SEMCOG's Community Explorer tool is great for dynamically visualizing demographic and economic data in Southeast Michigan. Use this dataset to extend Community Explorer and make your own visualization.This tool has over 40 indicators across 4 geography types (County, Community, School Districts, Census Tracts). Not only are the data columns available, but we also include the Margin of Error (MOE) to better understand the reliability of each column.IndicatorsTotal PopulationPopulation Density (Persons/Acre)Median AgePercent Age 65+Percent Age 65+ Living AlonePercent Ages 5 to 17Ratio Youth to SeniorsPercent Bachelor's Degree or HigherPercent People in PovertyPercent AsianPercent BlackPercent HispanicPercent WhiteTotal HouseholdsAverage Household SizePercent Households with SeniorsPercent Households with ChildrenPercent Households with No CarPercent Households with Internet AccessTotal Households without Internet AccessPercent Households with Broadband Internet AccessTotal Households without Broadband Internet AccessPercentage Households with Computing DevicesTotal Households without a Desktop or LaptopPercent Seniors with Broadband Internet AccessPercent Children without Broadband Internet AccessPercent Children without Computing DevicesTotal Housing UnitsPercent VacantPercent Owner OccupiedPercent Renter OccupiedPercent Single FamilyPercent Multi-FamilyTotal JobsJob Density (Jobs/Acre)Unemployment RateLabor Force Participation RateMedian Household IncomePer Capita IncomeMedian Housing ValueAverage Commute Time (Minutes)Percent Drive Alone to WorkPercent Commute by Transit
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Southeast Michigan Community Investment Foundation
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of The Womens Center of Southeastern Michigan
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Historical Dataset of Southeast Michigan Virtual Academy is provided by PublicSchoolReview and contain statistics on metrics:Total Students Trends Over Years (2013-2023),Total Classroom Teachers Trends Over Years (2015-2023),Distribution of Students By Grade Trends,American Indian Student Percentage Comparison Over Years (2019-2023),Hispanic Student Percentage Comparison Over Years (2015-2023),Black Student Percentage Comparison Over Years (2013-2023),White Student Percentage Comparison Over Years (2013-2023),Two or More Races Student Percentage Comparison Over Years (2013-2015),Diversity Score Comparison Over Years (2013-2023),Free Lunch Eligibility Comparison Over Years (2013-2023),Reduced-Price Lunch Eligibility Comparison Over Years (2014-2016),Reading and Language Arts Proficiency Comparison Over Years (2013-2017),Math Proficiency Comparison Over Years (2013-2017),Overall School Rank Trends Over Years (2013-2017),Graduation Rate Comparison Over Years (2013-2018)
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of United Way for Southeastern Michigan
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Southeast Michigan Community Alliance (Semca)
This data is used in the Materials Management Facilities Web App (Item Details). From the Michigan Association of Regions (MAR) website: "The Michigan Association of Regions is a state association of the fourteen (14) regional councils in Michigan. MAR consists of a policy board of local elected and appointed officials that meets periodically to discuss regional policy issues and programs, and adopts legislative positions. MAR also has an Executive Directors Committee that meets monthly. Member services consists of advocacy of regional programs, training and education, research, membership surveys, networking, as well as liaison to national associations, including the National Association of Regional Councils (NARC) and the National Association of Development Organizations (NADO).State Designated Planning and Development Regions are voluntary organizations comprised of local governments dedicated to serving the regional planning needs of multi-county areas in all parts of Michigan. They are a form of local government voluntarily created by their members, which are largely representative of local governments in the region; although membership also includes road authorities, nonprofit organizations and representatives of the business community in many regions.The land area of Michigan is divided into 14 planning & development regions with counties as the organizing unit. They range widely in size. Five have only three counties, while one has fourteen counties. The two smallest are only 1,711-13 square miles each in size, while the largest is 8,735 square miles in size. Population served varies from 57,510 persons to 4,833,493 based on Census estimates in 2000. Population density ranges from under 14 persons/square mile in Region 13 (Western U.P.), to over 1,043 persons/square mile in Region 1 (Southeast Michigan). The oldest of today’s regions, Tri-County Regional Planning Commission (Region 6 in Lansing, formed in 1956), and the three county Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission (formed in 1947and subsequently replaced by the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments in 1968 (SEMCOG, which covers seven counties in SE Michigan), originated out of a desire by local officials to coordinate transportation infrastructure planning and to serve as a forum for other regional issues."These boundaries are static and were digitized from boundaries shared on the Michigan Association of Regions (MAR) website in March 2023. They were digitized for inclusion on the Materials Management Division's facilities web map. For questions or comments, reach out to EGLE-Maps@Michigan.gov.
The Tecumseh Community Health Study is a longitudinal, ongoing prospective epidemiologic study of a natural community's health and disease status. Data have been collected on the Tecumseh population in southeast Michigan for over 30 years, beginning with a 1957 canvass of all households and adding all newcomers to the community until 1970, after which only previous residents have been followed. The Tecumseh project has conducted over 80 different studies, including both disease-specific investigations and studies concerned with the prevalence and incidence of disease in the community. The core data file for the years 1959-1969 contains data collected in Round I: 1959-1960, Round II: 1962-1965, and Round III: 1967-1969 (referred to as the Cardiovascular Studies I, II, and III, and the General Surveillance Study II). These data include information taken from baseline medical history interviews, medical examinations, clinical measurements, laboratory work, and electrocardiograms. Mortality status of all persons at the time of attempted or actual contact in Round III is also provided. The major variable groups include demographic information, family history of major diseases, systematic review of present and past symptoms and conditions, smoking and drinking habits, physical examinations, measurements and laboratory work, and electrocardiogram results.
https://www.michigan-demographics.com/terms_and_conditionshttps://www.michigan-demographics.com/terms_and_conditions
A dataset listing Michigan counties by population for 2024.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Pace Southeast Michigan
The Group Quarters Facilities data layer contains information on both institutional and non-institutional group quarters facilities in Southeast Michigan. According to the Census Bureau, group quarters are places where people live or stay, in a group living arrangement, that is owned or managed by an entity providing housing and/or services for the residents. This is not a typical household-type living arrangement and the people living in group quarters are usually not related to one another. It is important to monitor the group quarters population because they are sampled as individuals within Census Bureau surveys, rather than as members of a household unit, and less information is reported.
Group Quarters Types
Institutional group quarters provide supervised custody or care to inmates or residents. This includes correctional facilities, assisted living, nursing homes, and memory care.
Non-institutional group quarters house residents who are able or eligible to be in the labor force. This includes student and military housing, group homes, residential treatment centers, and religious housing.
Group Quarters Facility Counts
Data on group quarters facilities is decentralized, and collected from a variety of federal and state agencies, educational institutions, industry associations, and private sources.
Group Quarters Facility Attributes
SEMCOG maintains a limited number of attributes on the group quarters facility points data layer. Please note that because a single building may contain group quarters of different types, there will be cases where there is multiple records for a single structure. Table GQ.1 list the current attributes of the buildings dataset:
Table GQ.1
Group Quarters Dataset Attributes
FIELD | TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
COUNTY_ID | Integer | FIPS county code. |
CITY_ID | Integer | SEMCOG code identifying the municipality, or for Detroit, master plan neighborhood, in which the building is located. |
BUILDING_ID | Long Integer | Unique identifier number of each building from SEMCOG’s buildings layer. |
IDENTIFIER | Varchar(20) | Unique identifier assigned by a government agency in their own systems.Most often this field is NULL. |
FAC_NAME | Varchar(50) | Name of the group quarters facility record. |
FAC_ADDRESS | Varchar(50) | Mailing address of the group quarters facility record. |
FAC_CITY | Varchar(50) | Name of legal jurisdiction in which the facility is located. |
FAC_ZIPCODE | Long Integer | Five digit zip code of the mailing address of the group quarters facility. |
LICENSED_BEDS | Integer | Count of licensed beds OR maximum capacity of the group quarters facility. |
RESIDENT_COUNT | Integer | Count of residents in the facility in spring 2020. |
GQ_CODE | Integer | Group quarters facility type classification code.Please see below. |
Group Quarters Classification Code
SEMCOG’s group quarters classification codes are adopted from the coding system established by the U.S. Census Bureau to classify group quarters in their data products. There are several Census codes not used by SEMCOG as our region does not contain those types of facilities, and one additional code added for a different type of facility. More information on Census group quarters codes, including full descriptions of each classification, can be found on the https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/tech_docs/group_definitions/2018GQ_Definitions.pdf?">Census Bureau’s web site.
SEMCOG classifies student housing differently than the Census, separating dorms from fraternities and sororities regardless of whether they are located on campus. In addition, student cooperative housing is added as an additional type due to the large number of such buildings in Ann Arbor.
In addition, Census counts of homeless persons are distributed to government buildings in the largest community in each county and the City of Detroit to ensure their inclusion in the data layer.
Table GQ.2
Group Quarters Classification Codes
GQ CODE | DESCRIPTION | PRIMARY SOURCE |
102 | Federal Prisons | U.S. Bureau of Prisons |
103 | State Prisons | Michigan Department of Corrections |
104 | County Jails | Michigan Department of Corrections |
201 | Juvenile Group Homes | Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs |
202 | Juvenile Residential Treatment Centers | U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Admin |
203 | Juvenile Correctional Facilities | Michigan Department of Corrections |
301 | Assisted Living and Skilled Nursing Homes | U.S. Centers for Medicare and |
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/37957/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/37957/terms
Project Positive Attitudes Towards Health (PATH) was a survey conducted as a part of a larger study, "Empirical Assessment of Respondent Driven Sampling from Total Survey Error Perspectives," supported by the National Science Foundation. The larger study aims to examine operational as well as inferential properties of respondent driven sampling (RDS). The Project PATH was an application of RDS specific to the in-person environment targeting persons who inject drugs (PWID), a group associated with illicit and stigmatized behaviors and, hence, difficult to recruit in Southeast Michigan, which included Wayne, Oakland, Macomb and St. Clair counties. The Project PATH started in May 2017 and continued until the first week of November 2017 with a total sample size of 410 for the main survey. Questions in the main survey were largely adopted from the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance and the National Survey on Drug Use and Health conducted by the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and covered topics such as general health, mental health, illicit drug use, health risk behaviors, sexually transmitted diseases, HIV, sexual orientation, health care service utilization and as well as socio-demographics. Questions specific to the interest of the local stakeholders were developed; these included topics related to Hepatitis A and access to naloxone. Demographic variables include gender, race, marital status, education level, age, and employment status.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Southeast Michigan Land Conservancy
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This dataset tracks annual white student percentage from 2009 to 2023 for South Lyon East High School vs. Michigan and South Lyon Community Schools School District
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Southeast Michigan
The Southeast Michigan Council of Governments contracted with the Applied Management & Planning Group to conduct a travel behavior survey of 7,361 households from March 28, 1994, to June 10, 1994. The primary purpose of this study was to provide the council with a new database of travel behavior to assist in updating the region's transportation models. This data collection includes demographic, socioeconomic, travel, and mobile source emissions models for projecting future patterns of development, travel, congestion, and air pollution. Information about household characteristics and travel was collected using a one-day, activity-focused diary and a separate household survey. In an activity diary, respondents recorded 65,535 trips during the assigned the day.
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This dataset tracks annual diversity score from 2009 to 2023 for South Lyon East High School vs. Michigan and South Lyon Community Schools School District
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Southeast Michigan Producers Association
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Institute For Supply Management Southeast Michigan
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset tracks annual hispanic student percentage from 2009 to 2023 for South Lyon East High School vs. Michigan and South Lyon Community Schools School District
SEMCOG's Community Explorer tool is great for dynamically visualizing demographic and economic data in Southeast Michigan. Use this dataset to extend Community Explorer and make your own visualization.This tool has over 40 indicators across 4 geography types (County, Community, School Districts, Census Tracts). Not only are the data columns available, but we also include the Margin of Error (MOE) to better understand the reliability of each column.IndicatorsTotal PopulationPopulation Density (Persons/Acre)Median AgePercent Age 65+Percent Age 65+ Living AlonePercent Ages 5 to 17Ratio Youth to SeniorsPercent Bachelor's Degree or HigherPercent People in PovertyPercent AsianPercent BlackPercent HispanicPercent WhiteTotal HouseholdsAverage Household SizePercent Households with SeniorsPercent Households with ChildrenPercent Households with No CarPercent Households with Internet AccessTotal Households without Internet AccessPercent Households with Broadband Internet AccessTotal Households without Broadband Internet AccessPercentage Households with Computing DevicesTotal Households without a Desktop or LaptopPercent Seniors with Broadband Internet AccessPercent Children without Broadband Internet AccessPercent Children without Computing DevicesTotal Housing UnitsPercent VacantPercent Owner OccupiedPercent Renter OccupiedPercent Single FamilyPercent Multi-FamilyTotal JobsJob Density (Jobs/Acre)Unemployment RateLabor Force Participation RateMedian Household IncomePer Capita IncomeMedian Housing ValueAverage Commute Time (Minutes)Percent Drive Alone to WorkPercent Commute by Transit