WASHINGTON - About one in five students in the Gainesville School System come from a family living in poverty, but that's down from one-in-three ten years earlier.
The Census Bureau reports that in 2005, the latest year for which data is available, out of about 5,247 students in the city system, 1,346 come from a family living in poverty.
Of the Hall County system's 26,289 students, 2,988 fall into that category.
In 1995, out of 3,609 students in the city system, 1,080 were living in poverty. Of the 16,900 students in the county school system at that time, 2,330 came from a family living in poverty.
The Census Bureau says the estimates are produced in order for the Department of Education to implement provisions of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001.
The school district data, part of the Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates, are contained in data tables showing the number of poor children ages 5 to 17 in families.
The tables also contain 2005 state- and county-level estimates of median household income and the total number of poor children younger than 18, related children between 5 and 17 in families; and for states, through age 4. Included as well are estimates of the total number of people of all ages in poverty in states and counties. These estimates are the only source of income and poverty data for counties and poverty statistics for school districts with populations of less than 65,000.
The estimate tabulations, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, are one of the criteria used to allocate federal funds to local jurisdictions. The Census Bureau has, for the first time, produced the estimates by using results from its American Community Survey (ACS). ACS data were combined with aggregate data from federal tax information, administrative records on food stamp program participation, Census 2000 statistics and annual population estimates.
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On the Net:
http://www.census.gov/hhes/www/saipe/district.html