I am needing to get the demographics for a small fire district located just outside Kansas City. It's a small district- all volunteer Fire District but the boundary lines cross over into the edge of 2 neighboring towns. Ideally, if there was a way to pull the data by identifying the street names would be the most accurate. Anyone have any suggestions on how to go about this? There are probably about 1,200 households in the district.
Thank you.
I'm assuming that your fire district was NOT drawn as a collection of census blocks or some other type of census geography (e.g., tracts or block groups). Is there a GIS file from which a map of the…
I agree with Doug's suggestion. The most precise way to do this would be using GIS and an overlay process to get a list of block groups that are within the boundary. There are GIS-compatible ACS files…
I agree with Doug's suggestion. The most precise way to do this would be using GIS and an overlay process to get a list of block groups that are within the boundary. There are GIS-compatible ACS files that you could then use to directly aggregate the data, or you could use GIS to create a list of block groups and then use data.census.gov to get the data.
However, if it's an area where you "just" have the street names, or if you don't have access to GIS tools, data.census.gov has a map selection tool that you could use to select all of the block groups within the area. (If the fire district doesn't quite align with block group boundaries you may need to make some assumptions about which overlapping ones are "in" or "out.")
There's a video tutorial for the map selection tool here: https://www.census.gov/data/academy/data-gems/2021/how-to-create-and-customize-a-map.html
Thank you. I will take a look at that tutorial.