitan Division definitions, the comparable geographic units of the classification based on the 2000 standards. Research and analyses that previously used data for Primary Metropolitan Statistical Areas should now use data for Metropolitan Divisions. Data users and analysts interested in demographic and economic patterns, trends, and processes within large Metropolitan Statistical Areas should consider data for specific Metropolitan Divisions when conducting analyses.

Be Careful When Comparing to 1990 Data. Users making comparisons with areas defined under the 1990 standards should note that when the 2000 standards were applied, the result, in some cases, was to create several areas from an existing Metropolitan Statistical Area. The resulting reconfigured areas may also qualify under the 2000 standards to form a complementary Combined Statistical Area, while retaining their separate designations as Metropolitan or Micropolitan Statistical Areas. In these situations, the Combined Statistical Area may be the approximate geographic equivalent of the previous Metropolitan Statistical Area, and thus may be the more appropriate geographic unit for analytic and program purposes.

Sometimes the Combined Statistical Area Will Be the Only Geography Reported for Data Tabulations. Federal agencies will be making economic and demographic data available for Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas, Metropolitan Divisions, New England City and Town Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas. Because of sample sizes and associated data quality and confidentiality issues, there may be instances where agencies will produce data only at the level of Combined Statistical Areas.

Electronic Links to Useful Sites. The OMB bulletin from which this report was taken is available electronically from the OMB website at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/bulletins/fy04/b04-03.html

The 2000 Standards for Defining Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas are available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/fedreg/metroareas122700.pdf.

Other background documents are available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/inforeg/statpolicy.html#ms

Historical definitions of Metropolitan Statistical Areas are available from the Census Bureau’s web site at: http://www.census.gov.

Data Shows Only Two-Thirds of State’s Children Live in Traditional Married-Couple Households

  • August 20th, 2019
See accompanying chart.

Only about two-thirds of the children in Alabama under age 18 live in the traditional married-couple household, according to Annette Watters, manager of the State Data Center at The University of Alabama.

Watters said her figures are based on numbers just released by the U.S. Census Bureau which show that 64 percent of children under the age of 18 in Alabama live in a married-couple household, a percentage that is among the lowest in the nation.

Alabama is among several other Deep South, traditionally “Bible Belt” states that have large percentages of their children living in arrangements other than the traditional two-parent family, according to Watters. Alabama ranks 45th of 51 states (including the District of Columbia) for children who live in married-couple families.

One quarter, more than 278,000, of Alabama’s children live in a mother-only family, Watters said, which makes Alabama No. 5 in the nation for mother-only family groups.

“Fathers in Alabama are not nearly as likely as mothers to be the primary care-giver to their children,” Watters said. “In fact, only five percent, or somewhat over 57,000 children, live in a father-only family. This ranks Alabama 43rd in the nation for father-only family groups.”

Four percent of Alabama’s children, about 44,500, live in households with unmarried adult partners, Watters said.

“The data do not reveal if the partners are same-sex or opposite-sex unmarried partners,” she said. “This kind of living arrangement is not nearly as common in Alabama as it is in many other states. Alabama ranks 50th of 51 for children living in unmarried-partner households.”

Watters said in the case of children who live with their grandparents, the grandparent is often the primary care-giver, “but sometimes a mother and her child or children all live with Grandma. In those cases, the child is counted as living in a mother-only relationship and also counted as living in a grandparent’s household. Because children can be double-counted like that, the total percent of children in households in Alabama will sum to more than 100.”

Children in Alabama are much more likely to be living with a grandparent than with a father only or with a parent who is an unmarried partner, Watters said. More than 89,000 Alabama children are living with a grandparent, either with or without one of their parents also in the home. Alabama ranks sixth in the nation for grandparents who are taking care of grandkids.

In fact, the South has the highest percentage of grandchildren living with grandparents. In Alabama, 8 percent of children in households are living with a grandparent. The percentages are even higher for Mississippi (11 percent), Louisiana (10 percent) and South Carolina (9 percent). However, the District of Columbia (15 percent) and Hawaii (13 percent) have the highest numbers in this category.

With 64 percent of Alabama’s children living in households with two married parents, 36 percent are living in some other arrangement. Watters said the counties in Alabama that have the highest percentages of non-traditional household arrangements for children are Greene, Sumter, Perry, Dallas, Wilcox, Lowndes, Butler, Macon, and Bullock.

The data also shows that blacks are more likely to have households with grandchildren, foster children, and other relatives who are minor children.

States and counties that have consistently above-average proportions of children born out of wedlock have high concentrations of children in non-married-couple living arrangements.

The findings come from Census 2000. Watters said the Census Bureau has issued a special report on the social and economic characteristics of the nation’s 72 million children entitled Children and the Households They Live In: 2000. The study did not include people under the age of 18 who are the head of a household, a spouse, or the parent of a child when both the teen-aged parent and her child live in the household of an older family member.

See accompanying chart.

Pine Apple Grows Fastest, Huntsville Posts Largest Population Gains in Census Bureau Estimates

  • August 20th, 2019

The U.S. Census Bureau has released new population estimates for Alabama’s cities and towns that give the state its most recent indications of growth since the 2000 census, according to Annette Watters, manager of the Alabama State Data Center at The University of Alabama.

Which town grew the fastest? Clearly, the answer is Pine Apple in Wilcox County. Between 2000 and 2003 Pine Apple increased its population by 80 percent. That figure represents 136 people, moving Pine Apple’s total population from 171 to 307—a big population boom in a small town.

Measuring which place grew the fastest doesn’t tell the whole story. The other obvious question is, “Which city gained the most new residents?” The answer is Huntsville. Huntsville gained 5,719 new inhabitants between 2000 and 2003. Because Huntsville has a much larger population base than Pine Apple, those thousands of people represent not an 80 percent increase, but 4 percent. Nearby Madison gained 4,741 people, only about 1,000 less than Huntsville, but that gain represents a 16 percent increase for the smaller city.

According to the new estimates, seven cities in Alabama gained more than 2,000 people between 2000 and 2003: Huntsville (5,719); Madison (4,741); Auburn (3,861); Pelham (3,041); Prattville (2,354); Dothan (2,113); and Hoover (2,059). Both Calera (1,964) and Millbrook (1,957) came close to the 2,000 mark.

Watters noted that the estimates include the time period through July 1, 2003. If a city has experienced a growth spurt during the most recent 12 months, that will be reflected in future estimates.

“Birmingham remains Alabama’s largest incorporated place, despite continuing population losses,” Watters said. “Montgomery is the state’s second largest city, followed by Mobile, Huntsville, Tuscaloosa, Hoover, Dothan, Decatur, Auburn and Gadsden, in descending order of population size.”

In addition to Birmingham, three other of Alabama’s largest cities have lost more than 1,000 people over the past three years–Birmingham (-6,170); Mobile (-5,727); Montgomery (-1,484); and Gadsden (-1,359).

The population totals for the year 2000 have had some enhancements since the 2000 Census was released. These newest estimates take into account corrections that have been made, either through the challenges that cities made to their census counts, or boundary annexations, or changes for any incorrect boundary information the Census Bureau may have been using.

“We need to remember that the population figures for 2003 are estimates, not a real count of people,” Watters said. “If the Census Bureau receives new, different information they can, and do, change the estimates. There is a standard procedure for city and town officials to submit the necessary documentation if they think their estimates are in error.”

She added that getting the estimate revised is not an adversarial process. Officials just provide the specified documentation the Census Bureau needs to make the correction.

Population Estimates for Alabama’s 20 Largest Cities and Towns, 2000-2003

Rank              Estimates
in                     Base*   Estimate  Percent   Number
2003  NAME             2000        2003   Change   Change
Alabama     4,447,100   4,500,752       1%   53,652
1  Birmingham    242,790     236,620      -3%   -6,170
2  Montgomery    201,607     200,123      -1%   -1,484
3  Mobile        199,191     193,464      -3%   -5,727
4  Huntsville    158,518     164,237       4%    5,719
5  Tuscaloosa     77,753      79,294       2%    1,541
6  Hoover         63,011      65,070       3%    2,059
7  Dothan         57,923      60,036       4%    2,113
8  Decatur        53,948      54,239       1%      291
9  Auburn         43,062      46,923       9%    3,861
10  Gadsden        38,978      37,619      -3%   -1,359
11  Florence       36,282      35,852      -1%     -430
12  Madison        29,339      34,080      16%    4,741
13  Vestavia Hills 30,399      30,909       2%      510
14  Bessemer       29,693      29,108      -2%     -585
15  Phenix City    28,307      28,444       0%      137
16  Prichard       28,633      27,983      -2%     -650
17  Prattville     24,303      26,657      10%    2,354
18  Alabaster      23,635      25,462       8%    1,827
19  Homewood       25,104      24,399      -3%     -705
20  Anniston       24,498      23,750      -3%     -748

*Includes additions and corrections to the original census 2000 data.   

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census,
Population Estimates Division, Release date, June 24, 2004.

Under “Data” you will find a table with the 2003 population estimate of every Alabama city and town.

UA’s Data Center Sheds Light on Those Eschewing 9 to 5 Jobs in Favor of Stay-at-Home Work

  • August 20th, 2019

A national newspaper recently published an article about a woman who quit work to stay at home after her daughter was born. She became annoyed at having to rewind the toilet paper after the baby unraveled it onto the floor. The latch she invented to prevent the problem, along with some other inventions, is expected to net her about $1 million in sales next year and a book deal aimed at aspiring inventors.

All of which is a long-winded way of saying that having a stay-at-home job can be profitable as well as enjoyable.

Annette Watters, manager of the Alabama State Data Center at The University of Alabama, read the newspaper article and decided to take a look how many folks in Alabama have home-based jobs. Her research, based on 2000 information from the U.S. Census, turned up some interesting facts.

“Women are more likely than men to have a home-based job,” Watters said, noting that of people who work at home in Alabama, 54 percent are women.

Alabama’s home-based workers also are likely to be middle-aged. Sixty percent of them are between 35 and 60 years old, according to Watters.
“However,” she said, “having a job working out of one’s house is also something that some people do in their senior years. Eleven percent of home-based workers in Alabama are 65 years old or older.”

Lest you think that working at home is pretty much making “stuff” to sell or selling vegetables from a stand out front, think again.

“Working at home, possibly working for yourself, is something that appeals to well-educated people,” Watters said. “Sixty percent of Alabama’s home-based workers have at least some college. Twenty-nine percent of them have a bachelor’s degree or higher.

“These percentages are higher than the averages for workers who do not work at home. The national average educational attainment for home-based workers is even higher than the Alabama average.”

Watters also found that African-American Alabamians are much less likely than whites to be working at home. Blacks make up 8 percent of the work-at-home group, but 21 percent of the travel-to-the-workplace group.

Alabama home-based workers are most likely to be self-employed, with 45 percent operating their own non-incorporated business and another 12 percent running their own corporation . Another small group of people are unpaid family members working at home for the family business. About one-third of home-based workers are employees of some other kind of private for-profit company, and a few government workers are allowed to work from home.

The occupations that attract home-based workers are management, professional and related occupations – accounting, for example. Twenty-two percent of Alabamians working at home are in management or business and financial occupations. Another 15 percent offer professional services, most likely scientific, engineering, accounting or other financial services.

Computing, education, health, or social services are also among the professional services that might be offered by someone who works out of his or her home. Other occupations that lend themselves to home-based work are sales, personal care services and office/administrative support jobs.

But the down side to going to work in your pajamas and sipping a third cup of coffee is that home-based work isn’t necessarily lucrative. Forty-nine percent of Alabama home-based workers reported earning $15,000 a year or less in 1999. But, on the other hand, 4 percent of Alabama’s home-based workers earned $100,000 or more.

One reason for small incomes for some home-based businesses is their owners don’t intend to work at these jobs full-time. And of course, working at home means you don’t leave the office like most workers. Watters said about two-thirds of the at-home workers reported that they work more than 34 hours a week. A substantial percentage works no more than 14 hours a week at their home business. And some home-based businesses are seasonal. Some Alabamians work at their home business only a few weeks a year. Only about two-thirds of at-home jobs involve year-round work. Overall, only a little more than 2 percent of Alabama workers are allowed to wear their bunny slippers when they start their work day, but Watters says she expects that percentage to increase as time passes.

UA’s State Data Center Indicates There’s a Pickup for Every Five Folks, an SUV for Every 10

  • August 20th, 2019

A court in Maryland recently ruled that a homeowners association’s ban on parking pick-up trucks in their community was unenforceable. A lot of Alabama residents would applaud that decision, because Alabamians love their trucks.

Annette Watters, manager of the Alabama State Data Center at The University of Alabama’s Center for Business and Economic Research, recently discovered while sorting information from the U.S. Census that Alabama has about one pickup for every five people and about one sport utility vehicle for every 10 people.

“It also has approximately one pickup for every four licensed drivers and about one SUV for every eight licensed drivers,” Watters said. That translates to 1.7 million private and commercial trucks registered in Alabama during 2002, up approximately 12 percent from 1.5 million trucks in 1997.

Fifty-six percent of the registered trucks were pickups, 26 percent were SUVs, and 8 percent were minivans. The remaining 6 percent were specialized trucks for commercial or industrial use, such as dump trucks, tank trucks, flatbeds and the like.

In 2002, an estimated 7 percent of all large trucks in Alabama carried hazardous materials, which may seem a bit low to those who travel the state’s interstates regularly.

“I think it is interesting that about three-fourths of all the trucks in the state were used for personal transportation,” Watters said, “while 18 percent were operated for business, including for-hire use.”
The use of the remaining 6 percent was not reported. Utility companies and other service providers were the single largest category of businesses using trucks in Alabama. Agriculture and construction are the next biggest truck-using industries in the state.

And if it seems to you that most of the trucks you see are older models, you’re right, according to Watters.

“Seventy-two percent of the trucks on Alabama’s roads are five years old or older,” she noted. “Seventeen percent are three or four years old. Only 11 percent are two years old or less.”

Watters said the federal government conducts the truck survey every five years. “The data are important in studying the future growth of transportation and are needed in calculating fees and cost allocations among highway users,” Watters explained.

“The data also are important in evaluating safety risks to highway travelers and in assessing the energy efficiency and environmental impact of the nation’s truck fleet. Businesses and others make use of these data in conducting market studies and evaluating market strategies. This survey is also useful to businesses for calculating the longevity of products and determining fuel demands.”

The survey does not include vehicles owned by federal, state and local governments. Other vehicles excluded are ambulances, buses, motor homes, farm tractors and unpowered trailer units. “Off-highway” trucks, used exclusively on private property, are not required to be registered and are not included in this study.

Watters said registration practices for commercial vehicles differ greatly among the states. Some states register a truck-tractor semi-trailer combination as a single unit; others register the tractor and the semi-trailer separately. Only the truck-tractors are included in the registered truck counts for this study.

See www.census.gov/svsd/www/02vehinv.html, the 2002 Vehicle Inventory Survey, for more information about truck use in Alabama.

The State Data Center is part of the Culverhouse College of Commerce and Business Administration’s Center for Business and Economic Research. The Center for Business and Economic Research was created in 1930 and since that time has engaged in research programs to promote economic development in the state while continuously expanding and refining its base of socioeconomic information.