Officials from the U.S. Census Bureau and the University of Washington have announced the opening of a new Census Research Data Center (RDC) within the University of Washington College of Arts and Sciences. The UW facility will provide qualified researchers access to extensive Census Bureau data including demographic, economic, public health and household surveys, and may accelerate critical research and discoveries.
“There are fantastic benefits,” said Mark Ellis, Director of the NWCRDC and Professor of Geography at UW. Ellis believes the research data center will offer unmatched opportunities to generate a wide perspective on America’s social landscape, expand the collaboration between the US Census Bureau, local universities and academic researchers, and train a new generation of quantitative social scientists. “The Census Bureau runs a whole host of surveys—there are population surveys, but also surveys about housing, manufacturing, service jobs…a whole host of things designed to take the pulse of American society and American activity.”
“This Census Research Data Center will enable the research community across the Northwest to conduct statistical analyses that otherwise would not be possible on a wide range of research projects in the social sciences,” said Thomas Mesenbourg, the Census Bureau’s acting director. “We anticipate the creation of new products that leverage the value of Census Bureau data that has already been collected.”
Previously, Pacific Northwest-based researchers in the fields of business, economics, geography, health services, population, public policy and sociology had to travel 800 miles to the nearest RDC at UC Berkeley to access the restricted data, placing a significant constraint on their research capacity.
Marc Baldwin, Assistant Director of Forecasting for the State of Washington Office of Financial Management, suggests many efforts currently underway will benefit directly from the presence of a local RDC. Proposed projects include a study of the influence of wage ordinances on levels of poverty and inequality; an examination of globalization’s effects on declining trade costs; an analysis of the impact of Tolling on Low-income and Minority Populations in the Puget Sound; and a study of the relation between socioeconomic status and obesity rates in Seattle-King County, to name a few.
The Northwest Regional Data Center is funded by the Washington State Office of Financial Management, the UW College of Arts and Sciences, the UW Provost’s Office, the UW School of Social Work and a $300,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. [24×7]