6 datasets found
  1. U.S. New York poverty rate 2000-2023

    • statista.com
    Updated Oct 15, 2024
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    Statista (2024). U.S. New York poverty rate 2000-2023 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/205495/poverty-rate-in-new-york/
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 15, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    In 2023, about 14.2 percent of New York's population lived below the poverty line. This accounts for persons or families whose collective income in the preceding 12 months was below the national poverty level of the United States. The poverty rate of the United States can be found here.

  2. F

    Estimated Percent of People of All Ages in Poverty for New York County, NY

    • fred.stlouisfed.org
    json
    Updated Dec 20, 2024
    + more versions
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    (2024). Estimated Percent of People of All Ages in Poverty for New York County, NY [Dataset]. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PPAANY36061A156NCEN
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    jsonAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 20, 2024
    License

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain

    Area covered
    New York County, Manhattan, New York, New York
    Description

    Graph and download economic data for Estimated Percent of People of All Ages in Poverty for New York County, NY (PPAANY36061A156NCEN) from 1989 to 2023 about New York County, NY; New York; NY; percent; child; poverty; and USA.

  3. d

    DOHMH COVID-19 Antibody-by-Neighborhood Poverty

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.cityofnewyork.us
    Updated Jul 7, 2024
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    data.cityofnewyork.us (2024). DOHMH COVID-19 Antibody-by-Neighborhood Poverty [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/dohmh-covid-19-antibody-by-neighborhood-poverty
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 7, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    data.cityofnewyork.us
    Description

    This dataset contains information on antibody testing for COVID-19: the number of people who received a test, the number of people with positive results, the percentage of people tested who tested positive, and the rate of testing per 100,000 people, stratified by ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) neighborhood poverty group. These data can also be accessed here: https://github.com/nychealth/coronavirus-data/blob/master/totals/antibody-by-poverty.csv Exposure to COVID-19 can be detected by measuring antibodies to the disease in a person’s blood, which can indicate that a person may have had an immune response to the virus. Antibodies are proteins produced by the body’s immune system that can be found in the blood. People can test positive for antibodies after they have been exposed, sometimes when they no longer test positive for the virus itself. It is important to note that the science around COVID-19 antibody tests is evolving rapidly and there is still much uncertainty about what individual antibody test results mean for a single person and what population-level antibody test results mean for understanding the epidemiology of COVID-19 at a population level. These data only provide information on people tested. People receiving an antibody test do not reflect all people in New York City; therefore, these data may not reflect antibody prevalence among all New Yorkers. Increasing instances of screening programs further impact the generalizability of these data, as screening programs influence who and how many people are tested over time. Examples of screening programs in NYC include: employers screening their workers (e.g., hospitals), and long-term care facilities screening their residents. In addition, there may be potential biases toward people receiving an antibody test who have a positive result because people who were previously ill are preferentially seeking testing, in addition to the testing of persons with higher exposure (e.g., health care workers, first responders.) Neighborhood-level poverty groups were classified in a manner consistent with Health Department practices to describe and monitor disparities in health in NYC. Neighborhood poverty measures are defined as the percentage of people earning below the Federal Poverty Threshold (FPT) within a ZCTA. The standard cut-points for defining categories of neighborhood-level poverty in NYC are: • Low: <10% of residents in ZCTA living below the FPT • Medium: 10% to <20% • High: 20% to <30% • Very high: ≥30% residents living below the FPT The ZCTAs used for classification reflect the first non-missing address within NYC for each person reported with an antibody test result. Rates were calculated using interpolated intercensal population estimates updated in 2019. These rates differ from previously reported rates based on the 2000 Census or previous versions of population estimates. The Health Department produced these population estimates based on estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau and NYC Department of City Planning. Rates for poverty were calculated using direct standardization for age at diagnosis and weighting by the US 2000 standard population. Antibody tests are categorized based on the date of specimen collection and are aggregated by full weeks starting each Sunday and ending on Saturday. For example, a person whose blood was collected for antibody testing on Wednesday, May 6 would be categorized as tested during the week ending May 9. A person tested twice in one week would only be counted once in that week. This dataset includes testing data beginning April 5, 2020. Data are updated daily, and the dataset preserves historical records and source data changes, so each extract date reflects the current copy of the data as of that date. For example, an extract date of 11/04/2020 and extract date of 11/03/2020 will both contain all records as they were as of that extract date. Without filtering or grouping by extract date, an analysis will almost certain

  4. U.S. poverty rate of the top 25 most populated cities 2021

    • statista.com
    Updated Jul 5, 2024
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    Statista (2024). U.S. poverty rate of the top 25 most populated cities 2021 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/205637/percentage-of-poor-people-in-the-top-20-most-populated-cities-in-the-us/
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 5, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Statistahttp://statista.com/
    Time period covered
    2021
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    In 2021, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was the city with the highest poverty rate of the United States' most populated cities. In this statistic, the cities are sorted by poverty rate, not population. The most populated city in 2021 according to the source was New York city - which had a poverty rate of 18 percent.

  5. d

    2017-18 - 2021-22 Demographic Snapshot

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.cityofnewyork.us
    Updated Nov 29, 2024
    + more versions
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    data.cityofnewyork.us (2024). 2017-18 - 2021-22 Demographic Snapshot [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/2017-18-2021-22-demographic-snapshot
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 29, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    data.cityofnewyork.us
    Description

    "Enrollment counts are based on the October 31 Audited Register for the 2017-18 to 2019-20 school years. To account for the delay in the start of the school year, enrollment counts are based on the November 13 Audited Register for 2020-21 and the November 12 Audited Register for 2021-22. * Please note that October 31 (and November 12-13) enrollment is not audited for charter schools or Pre-K Early Education Centers (NYCEECs). Charter schools are required to submit enrollment as of BEDS Day, the first Wednesday in October, to the New York State Department of Education." Enrollment counts in the Demographic Snapshot will likely exceed operational enrollment counts due to the fact that long-term absence (LTA) students are excluded for funding purposes. Data on students with disabilities, English Language Learners, students' povery status, and students' Economic Need Value are as of the June 30 for each school year except in 2021-22. Data on SWDs, ELLs, Poverty, and ENI in the 2021-22 school year are as of March 7, 2022. 3-K and Pre-K enrollment totals include students in both full-day and half-day programs. Four-year-old students enrolled in Family Childcare Centers are categorized as 3K students for the purposes of this report. All schools listed are as of the 2021-22 school year. Schools closed before 2021-22 are not included in the school level tab but are included in the data for citywide, borough, and district. Programs and Pre-K NYC Early Education Centers (NYCEECs) are not included on the school-level tab. Due to missing demographic information in rare cases at the time of the enrollment snapshot, demographic categories do not always add up to citywide totals. Students with disabilities are defined as any child receiving an Individualized Education Program (IEP) as of the end of the school year (or March 7 for 2021-22). NYC DOE "Poverty" counts are based on the number of students with families who have qualified for free or reduced price lunch, or are eligible for Human Resources Administration (HRA) benefits. In previous years, the poverty indicator also included students enrolled in a Universal Meal School (USM), where all students automatically qualified, with the exception of middle schools, D75 schools and Pre-K centers. In 2017-18, all students in NYC schools became eligible for free lunch. In order to better reflect free and reduced price lunch status, the poverty indicator does not include student USM status, and retroactively applies this rule to previous years. "The school’s Economic Need Index is the average of its students’ Economic Need Values. The Economic Need Index (ENI) estimates the percentage of students facing economic hardship. The 2014-15 school year is the first year we provide ENI estimates. The metric is calculated as follows: * The student’s Economic Need Value is 1.0 if: o The student is eligible for public assistance from the NYC Human Resources Administration (HRA); o The student lived in temporary housing in the past four years; or o The student is in high school, has a home language other than English, and entered the NYC DOE for the first time within the last four years. * Otherwise, the student’s Economic Need Value is based on the percentage of families (with school-age children) in the student’s census tract whose income is below the poverty level, as estimated by the American Community Survey 5-Year estimate (2020 ACS estimates were used in calculations for 2021-22 ENI). The student’s Economic Need Value equals this percentage divided by 100. Due to differences in the timing of when student demographic, address and census data were pulled, ENI values may vary, slightly, from the ENI values reported in the School Quality Reports. In previous years, student census tract data was based on students’ addresses at the time of ENI calculation. Beginning in 2018-19, census tract data is based on students’ addresses as of the Audited Register date of the g

  6. New York City Equitable Zoning

    • zenodo.org
    bin, zip
    Updated Mar 15, 2023
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    Bingqing Liu; Bingqing Liu; Farnoosh Namdarpour; Farnoosh Namdarpour; Joseph Chow; Joseph Chow (2023). New York City Equitable Zoning [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7733664
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    zip, binAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 15, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    Authors
    Bingqing Liu; Bingqing Liu; Farnoosh Namdarpour; Farnoosh Namdarpour; Joseph Chow; Joseph Chow
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    New York
    Description

    This dataset gives NYC Equitable Zoning (NYCEZ), which is a zoning system of NYC derived from census tracts and ACS data with 574 zones.

    The zoning system considers data reliability of 3 minority population groups: population below poverty level, seniors above 67, and long commuters (>1 hour). Underserved groups of interest include the population above 67 years old (seniors), the population under the poverty level, the population with a commute time above one hour, and the population with one or more disabilities. Only the former three groups are considered in zoning, since populations disabilities are already highly correlated with the others.

    The 2168 census tracts in NYC are aggregated to improve the data reliability of the 3 minority groups. Average margin of error (MOE) percentages at census tract level of population above 67, population below poverty level, and population with a commute time above 1 hour are 15.22%, 50.07%, and 18.23%, respectively. After aggregation to the NYC Equitable Zones, MOE percentages become 8.02%, 12.33%, and 9.88%, respectively. Equitable Zones shown in Figure 5 simultaneously reduces the average MOE percentage of demographic data by 48% for seniors, 75% for low-income population, and 46% for long commuters.

    Files include:

    • NYC census tracts shapefile with mapping to NYCEZ (“zoning” column)
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.cpg
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.dbf
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.prj
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.sbn
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.sbx
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.shp
      • equitable_zoning_new_dissol.shx
    • NYCEZ shapefile
      • equitable_zoning_new.cpg
      • equitable_zoning_new.dbf
      • equitable_zoning_new.prj
      • equitable_zoning_new.shp
      • equitable_zoning_new.shx
    • Data used for NYCEZ generation (from American Community Survey (ACS))
      • Number of seniors in each census tract (with 80 variance replicate estimates)
        • data_elderly.csv
      • Number of disabled in each census tract (with 80 variance replicate estimates)
        • data_disabled.csv
      • Number of long commuters in each census tract (with 80 variance replicate estimates)
        • data_commute>1h.csv
      • Number of low incomers in each census tract (with 80 variance replicate estimates)
        • data_below_poverty.csv

    Variance replicate estimates from ACS are used to MOE aggregation. Information can be found here: https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/data/variance-tables.html

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Statista (2024). U.S. New York poverty rate 2000-2023 [Dataset]. https://www.statista.com/statistics/205495/poverty-rate-in-new-york/
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U.S. New York poverty rate 2000-2023

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Oct 15, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
Statistahttp://statista.com/
Area covered
United States
Description

In 2023, about 14.2 percent of New York's population lived below the poverty line. This accounts for persons or families whose collective income in the preceding 12 months was below the national poverty level of the United States. The poverty rate of the United States can be found here.

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