2011 Census Joint Intelligence Group 3 April 2013.

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Presentation transcript:

2011 Census Joint Intelligence Group 3 April 2013

Presentation outline Part 1 Results so far for Bristol Part 2 Geography Getting hold of the data What data is coming next?

Bristol 2011 Census initial results A usual resident of the UK is anyone who, on census day, was in the UK and had stayed or intended to stay in the UK for a period of 12 months or more * A short-term UK resident is anyone born outside the UK who has stayed or intends to stay in UK for a period of 3 months or more but less than 12 months

Census vs population estimates

Census vs Rolled Forward Estimate by age

Population  Bristol = 7 th largest city in England outside of London and 10 th largest LA  Increased by 38,000 (9.7%) since 2001 (E%W 7.3%)  Median age = 33 years old (E&W 39)  78,700 children, 66, year olds, 9,000 people aged 85+

Population change Largest ward: Lawrence Hill 18,942 Smallest ward: Stoke Bishop 9,269 Cabot increase: 62% Lawrence Hill increase: 44% These 2 wards account for 31% of population increase in city since 2001 Average number of people per household: 2.3

Ethnicity

Bristol BME population increased from 8.2% to 16%

Ethnicity Lawrence Hill BME: 55% Whitchurch Park BME: 4% St Pauls Grosvenor Road BME: 80% The Coots, Stockwood BME: 1.4%

Country of birth On Census Day 4,947 people living in Bristol who were born in Somalia - 4th highest number of all LAs after B’ham (7,765), Brent (6,855) & Ealing (6,468) 63,000 (15%) of people in Bristol were born outside of UK (8% 2001) - from more than 50 different countries - 61% have arrived in UK since 2001

Religion (voluntary question) At least 45 religions are represented in Bristol  Christians in Bristol down from 62% (2001) to 47% (2011)  No religion up from 25% to 37%  22,016 Muslims up from 2% to 5%  Bristol is ranked 7th in E&W for proportion stating no religion  2,310 Jedi Knights

Main Language

Doesn’t include English !

Language  Main language spoken and English proficiency (also by household)  At least 91 main languages are spoken in Bristol  English is the main language spoken followed by Polish (6,080) and Somali (5,004), also 1 Yiddish speaker and 1 Cornish speaker  9% of people do not speak English as their main language  6,089 (1.5%) people cannot speak English or cannot speak English very well

Language by ward

Health and disability Proxy for disability: People with a long-term health problem or disability 2011 question: ‘Are your day-to-day activities limited because of a health problem or disability which has lasted, or is expected to last, at least 12 months? Include problems related to old age’ Yes, limited a lot Yes, limited a little No

Health and disability BUT numbers have increased from 67,739 to 71,724 People with good or very good health: 82.3%

Carers The number of people providing unpaid care has increased from 35,344 to 40,138 carers – 9.4% of all people living in Bristol

Economic activity  Similar to national picture but more students and less retired  62% of people (16-74) are employed  Economically active up 67% (2001) to 71% (2011)  Full time employees part time employees self employed

Students Students counted at term time address FT students (18+): 25,573 (6.7%) in ,638 (8.3%) in % of total pop in Cabot 2% Brislington West Majority of the population in some LSOAs with large halls of residence

Qualifications  No qualifications down from 26% (2001) to 20% (2011) - E&W 23%  Degree level and above up from 24% (2001) to 33% (2011) - E&W 27%

Method of travel to work

1st out of all Core Cities for proportion of people cycling to work 1st out of all Core Cities for proportion of people walking to work 3 rd for number cycling to work - after Cambridge + Hackney 3 rd for number walking to work - after Birmingham + Leeds 12 th for proportion of people cycling to work

Method of travel to work Nationally public transport increased as a whole but commuting by bus or coach decreased. The 10 local authorities with largest percentage point decreases in public transport use saw above average increases in the percentage of people driving to work. EXCEPT Bristol where walking and cycling increased.

Car availability 25,196 more cars in Bristol than in % of households do not have access to a car – 73% in St James Barton, 5% in Old Sneed Park

Housing Type  96% of household spaces are occupied by at least one usual resident 7,138 not occupied by usual residents  An additional 22,762 household spaces since % of change has been in the form of flats Flats = 34% of housing stock, up from 28% in 2001

Housing Change % of all change has been in Ashley, Cabot, Lawrence Hill and Easton 14% of all change has been in Bedminster, Southville and Windmill Hill

Tenure Private renting has increased significantly from 14% to 25% Privately rented (or LRF) doubled since 2001 to 45,600 households

Tenure Owned Stoke Bishop 83% Lawrence Hill 20% Social Rented Lawrence Hill 48% Stoke Bishop 3% Private Rented or LRF Clifton East 56% Whitchurch Park 7%

Household size Average household size: 2.3 people Average number of rooms/household: 5.0 Average number of bedrooms/household: % of households overcrowded - occupancy rating of -1 rooms 33% of households overcrowded in Lawrence Hill

Household composition

Part 2 Geography Getting hold of the data Bristol analysis What data is coming next?

Census geography Changes in OA and SOA boundaries in Bristol have taken place when: i.significant population change has occurred since the 2001 Census ii.areas have been independently assessed as lacking social homogeneity Data sources may be for different geographies eg Indices of Deprivation 2010 by 2001 LSOA but 2011 Census by 2011 LSOAs. Example: ‘St Pauls’ LSOA split into i.‘St Pauls City Road’ ii.‘St Pauls Grovsenor Road’ iii.‘St Pauls Portland Square’ For more information and maps see ‘2011 Geographies for 2011 Census data in Bristol’

Where to get the data: 1 BCC census web page Currently includes (PDFs!):  Briefing notes  Change since 2001  Data by topic themes for Bristol LA  Data for wards and Lower Super Output Areas  Maps  2011 Census Profiles by ward and link to tool.………

2011 Census Selected Statistics Tool Excel tool for creating area profiles Tool available on BCC 2011 Census web page Demo >>>>>>>>>

Where to get the data: 2 NOMIS Key Statistics and Quick Statistics Detailed Statistics and Local Characteristics to come Wizard query tool Download one table at a time but for several areas

Where to get the data: 3 Neighbourhood Statistics Data by topic for download Postcode search for profiles No crosstabulations!

Where to get the data: 4 Office for National Statistics (ONS) Census Prospectus Topic Reports Data visualisations Data Explorer Tool – available summer 2013

Planned analysis & reports - Bristol 2011 Census Atlas and/or series of ‘Topic Reports’ in discussion with individual teams including:  National and Core City comparisons  Change  LSOA maps  Topics: equalities communities, community cohesion, housing, health, travel and transport, workforce and jobs, students etc…..

2011 Census Publication Timetable

ONS Population Timetable

Contact details Jayne Mills Strategic Planning Neighbourhoods and City Development Bristol City Council T: E: W: