Originally published in the New Haven Independent on 4/12/19: https://www.newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/data_haven_survey/
by APARNA NATHAN & MARK ABRAHAM
Apr. 15, 2019
All DataHaven Programs, Community Wellbeing Survey, Civic Vitality, Demographics, Economy, Education, Health, Housing, Public Safety
[Excerpt of feature article by Nathalie Bussemaker, Yale Daily News, April 12, 2019]
[....]
Why are companies leaving Connecticut for high-tax cities? Many think the answer can be traced to the preferences of millennials.
[News article by Brian Slattery]
Hamden is a good place to live — as long as you can find a good job.
That’s one of the lessons from a newly released 2018 DataHaven Community Wellbeing Survey.
Apr. 11, 2019
All DataHaven Programs, Community Wellbeing Survey, Civic Vitality, Demographics, Economy, Education, Health, Housing, Public Safety
Excerpt of article by Emiliano Gomez, March 27, 2019:
"In 2010, parts of three New Haven neighborhoods — Fair Haven, Newhallville and Edgewood — were designated by the Census Bureau as especially “hard to count” tracts due to low mail-return rates of census forms — less than 60 percent.
Such neighborhoods are mostly composed of groups the Census Bureau has designated “hard to count.”
Mar. 27, 2019
All DataHaven Programs, Civic Vitality, Demographics, Economy