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Editors note: For additional comments and information,
contact Annette Watters, 205/348-6191.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Is Alabama a rural state or an urban state?
The answer may surprise you. The Census Bureau recently provided
some information about the urban and rural population in Alabama.
“Every county in Alabama has some rural population, even
the most densely settled counties,” says Annette Jones Watters,
manager of the Alabama
State Data Center at the Center
for Business and Economic Research at The University of Alabama.
“But some sparsely settled counties have no urban population
at all.”
In recent decades Alabama has seen an increased number of people
moving from rural to urban settings. Twelve Alabama counties had
smaller populations in 2000 than in 1990. All of these but Calhoun
County (home of Anniston) are counties people think of as rural.
But the government’s definition of “rural” has
changed.
The Census Bureau has classified urban and rural population after
each decennial census, Watters said. “This process began with
the 1950 census. Since the 1950 census, the Census Bureau has revised
these criteria for each decennial census, taking advantage of improvements
in data collection, reporting methodologies and advancements in
technology.”
The Census Bureau identifies and tabulates data for the urban
and rural population solely for presenting census statistical data,
Watters said. “The Bureau does not take into account any non-statistical
uses that may be made of the data and it does not attempt to meet
the requirements of any federal or state program. Nevertheless,
the Census Bureau recognizes that some federal and state agencies
are required by law to use urban and rural classification defined
by the Census Bureau to allocate program funds, set program standards
and implement aspects of the their programs.”
Watters stressed that the urban and rural designations “represent
people who live, work and raise their families. People have a considerable
amount of pride about where they are and have strong opinions about
the concepts or rural and urban.”
With this series of definitional revisions, Watters said, “the
Census Bureau tried hard to make all the decisions about urban/rural
designation to be equitable, uniform and objective for the entire
nation.”
Watters pointed out that the Census Bureau’s urban and rural
statistics refer to “people, not to land area.” For
example, a county will be classified as if most of its people live
in areas that are densely settled. “That same county might
have most of its territory taken up by things we think of as rural
features–forests, farms, pastures and so on. Colbert County
in north Alabama is a good example of an urban county by Census
Bureau standards, but most of its land area is not part of any city
or town.”
The urban population of a county, Watters said, lives in densely
settled areas that meet minimum population density requirements.
“The rules about what is ‘densely settled’ are
very exact and the Census Bureau examined every block in the country
to determine its urban status. ‘Rural’ is everything
else that doesn’t fit the strict rules for ‘urban.’”
The new government urban/rural classification system produces some
unexpected results in Alabama. For instance, Lauderdale County,
home of Florence, is now a rural county. Although Florence is one
of Alabama’s largest cities, there are enough people in Lauderdale
County who do not live in Florence to make the population mix in
that county 48 percent urban and 52 percent rural.
Another surprising outcome of the new urban/rural standards is
that Macon County, home of Tuskegee, is now an urban county. Tuskegee
is a much smaller town than Florence, but half of the people in
Macon County live inside the city limits of Tuskegee, officially
tipping the status of Macon County from rural to urban.
The Census Bureau says that 55 percent of Alabama’s population
lives in an urban setting and 45 percent lives in rural areas. So,
according to the Census Bureau’s definition, Alabama is an
urban state.
For more information, visit the website of the Center for Business
and Economic Research at The University of Alabama. http://cber.cba.ua.edu/asdc.html.
Under “Data” you will find maps illustrating urban and
rural counties in both 1990 and 2000 and a table detailing the urban
and rural population counts for each county in Alabama.
The University of Alabama’s Culverhouse
College of Commerce and Business Administration, founded in
1919, first began offering graduate education in 1923. The Center
for Business and Economic Research was created in 1930, and
since that time has engaged in research programs to promote economic
development in the state while continuously expanding and refining
its base of socioeconomic information.
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