Dear friends and colleagues,
Two times each year, the U.S. Census Bureau releases data on a variety of topics including poverty, educational attainment, housing costs, race, etc… The Data Center has updated its widely popular Who Lives in New Orleans and Metro Parishes Now? web page with the most up-to-date data for the New Orleans area. The page includes data on:
- Race and ethnicity
- Age
- Educational attainment
- Internet access
- Access to vehicles
- Foreign-born population
- Geographic mobility
- Housing costs and affordability
- and much, much more
Here are some interesting factoids from this latest update:
- In 2017, the share of population in Orleans Parish that is African American is 59 percent.
- The share of Hispanics has increased in all eight parishes, with Jefferson Parish witnessing the largest increase in growth, moving from 32,418 in 2000 to an estimate of 65,581, in 2017, an increase of 102 percent.
- The median age of the metro area has risen to 38 in 2017, up from 34.8 in 2000.
- Severe housing cost burden for renters, where more than 50 percent of your household income goes towards rent, has grown from 24 percent in 2000 to 38 percent in 2017 in Orleans Parish while only rising to 25 percent nationally.
- The metro area has seen a shift in the number of children under 18 years old, shrinking from 358,092 in 2000 to 284,167 in 2017 with much of the loss driven by Orleans Parish.
- In 2017, only 60 percent of households in Orleans Parish have access to the Internet compared to 78 percent of households in St. Tammany Parish and 73 percent nationwide.
Want more? Check out the full Who Lives in New Orleans and Metro Parishes Now? page and get all the details in a downloadable Excel file at:
Bringing you the data you need to make informed decisions,
The Data Center team
Rachel Weinstein, Jenna Losh, Robert Habans, Dabne Whitemore, Lamar Gardere, Allison Plyer, and Erica Amrine