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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 Health Association
https://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/26721/termshttps://www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/ICPSR/studies/26721/terms
This data collection contains the first four waves of the Iowa Youth and Families Project (IYFP), conducted in 1989, 1990, 1991, and 1992. The Iowa Youth and Families Project was developed from an initial sample of 451 7th graders from two-parent families in rural Iowa. The study was merged with the Iowa Single Parent Project (ISPP) to form the Iowa Family Transitions Project in 1994, when the target youth were seniors in high school. Survey data were collected from the target child (7th grader), a sibling within four years of age of the target child, and both parents. Field interviewers visited families at their homes on several occasions to administer questionnaires and videotape interaction tasks including family discussion tasks, family problem-solving tasks, sibling interaction tasks, and marital interaction tasks. The Household Data files contain information about the family's financial situation, involvement in farming, and demographic information about household members. The Parent and the Child Survey Data files contain responses to survey questions about the quality and stability of family relationships, emotional, physical, and behavioral problems of individual family members, parent-child conflict, family problem-solving skills, social and financial support from outside the home, traumatic life experiences, alcohol, drug, and tobacco use, and opinions on topics such as abortion, parenting, and gender roles. In addition, the Child Survey Data files include responses collected from the target child and his or her sibling in the study about experiences with puberty, dating, sexual activity, and risk-taking behavior. The Problem-Solving Data files contain survey data collected from respondents about the family interactions tasks. The Observational Data files contain the interviewers' observations collected during these tasks. Demographic variables include sex, age, employment status, occupation, income, home ownership, religious preference, frequency of religious attendance, as well as the ages and sex of all household members and their relationship to the head of household. Demographic information collected on the parents also includes their birth order within their family, the ages and political philosophy of their parents, the sex, age, education level, and occupation of their siblings, and the country of origin of their ancestors.
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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.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of East Central Iowa Rural Electric Cooperative
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.
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Application locations and areas within Iowa, submitted by eligible applicants between 7/14/2023 - 8/25/2023 (5:00 PM CST) for Notification of Funding Availability (NOFA) #008.Application locations represent unserved and underserved point-based address locations in Iowa. Application locations were originally selected by Applicants using the Project Selection Tool (Broadband Map V5) and following the selection and submission guidelines in Exhibit 'K' as part of their NOFA #008 application. The application window was open from 7/14/2023 - 8/25/2023 (5:00 PM CST) in order for the OCIO to receive all timely and complete applications per the guidelines described in Exhibit 'A' to NOFA #008. Application areas were constructed based on the list of locations submitted by Applicants using a convex hull to enclose the locations within a polygon.Per NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A', section 1.2. Key Program Definitions:"100/100 Broadband" means reliable one hundred (100) megabits per second of download speed or faster and one hundred (100) megabits per second of upload speed or faster."100/20 Broadband" means reliable one hundred (100) megabits per second of download speed or faster and twenty (20) megabits per second of upload speed or faster, but less than 100/100 Broadband."Broadband Availability Map" means the statewide map that identifies whether and at which speeds a Communications Service Provider Facilitated Broadband to Broadband Unit as of the As of Date, whether a grantee has received a prior state or federal grant to Facilitate 100/20 Broadband to a Broadband Unit, and whether a Broadband Unit is an Eligible Service Location. The Broadband Availability Map is published at : https://ocio.iowa.gov/broadband-availability-map-version-5."Broadband Intervention Zone" or "Zone" means a geographic area comprised of Eligible Service Locations selected by the OCIO upon completion of the evaluation of Applications to the Invitation to Qualify published at https://ocio.iowa.gov/invitation-qualify-001."Broadband Unit(s)" means a Broadband-serviceable location identified on the Broadband Availability Map."Community Anchor Institutions" or "CAI" means an entity such as a school, library, heath clinic, health center, hospital or other medical provider, public safety entity, institution of higher education, public housing organization, or community support organization that facilitates greater use of broadband service by vulnerable populations, including, but not limited to, low-income individuals, unemployed individuals, children, the incarcerated, and aged individuals."Eligible Service Location" means a location identified on the Broadband Availability Map to which no provider offers service at speeds greater than or equal to 100/20 Broadband. The location must not have been previously awarded Federal or State broadband incentives for build out greater than 100/20 Broadband. An Eligible Service Location may include a Community Anchor Institution."Project Area" means one or more Eligible Service Locations to which an Applicant proposed to Facilitate Covered Speeds. The Project Area is established by converting these addresses into a minimum bounding polygon or convex hull formed by enclosing/circumscribing the list of addresses. Reference section 2.2.6.1 (Project Worksheet) and the Project Worksheet for instructions on how to identify a Project.For more information on NOFA #008 and broadband, please visit: https://ocio.iowa.gov/empower-rural-iowa-broadband-grant-program-notice-funding-availability-008.NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A': https://ocio.iowa.gov/sites/default/files/exhibit_a_notice_of_funding_availability_nofa008_final.pdf.NOFA #008 Exhibit 'K': https://ocio.iowa.gov/sites/default/files/exhibit_k_project_selection_and_data.uctions_nofa_008.pdf.Project Selection Tool (Broadband Map V5): https://iowa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=e9d5ba9cb3994b9c9fef59cee6bd4c4d.Broadband Availability Map: https://ocio.iowa.gov/broadband-availability-map-version-5.Iowa Broadband Map v5 Eligibility: https://iowa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=f454e1dd4e1c405787b5f35c56bcfee3.
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 white student percentage from 1991 to 2023 for Rural Elementary School #1 vs. Iowa and Wapsie Valley Comm School District
This dataset provides information about the number of properties, residents, and average property values for Rural Street cross streets in New Hampton, IA.
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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
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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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Published project locations of applicant projects receiving grant funding for Notification of Funding Availability (NOFA) #008 in Iowa. This view depicts project locations within Iowa, submitted by eligible applicants between 7/14/2023 - 8/25/2023 as part of the applicant's core application. Applications were evaluated and ranked during the review process between 8/25/2023 - 10/30/2023. Some projects retained their original selected project locations, while others were amended based on overlaps with other submitted projects and their ranks relative to each other, with higher ranked overlapping projects retaining their originally selected locations and lower ranked overlapping projects losing some or all of their locations.Per NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A', section 1.7.6. Final Agency Decision(s)/Notice of Intent to Award:The Office will review all Applications received in accordance with the terms, conditions, and requirements of Applicable Law and this NOFA, and make a final agency decision regarding whether to which Applications, and in what amount(s) to award grant funds. In making final Award decision(s), the Office may consider a variety of information or materials. In formulating its final recommendation(s), the Office is not bound by the results of the scoring process set forth in this NOFA. The Office will notify each Applicant of ward decisions by issuing a Notice of Intent to Award ("NOIA"). Such NOIA shall be distributed by email to the Applicant's Authorized Official. The Office will also post the NOIA online at https://ocio.iowa.gov/broadband. Unsuccessful Applicants are solely responsible for reviewing this website to determine their Award status.Per NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A', section 3. Scoring Methodology:Scoring and ranking Applications submitted in response to this NOFA will occur through quantitative factors, more fully outlined below. A maximum of 100 points is available. Specific point values assigned to each evaluation factor set forth in section 3.1 (Quantitative Factors), are posted in section 3.2 (Scoring Rubric).The Office recognizes that some of the factors identified below compete with each other. This is by design. Completed Projects will be expected to meet or exceed any statements or representations made in connection with questions or inputs associated with scored factors outlined below, and any related answers or inputs shall be deemed contractual obligations of Applicant and incorporated by reference into a resulting Grant Agreement as if fully set forth therein.Rank Ordering Procedure. Following the scoring process using the factors set forth in section 3.1, all Applicants will be subject to the Rank Ordering Procedure:● First, as part of the Technical Review described in section 1.7.5.1 the Office will group Applications accordingly: Group A will consist of Applications that will Facilitate Covered Speeds to at least 80% of the Eligible Service Locations in at least one Broadband InterventionZone (“Group A”), and Group B will consist of all others (“Group B”);● Second, Applications will be ranked within Group A and Group B by cumulative points; and● Third, the highest scoring Application within Group B will be assigned a rank order that immediately follows the lowest ranked Application within Group A. The remaining Applications in Group B will be assigned successive ranks consistent with their cumulative score for the factors set forth in section 3.1.For more information on NOFA #008 and broadband, please visit: https://ocio.iowa.gov/empower-rural-iowa-broadband-grant-program-notice-funding-availability-008.NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A': https://ocio.iowa.gov/sites/default/files/exhibit_a_notice_of_funding_availability_nofa008_final.pdf.
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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
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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
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.
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This filtered view lists rural hospitals receiving payments from the Iowa Department of Public Health that were funded by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act.
Funds support rural hospitals which are seeing increased demands for clinical services and equipment, as well as experiencing short-term financial and workforce challenges meeting the needs of patients with COVID19 seeking care at their facilities.
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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Application locations and areas within Iowa, submitted by eligible applicants between 7/14/2023 - 8/25/2023 (5:00 PM CST) for Notification of Funding Availability (NOFA) #008.Application locations represent unserved and underserved point-based address locations in Iowa. Application locations were originally selected by Applicants using the Project Selection Tool (Broadband Map V5) and following the selection and submission guidelines in Exhibit 'K' as part of their NOFA #008 application. The application window was open from 7/14/2023 - 8/25/2023 (5:00 PM CST) in order for the OCIO to receive all timely and complete applications per the guidelines described in Exhibit 'A' to NOFA #008. Application areas were constructed based on the list of locations submitted by Applicants using a convex hull to enclose the locations within a polygon.Per NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A', section 1.2. Key Program Definitions:"100/100 Broadband" means reliable one hundred (100) megabits per second of download speed or faster and one hundred (100) megabits per second of upload speed or faster."100/20 Broadband" means reliable one hundred (100) megabits per second of download speed or faster and twenty (20) megabits per second of upload speed or faster, but less than 100/100 Broadband."Broadband Availability Map" means the statewide map that identifies whether and at which speeds a Communications Service Provider Facilitated Broadband to Broadband Unit as of the As of Date, whether a grantee has received a prior state or federal grant to Facilitate 100/20 Broadband to a Broadband Unit, and whether a Broadband Unit is an Eligible Service Location. The Broadband Availability Map is published at : https://ocio.iowa.gov/broadband-availability-map-version-5."Broadband Intervention Zone" or "Zone" means a geographic area comprised of Eligible Service Locations selected by the OCIO upon completion of the evaluation of Applications to the Invitation to Qualify published at https://ocio.iowa.gov/invitation-qualify-001."Broadband Unit(s)" means a Broadband-serviceable location identified on the Broadband Availability Map."Community Anchor Institutions" or "CAI" means an entity such as a school, library, heath clinic, health center, hospital or other medical provider, public safety entity, institution of higher education, public housing organization, or community support organization that facilitates greater use of broadband service by vulnerable populations, including, but not limited to, low-income individuals, unemployed individuals, children, the incarcerated, and aged individuals."Eligible Service Location" means a location identified on the Broadband Availability Map to which no provider offers service at speeds greater than or equal to 100/20 Broadband. The location must not have been previously awarded Federal or State broadband incentives for build out greater than 100/20 Broadband. An Eligible Service Location may include a Community Anchor Institution."Project Area" means one or more Eligible Service Locations to which an Applicant proposed to Facilitate Covered Speeds. The Project Area is established by converting these addresses into a minimum bounding polygon or convex hull formed by enclosing/circumscribing the list of addresses. Reference section 2.2.6.1 (Project Worksheet) and the Project Worksheet for instructions on how to identify a Project.For more information on NOFA #008 and broadband, please visit: https://ocio.iowa.gov/empower-rural-iowa-broadband-grant-program-notice-funding-availability-008.NOFA #008 Exhibit 'A': https://ocio.iowa.gov/sites/default/files/exhibit_a_notice_of_funding_availability_nofa008_final.pdf.NOFA #008 Exhibit 'K': https://ocio.iowa.gov/sites/default/files/exhibit_k_project_selection_and_data.uctions_nofa_008.pdf.Project Selection Tool (Broadband Map V5): https://iowa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=e9d5ba9cb3994b9c9fef59cee6bd4c4d.Broadband Availability Map: https://ocio.iowa.gov/broadband-availability-map-version-5.Iowa Broadband Map v5 Eligibility: https://iowa.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=f454e1dd4e1c405787b5f35c56bcfee3.
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Metadata and data derived from Descartes Pascal Papers. Descartes Pascal Digital Collection contains a selection of images from the glass plate negative collection documenting rural life in Iowa around the turn of the twentieth century, including homesteads, buildings, and the Pascal family.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
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.