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Graph and download economic data for Real Per Capita Personal Income: Nonmetropolitan Portion for Iowa (IANMPRPIPC) from 2008 to 2023 about rural, IA, personal income, per capita, personal, income, real, and USA.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Iowa Rural Development Council
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Graph and download economic data for Regional Price Parities: Services: Other: Nonmetropolitan Portion for Iowa (IANMPRPPSERVEOTH) from 2008 to 2023 about rural, PPP, IA, services, price, and USA.
This feature layer contains Linn County, Iowa rural zoning. This dataset is maintained by the Planning and Development Department.Update FrequencyApproximately dailyAdditional ResourcesVisit Linn County, Iowa on the web.Visit Linn County, Iowa GIS on the web. This site is updated as needed to reflect maps, apps, and data of interest from various County departments.Contact InformationQuestions? Contact the GIS Division by phone at 319.892.5250 or by email.
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/13527/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/13527/terms
Summary File 4 (SF 4) from the United States 2000 Census contains the sample data, which is the information compiled from the questions asked of a sample of all people and housing units. Population items include basic population totals: urban and rural, households and families, marital status, grandparents as caregivers, language and ability to speak English, ancestry, place of birth, citizenship status, year of entry, migration, place of work, journey to work (commuting), school enrollment and educational attainment, veteran status, disability, employment status, industry, occupation, class of worker, income, and poverty status. Housing items include basic housing totals: urban and rural, number of rooms, number of bedrooms, year moved into unit, household size and occupants per room, units in structure, year structure built, heating fuel, telephone service, plumbing and kitchen facilities, vehicles available, value of home, monthly rent, and shelter costs. In Summary File 4, the sample data are presented in 213 population tables (matrices) and 110 housing tables, identified with "PCT" and "HCT" respectively. Each table is iterated for 336 population groups: the total population, 132 race groups, 78 American Indian and Alaska Native tribe categories (reflecting 39 individual tribes), 39 Hispanic or Latino groups, and 86 ancestry groups. The presentation of SF4 tables for any of the 336 population groups is subject to a population threshold. That is, if there are fewer than 100 people (100-percent count) in a specific population group in a specific geographic area, and there are fewer than 50 unweighted cases, their population and housing characteristics data are not available for that geographic area in SF4. For the ancestry iterations, only the 50 unweighted cases test can be performed. See Appendix H: Characteristic Iterations, for a complete list of characteristic iterations.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of West Central Iowa Rural Water Association
The goal of the study is to conduct a randomized clinical trial to test several office-based strategies for improving colon cancer screening among individuals who are regular patients at 16 family practice physician offices in the state of Iowa. These offices are members of the Iowa Research Network (IRENE), a rural practice-based research network. The interventions to be tested are increasing in intensity from the usual care provided in the office, to physician chart reminders, mailed educational materials to patients, a fecal immunochemical test with postage-paid return envelope, and a telephone call designed to determine attitudes and barriers to screening, and to motivate subjects to get screened. Our main research questions are: 1)do attitudes toward CRC screening change after providing educational materials about CRC screening? 2)do mailed educational materials and a FIT, with or without a telephone reminder, result in increased rates of CRC testing with the FIT?
According to entry polls conducted at the 2020 Democratic Party Iowa caucuses, Bernie Sanders was the most popular candidate among both urban and suburban voters, with 25 percent of each category intending to vote for him. Pete Buttigieg was the most popular among rural voters with 23 percent.
The Iowa caucuses were held on February 3, 2020, and are the first contest in the primaries for the Democratic Party to choose their candidate for the 2020 U.S. presidential election.
The Tax Increment Finance Reporting Act of 2012 established new urban renewal and tax increment financing (TIF) reporting requirements for counties, cities, and rural improvement zones in Iowa with urban renewal areas in place during FY 2012. This dataset provides a financial summary of urban renewal reports submitted by counties, cities and rural improvement zones submitted annually beginning with Fiscal Year 2012. Tax increment financing is a financing mechanism for urban renewal. It involves dividing the property taxes paid from property within a designated area between the traditional taxing authorities (counties, cities, schools, etc.) and the taxing authority that created the TIF area.
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This dataset tracks annual white student percentage from 1991 to 2023 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
This resource is a member of a series. The TIGER/Line shapefiles and related database files (.dbf) are an extract of selected geographic and cartographic information from the U.S. Census Bureau's Master Address File / Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (MAF/TIGER) Database (MTDB). The MTDB represents a seamless national file with no overlaps or gaps between parts, however, each TIGER/Line shapefile is designed to stand alone as an independent data set, or they can be combined to cover the entire nation. The All Roads Shapefile includes all features within the MTDB Super Class "Road/Path Features" distinguished where the MAF/TIGER Feature Classification Code (MTFCC) for the feature in MTDB that begins with "S". This includes all primary, secondary, local neighborhood, and rural roads, city streets, vehicular trails (4wd), ramps, service drives, alleys, parking lot roads, private roads for service vehicles (logging, oil fields, ranches, etc.), bike paths or trails, bridle/horse paths, walkways/pedestrian trails, and stairways.
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This dataset tracks annual student-teacher ratio from 1991 to 2023 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
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This dataset tracks annual math proficiency from 2011 to 2022 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
https://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.1/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/PTVNNChttps://dataverse.harvard.edu/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.1/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.7910/DVN/PTVNNC
The project was launched in 1987 to investigate the human consequences of the Farm Crisis that began in the late 1970s and continued to affect rural America up to 1997, a decline more drastic than any downswing since the 1930s. The core project is directed by Rand Conger of Iowa State University while Elder serves as a co-principal investigator and director of the "Rural Social Change" component of the project. Data collection began in 1989 with a sample of 451 two-parent families from eight north central counties of Iowa. The counties were selected for their rural farm economies and proximity to the project's home at the Family Research Center in Ames, Iowa. In order to facilitate the recruitment of farm families and minimize variations in family structure, the study design called for two-parent families with a 7th-grader and a near sibling (within four years of age). The initial pool of families was defined in terms of 7th grade students who were enrolled in public and private schools during the fall term of 1989. The 7th grade criterion provided a match to the sample used in the study Children of the Great Depression (Elder, 1974). The sample has been followed up annually from 1989 to 1992, then again in 1994 (senior year of high school), 1995, 1997, and 2000. Parents and children were surveyed in each of these years, and in most of the years family interactions were videotaped. The videotapes provide the basis for behavioral ratings of husband-wife interaction, sib interaction, and family interaction. Shortly after the project began two additional samples were added to the project sample; a sample of 107 single-parent families in 1991 and approximately 900 grandparents in 1994. The grandparents were contacted again in 1998 with a subsample participating in an in-depth, face-to-face interview. As of 1999, approximately 500 families are still active participants in the project. The Iowa project is widely regarded as having the richest archive of life record data on rural families and children in the United States, and it is likely to continue for some time to come. Most of the target children are approximately 26 years at present, and periodic data collection is planned over the next five years with support from the National Institute of Mental Health. The Iowa State and UNC teams have worked out a division of labor which reflects the unique strengths and interests of each group. The members of the Ames group share a primary interest in family interactive processes and personal adaptation whereas the Chapel Hill team has developed a program of research concerned with social change in families and lives, with emphasis on the life course and health outcomes.
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This dataset tracks annual reading and language arts proficiency from 2011 to 2022 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
Data provides consumer counts for services provided to aging citizens of Iowa funded through federal and state programs starting in 2009 and is updated annually. It includes breakdowns for gender, race and ethnicity, those in rural areas and designated as being in poverty.
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The dataset provides consolidated property tax rates for each urban and rural taxing district in Iowa by fiscal year, starting with FY 2002. Property tax rates are the dollars collected per $1,000 in a property's taxable value. The consolidated rate represents the combined rate for all levy authorities (e.g. counties, cities, school districts, townships, etc.) represented in a tax district.
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This dataset tracks annual free lunch eligibility from 1989 to 1992 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
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Please find enclosed the data and do-file to replicate the results in Tables 1, 3, 4, 5 and 6 in the paper. Table 2 was calculated based on a different data file which is not uploaded.
This resource provides access to the annual urban renewal report. The system provides reports for each county, city and rural improvement zone highlighting debt, revenue and expenditures associated with urban renewal areas within their jurisdiction. It also provides the plan, map and ordinance for each urban renewal area within the county, city or rural improvement zone. The individual reports are provided as PDF files.
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Graph and download economic data for Real Per Capita Personal Income: Nonmetropolitan Portion for Iowa (IANMPRPIPC) from 2008 to 2023 about rural, IA, personal income, per capita, personal, income, real, and USA.