Lyssa Jenkens, Ph.D. August 2007
Problem Absence of timely and detailed information about the location and skills profile of the residential labor force at appropriate levels of geography
Location Details Labor Pool City of Plano = 120,200 734,200 Collin County = 267,000 DFW Metro = 2,573,700 734,200 204,700
Skills Details Computer Programmers Computer Software Engineers Computer Support Specialists Network Systems & Data Communications Computer Scientists & Systems Analysts All Other Computer/Mathematical Specialists Computer Sciences Mathematical Sciences
Management Occupations: 100,787 Chief Executives 10,594 General and Operations Managers 9,145 Marketing and Sales Managers 11,846 Computer and Information Systems Managers 5,114 Financial Managers 7,806 Human Resources Managers 3,636 Farmers and Ranchers 547 Construction Managers 6,348 Education Administrators 4,381 Food Service Managers 5,373 Property, Real Estate, & Other Association Managers 4,340 Other General & Specialized Managers 31,653 Business and Financial Operations Occupations: 57,283 Human Resources, Training & Labor Specialists 8,186 Management Analysts 7,503 Other Business Operations Specialists 12,399 Accountants and Auditors 19,992 Loan Counselors and Officers 3,537 Other Financial Specialists 5,662 Computer and Mathematical Occupations: 49,395 Computer Programmers 10,573 Computer Software Engineers 13,276 Computer Support Specialists 6,432 Network Systems & Data Communications Analysts 5,249
Timely Population Growth 2000 - 2005 Occupational Changes Population grew by 12% (626,000) Employed labor force grew by 11% (279,000) Occupational Changes Tech Wreck and 9/11 Business professionals specialists down by 12% while other healthcare practitioners up by 20% Geographic Shifts Collin county grew by 32% compared to 4% growth in Dallas county
Implications Site Selection Decisions Inter-regional Intra-regional Economic Development Strategies Infrastructure Planning Transportation Educational & Training Facilities
Solution Update the database!
Barriers Rapid Population Growth Changing Demographics Economic Restructuring Inconsistent/Incomplete Databases Limited Resources Competing Demands
Benefits For all regions, this is… In DFW, we have… a unique, powerful data resource in high demand by public and private decision-makers across a wide range of activities In DFW, we have… the methodological skills to create the technology to distribute the partnerships to enhance
Next Steps Technical Recompile control totals Allocate change Occupational Estimates --PUMS 2000 and 2005 --PUMA, County, Metro Small area housing and households --Census 2000, NCTCOG 2005, RSI 2000 and 2005 --Lat/Long, Block group, PUMA, County, Metro Allocate change Reconcile totals By occupation By geography Process Review and comment Reconciliation Distribution process and protocols
Your Turn, please…. How could this data resource help you in your efforts, especially in terms of regionalism and regional partnerships? How should the information be “packaged” to make it more accessible to you? Online Presentations Printed materials What would you change, add or remove to make it most useful to your organization?