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Census Data and Montana Indian Reservations

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Title: Census Data and Montana Indian Reservations


1
Census Data and MontanaIndian Reservations
  • Pam HarrisBureau ChiefCensus and Economic
    Information CenterMontana Department of Commerce

2
CEIC Who We Are
  • Partnership with U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Census
    Bureau and Bureau of Economic Analysis to
    disseminate Montana data collected by federal
    agencies
  • Cvs.C staff provide demographic and economic data
    and analysis, GIS support, technical assistance
    and training.
  • Assist Montana businesses, communities schools,
    and all government agencies to access and use
    this information for decision-making.

3
Why Census Data?
  • Census data is unique
  • Only source for small area data (reservation,
    cities/towns, tribal census tracts, etc.)
  • Only source which shows characteristics for the
    population such as age, race, gender, educational
    attainment, income, labor force, types of
    households, etc.
  • Census results are used to distribute almost 200
    billion annually in federal, state, local, and
    tribal funds

4
Examples of American Indian Federal Programs
Relying on Census Data
  • Workforce Investment Program
  • Community Development Block Grants (CDBG)
  • Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants and
    Children (WIC)
  • Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
  • Low Income Energy Assistance

5
How can data help?
  • Census data helps tribal planners evaluate
    conditions on their reservations and in their
    communities.
  • Tribal governments, states, cities, federal
    agencies, and businesses all need current
    information to make critical decisions.
  • Data can help decide what services are needed and
    how to distribute funding for housing, economic
    development, health care, and other programs that
    benefit veterans, children, families, the elderly
    and the society as a whole.
  • Census data is an important tool for tribal
    government decision-making and could result in
    improved utility services, new housing, job
    training, better school facilities, or a new
    health clinic to benefit you, your family, your
    community or reservation.

6
More current data coming..
  • American Community Survey (ACS) will replace the
    decennial census long form questionnaire
    producing the socio-economic data every year
    instead of every 10 years.
  • Example Workforce Investment Act of 1998
    requires information about American Indian and
    Alaska Native households to support training and
    employment activities. ACS will provide this
    critically important information.
  • ACS has been endorsed by the Indian and Native
    American Employment and Training Coalition and
    the National Congress of American Indians.
  • Flathead and Lake Counties have been a successful
    part of the early ACS testing for the last six
    years.

7
Census 2010
  • Pilot project in South Dakota, Cheyenne River
    Reservation
  • An accurate and complete count of the population
    in 2010 will enable American Indians to receive
    the correct share of federal and state resources
    that are based on census data
  • Pilot project is testing new counting methods
    setting standard for how the Census Bureau counts
    American Indians all over the U.S.
  • American Indians have been undercounted in
    previous censuses, and the mutual goal of the
    Census Bureau and the American Indian community
    is to reverse that trend in 2010.

8
Montana Reservations
Accurate Data
Federal Statistical Agencies
Statistics
EconomicDevelopers
Grant Writers
SocialServiceAgencies
Planners
for Montana Reservations
9
Summary
  • Federal monies are getting harder to obtain. Data
    users need to be smarter about using the
    information available to help secure essential
    funding for tribal programs.
  • Without accurate, reliable, and current
    information, detailed analysis of Indian
    Reservations Economies will be more difficult.
  • Need to work together, take ownership of the
    data, to ensure that the American Community
    Survey and the 2010 Census are the best they can
    be, which will ultimately benefit everyone.

10
Analyzing Montanas Indian Reservations
Economies
  • Susan Ockert
  • Senior Research Economist,
  • Census and Economic Information Center, Montana
    Department of Commerce

11
2000 Census Data
SOURCE U.S. CENSUS BUREAU, CENSUS 2000
12
Population by American Indian and by Tribe
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
13
American Indian Population Urban vs. Rural
Urban 1,000 people per square mile
Metropolitan Areas Billings, Great Falls,
Missoula
Concentrations of population, housing, and
commercial structures that are
identifiable by name but have no legal authority.
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
14
What is an economy?
Jobs ? Income
Businesses
  • Public Goods
  • Zoning/Land Use
  • Public Finance
  • Public Safety

Consumers
Government
Create Wealth
  • Marketing
  • Customer Service
  • Accounting
  • Management

Redistribute Wealth
Source Understanding Your Communitys Economic
Base, University of Missouri Extension, http//
muextension.missouri.edu
15
Current Reservation Environment
  • Population
  • Faster growth rate
  • Younger median age
  • Education
  • Fewer with degrees
  • Higher drop out rate
  • Social
  • Larger percent of population uses food stamps
  • Higher pregnancy rate
  • Higher alcohol treatment need

Sources See last page
16
Current Reservation Economies
  • Higher unemployment
  • More poverty
  • Lower per capita income
  • Lower wages
  • Lower housing values
  • Smaller private sector

Sources See last page
17
Types of Jobs
  • 33 of jobs on the reservation are Government
    compared with 15 of jobs in the country as a
    whole
  • 44 of jobs on the reservation are in the Private
    Sector compared with 80 of jobs in the nation

Source Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis,
fedgazette, March 2006
18
Business Environment
NOTE AI American Indian
Source U.S. Census Bureau, Survey of Business
Owners
19
Threshold Analysis
  • Central Place Theory - Population needed to
    support retail and service businesses
  • Simple Analysis population and number of
    businesses
  • Similar characteristics such as population
    location
  • Does not take into account economies of scale
  • Square footage
  • Number of doctors in one facility
  • Grocery store
  • Health care
  • Financial Institutions

20
Grocery Stores
Number of Businesses
Number of Businesses using statewide threshold
of 2,725
21
Health Care Doctors and Clinics
Number of Businesses
Number of Businesses using statewide threshold
of 509
22
Financial Institutions
Number of Businesses
Number of Businesses using statewide threshold
of 1,227
23
Implications
  • Reservations are underserved in these private
    sectors
  • Just Off the Reservation serving own population
    and reservation
  • Trade Centers and Metropolitans serve a much
    larger region

24
Location Quotient
  • Determine if number of jobs are what a local
    economy should have to serve local needs
  • Comparison of local employment to statewide for
    each industry
  • 1 serving more than local

  • MT Department of Labor and Industry, Research and
    Analysis has calculated LQ for each county in
    Montana (www.ourfactsyourfuture.mt.gov)

25
Fort Peck Reservation
26
Blackfeet Reservation
27
Comparisons
State Most over served Mining except Oil Ga
s at 5.7 Most under served Textile Mills at .0
6
28
Implications
  • Money is leaving the reservations to purchase
    retail goods and consumer services
  • There is not an adequate supply of financial
    services on the reservations
  • There is not an adequate supply of doctors,
    clinics, etc. on the reservations

29
Diversity of Economy
  • Hachman Index measures diversity of economy
    employment spread out among many different
    industries compared to benchmark
  • Montana or United States
  • More diversity reduces communitys vulnerability
    to economic downturns
  • Closer to 1 mean more diversity
  • MT Department of Labor and Industry, Research and
    Analysis has calculated HI for each county in
    Montana (www.ourfactsyourfuture.mt.gov)

30
Hachman Index
  • Fort Peck Reservation .24
  • Blackfeet Reservation .14
  • County Hachman Indices
  • Lowest (Stillwater) .01
  • Median .25
  • (McCone, Phillips, Toole)
  • Highest .66
  • (Gallatin, Missoula, Cascade)

31
Implications
  • Reservation and county economies are not
    diverse
  • One company towns

32
Vibrancy of Economy
  • Reference USA
  • 921 Executive, Legislative and
  • Other government support.
  • Excludes
  • Law enforcement, public health

NOTE Red is off the reservation
Sources Reference USA, www.referenceusa.com,
U.S. Census Bureau, Zip Code Business Patterns,
2002 and 2003
33
Productivity Measure of Efficiency
Average Output per Worker (IMPLAN)
Minnesota IMPLAN Group, www.implan.com
34
Compensation per Worker
Average Salary per Worker (IMPLAN)
Minnesota IMPLAN Group, www.implan.com
35
Reservation Natural Resources
  • Montana Reservations compared to U.S.
    Reservations
  • 13 of all acres of coal
  • 12 of all oil and gas leases
  • 5 of all coal royalties/revenues
  • 5 of oil royalties/revenues

36
Agriculture on the Reservation
Due to confidential information, only 6
reservations used
United States Department of Agriculture, National
Agricultural Statistics Service,
http//www.nass.usda.gov/Census_of_Agriculture/ind
ex.asp
37
Summary
  • With legal and policy foundation and data
    collection
  • Reservations have potential to expand private
    business sectors
  • Reservations have natural resources, especially
    for energy generation, to use as economic
    engines
  • American Indian farmers appear to have
    comparative advantage in farming

38
Contact Information
  • Susan Ockert
  • Senior Research Economist
  • (406) 821-2740
  • sockert_at_mt.gov
  • www.ceic.mt.govPowerPoint presentation
    available on CEICs web site at
    www.ceic.mt.gov/presentations.asp and MEDAs web
    site at www.medamembers.org/memdir.php

39
  • NOTES
  • BA Bachelors and Advanced Degrees
  • Pregnancy Rate Pregnancies per 1,000 teens, aged
    15-19
  • Alcohol Treatment Need Index that includes
    alcohol mortality and alcohol-defined arrest
    rates
  • SOURCES
  • Reservation Data U.S. Census Bureau, Census
    2000 US Department of Interior, Bureau of Indian
    Affairs, 2003 MT Department of Labor and
    Industry, Research Analysis Bureau, 2005
  • Population U.S. Census Bureau, Population
    Estimates Program, July 1, 2004 Estimates
  • Unemployment MT Department of Labor and
    Industry, Research and Analysis Bureau, Labor Day
    Report 2005
  • Per Capita US Department of Commerce, Bureau of
    Economic Analysis, 2003
  • Poverty U.S. Census Bureau, Small Area Income
    Poverty Estimates, 2002
  • Housing Value U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
  • Median Age U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000
  • Food Stamps MT Department Public Health and
    Human Services, Statistical Report June 2005
  • Pregnancies MT Department of Public Health and
    Human Services, Trends in Montana Teen
    Pregnancies and Their Outcomes 1981-2000,
    November 2002
  • Alcohol treatment Need MT Department of Public
    Health and Human Services, An Integrated
    Substance Abuse Treatment Needs Assessment for
    Montana, 2001
  • Drop Out Office of Public Instruction, Montana
    High School Dropout Rates by Race/Ethnicity,
    2003-04 School Year
  • Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 American
    Indian and Alaska Native Summary File (AIANSF)
    Sample Data, www.ceic.mt.gov/C2000/allreservations
    bytribe.xls
  • Source U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 Summary
    File 2, Matrix PCT1. www.ceic.mt.gov/C2000/urban_r
    ural_indian.xls
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