Mapping Fresno Data:
This section of the dashboard shows 2018-2022 American Community Survey data visualized at the census tract scale. You can select layers to see different map visualizations. The maps also support zooming in and out. As you zoom in, more region and street labels appear. Use the map icon in the bottom right corner to return to a view of all of Fresno County. You can get more detail about the tract by clicking on it.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: All racial groups are non-Hispanic. For example, the “Black Residents” map shown is for Non-Hispanic Black residents of Fresno County. All Hispanic residents are shown in the Hispanic map. The Mobility Metrics include the share of people experiencing poverty who live in high-poverty neighborhoods. While related, this metric is distinct because it looks at the share of all residents experiencing poverty, not just those who live in high-poverty neighborhoods.
“AIAN” stands for American Indians and Alaska Natives, and “NHPI” stands for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: All racial groups are non-Hispanic. This map shows, for each racial or ethnic group in a given census tract, the percentage of residents of that census tract who have a different race or ethnicity than their own. For example, on the “Hispanic Residents” map, a census tract value of 80% indicates that 80% of the residents in that tract are not Hispanic. One of the predictors in the Mobility Metrics is an index of people’s exposure to neighbors of different races and ethnicities in census tracts at the county or city scale. The data in this map, however, show the tract-level exposure.
“AIAN” stands for American Indians and Alaska Natives, and “NHPI” stands for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: All racial groups are non-Hispanic. These charts show, for each racial or ethnic group in a given census tract, the percentage of households of that group that have access to broadband internet (including cable, fiber optic, DSL, or cellular data) and a computer (including desktop, laptop, and cell phone). The Mobility Metric associated with digital access uses identical data to the data shown on this chart, but it is aggregated to either the city or the county scale.
“AIAN” stands for American Indians and Alaska Natives, and “NHPI” stands for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: All racial groups are non-Hispanic. These charts show the household income in each census tract at the specified percentile. The Mobility Metric associated with household income is related, but it uses slightly different percentiles, and it is at the city or county scale.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: All racial groups are non-Hispanic. The map shows, for each racial or ethnic group in a given census tract, the share of households of that race or ethnic group who own their homes. On the data dashboard tab, one metric displays the percentage point difference in the share of a community’s home values held by a racial or ethnic group and the share of households of the same group. This map is unable to show that metric because of a lack of publicly available data on home values at the census tract level.
“AIAN” stands for American Indians and Alaska Natives, and “NHPI” stands for Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders.
Source: 5-year American Community Survey data from 2018-2022.
Notes: These data show the median number of years residents have lived in their housing unit. For a given tract, if the median number of years is seven, that means half of all households have moved into their housing unit in the past seven years, and half of households have lived in their housing unit for more than seven years. We calculated this data by subtracting 2020 from the American Community Survey’s data on “Median Year Householder Moved Into a Unit.”