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snippet: To assist communities in identifying racially/ethnically-concentrated areas of poverty (R/ECAPs), HUD has developed a census tract-based definition of R/ECAPs.
summary: To assist communities in identifying racially/ethnically-concentrated areas of poverty (R/ECAPs), HUD has developed a census tract-based definition of R/ECAPs.
extent: [[-158.271198748,17.881242],[-65.2442339999999,61.231480999]]
accessInformation: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, U.S. Census Bureau, Brown University Longitudinal Tract Database
thumbnail: thumbnail/thumbnail.png
maxScale: 1.7976931348623157E308
typeKeywords: ["ArcGIS","ArcGIS Server","Data","Feature Access","Feature Service","providerSDS","Service"]
description: To assist communities in identifying racially/ethnically-concentrated areas of poverty (R/ECAPs), HUD has developed a census tract-based definition of R/ECAPs. The definition involves a racial/ethnic concentration threshold and a poverty test. The racial/ethnic concentration threshold is straightforward: R/ECAPs must have a non-white population of 50 percent or more. Regarding the poverty threshold, Wilson (1980) defines neighborhoods of extreme poverty as census tracts with 40 percent or more of individuals living at or below the poverty line. Because overall poverty levels are substantially lower in many parts of the country, HUD supplements this with an alternate criterion. Thus, a neighborhood can be a R/ECAP if it has a poverty rate that exceeds 40% or is three or more times the average tract poverty rate for the metropolitan/micropolitan area, whichever threshold is lower. Census tracts with this extreme poverty that satisfy the racial/ethnic concentration threshold are deemed R/ECAPs. This translates into the following equation: Where i represents census tracts, () is the metropolitan/micropolitan (CBSA) mean tract poverty rate,  is the ith tract poverty rate, () is the non-Hispanic white population in tract i, and Pop is the population in tract i.While this definition of R/ECAP works well for tracts in CBSAs, place outside of these geographies are unlikely to have racial or ethnic concentrations as high as 50 percent. In these areas, the racial/ethnic concentration threshold is set at 20 percent.  Data Source: American Community Survey (ACS), 2009-2013; Decennial Census (2010); Brown Longitudinal Tract Database (LTDB) based on decennial census data, 1990, 2000 & 2010. Related AFFH-T Local Government, PHA Tables/Maps: Table 4, 7; Maps 1-17. Related AFFH-T State Tables/Maps: Table 4, 7; Maps 1-15, 18. References:Wilson, William J. (1980). The Declining Significance of Race: Blacks and Changing American Institutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. To learn more about R/ECAPs visit: https://www.hudexchange.info/resource/4868/affh-raw-data/Date of Coverage: 11/2017
licenseInfo: HUD and the dataset and metadata authors assume no responsibility for the use or misuse of the dataset. No warranty, expressed or implied is made with regard to the accuracy of the spatial accuracy, and no liability is assumed by the U.S. Government in general, the dataset creators or the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development specifically, as to the spatial or attribute accuracy of the data.
catalogPath:
title: 2024 Omaha RECAPs
type: Feature Service
url:
tags: ["U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development","HUD","Racially or Ethnically Concentrated Areas of Poverty","R/ECAP","AFFH","Location Affordability","Fair Housing","hud.official.content","Boundaries","Economy","Location","Society","Governmental Units","Administrative and Statistical Boundaries","UNITED STATES OF AMERICA","UNITED STATES MINOR OUTLYING ISLANDS"]
culture: en-US
portalUrl:
name: 2024_Omaha_RECAPs
guid: 4D53583C-CC95-488E-A0AE-A32F89A84650
minScale: 0
spatialReference: NAD_1983_StatePlane_Nebraska_FIPS_2600_Feet