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For the purpose of examining trends occurring at
the town and state levels, the CtSDC grouped the 169 Connecticut Towns into one
of five categories —
Using these ProjectionsVarious components of the projections, such as counts for individual towns, might not sum to counts for larger areas such as counties or the state. Statistical methods were used to optimize extrapolations for each separate geographic level. See Methodology for clarification. To compare a specific Group to state-wide data, use the roll-up of the Five Groups!
Three Check-boxes to open each file:
Membership in one of Connecticut's
"Five Towns" is described more fully in a 2004 report. [NOTE: Give this file about a minute to load.]
Urban Core This group of towns is characterized as having the (1) lowest income, (2) highest poverty, and the (3) highest
population density, with an extremely high population density being the primary characteristic for this category.
The city of Bridgeport, located on the coast in southwestern Connecticut, is most representative of this group.
Urban Periphery These towns are characterized by (1) below average income, (2) average poverty, and
(3) high population density. In 2000, 36% of the state's population lived in the Urban Periphery,
making this the group with the highest population. These towns are best described as transitional towns between the
urban cores and the suburbs. Located in eastern Connecticut, Norwich was the most representative of this group. Suburban These towns are characterized by (1) above average income, (2) low poverty, and
(3) moderate population density. Towns in this group are best distinguishd as suburbs of more densely
populated urban areas. Located in the midsection of Connecticut, Cheshire was the most representative of this group,
being a suburb to both Waterbury and New Haven. Wealthy This group of towns can be characterized by (1) exceptionally high income, (2) low poverty, and
(3) moderate population density. The single variable that best distinguishes this group is its high income or wealth.
Located in southwest Connecticut, Westport was the most representative of this group in 2000.
Rural This group of towns can be characterized by (1) average income, (2) below average poverty, and
(3) lowest population density. The single variable that best distinguishes this group is its low population density.
Located in southeast corner of Connecticut, North Stonington was the most representative of this group in 2000. Download Microsoft Excel Viewer 2003 at no charge.
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