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snippet: Census tracts provide a stable set of geographic units for the presentation of decennial census data. These data were downloaded from the US Census and projected and extracted for the SCAG region. In addition, these data were clipped for cartographic purposes.
summary: Census tracts provide a stable set of geographic units for the presentation of decennial census data. These data were downloaded from the US Census and projected and extracted for the SCAG region. In addition, these data were clipped for cartographic purposes.
accessInformation: US Census and SCAG
thumbnail:
maxScale: 5000
typeKeywords: []
description: <DIV STYLE="text-align:Left;"><DIV><DIV><P><SPAN>Census tracts generally have a population size of 1,200 to 8,000 people with an optimum size of 4,000 people. The spatial size of census tracts varies widely depending on the density of settlement. Ideally, census tract boundaries remain stable over time to facilitate statistical comparisons from census to census. However, physical changes in street patterns caused by highway construction, new development, and so forth, may require boundary revisions. In addition, significant changes in population may result in splitting or combining census tracts. Census tract boundaries generally follow visible and identifiable features. Census tract boundaries may follow legal boundaries (e.g., MCD or incorporated place boundaries in some states to allow for census tract-to-governmental unit relationships where the governmental boundaries tend to remain unchanged between censuses). State and county boundaries always are census tract boundaries in the standard census geographic hierarchy. In a few rare instances, a census tract may consist of noncontiguous areas.</SPAN></P></DIV></DIV></DIV>
licenseInfo:
catalogPath:
title: SCAG Census Tracts 2020
type:
url:
tags: ["census tract","SCAG","boundaries"]
culture: en-US
name:
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minScale: 150000000
spatialReference: