compass points 2016
TRANSCRIPT
OLDER ADULTS SOON TO EXCEED SCHOOL-AGE POPULATION
By 2025, Minnesota's older adult population (age 65+) is expected to exceed our state's school-age population for the first time in our state's history. Currently, in one-third of Minnesota's counties, at least 20 percent of the residents are older adults. By 2030, this should be true for every county in Minnesota.
MINNESOTA'S POPULATION OF COLOR SURPASSES 1 MILLION
Minnesota's population of color crossed the 1 million mark in 2014. Since 1990 the population of color has accounted for nearly all of the growth in Minnesota’s population, so that today about 1 in 5 residents is a person of color. Looking at our population under age 18, about 1 in 3 is a person of color. By 2040, people of color will comprise 30 percent of Minnesota's population, including 40 percent in the Twin Cities region.
EMPLOYMENT TICKS UP
In 2014, 77 percent of all adults in Minnesota were employed, placing it third in the nation. This is the fourth year in a row of slow, steady growth. Minnesota remains home to very large employment gaps by race, but there appears to be a slight narrowing of this gap, with the employment rate among adults of color rising by about 3 percentage points over the last few years.
FEWER PEOPLE LACK HEALTH INSURANCE
Minnesota and the U.S. as a whole saw a substantial drop in the number and proportion of residents without health insurance between 2013 and 2014. In Minnesota, 9.3 percent of residents under age 65 lacked health insurance in 2013, compared with 6.7 percent in 2014, a 2.6 percentage point drop. Nationally, the rate dropped over 3 percentage points.
NEARLY 3 IN 10 MINNESOTA HOUSEHOLDS PAY TOO MUCH FOR HOUSING
Almost 600,000 Minnesota households are cost-burdened, or pay 30 percent or more of their income for housing. Mirroring the nation, the share of households paying too much for housing has decreased in recent years, after rising sharply in the 2000s. Homeowners are much less likely than renters to be cost-burdened.
MINNESOTA COMPASS | mncompass.orgMeasuring progress. Inspiring action.
COMPASS POINTS 2016Minnesota Compass looks at key measures in 13 topic areas to promote cradle-to-career success for all of Minnesota’s youth, a strong and vibrant economy and workforce, and healthy communities throughout the state.
Notable Trends
Check out more trends at www.mncompass.org/trends/featured-trends
32% Percentage of adults age 65+ with a disability SAME 4
38% Adults age 65+ who volunteer SAME 2
$40,000 Median household income, head of household age 65+ BETTER 17
57% Students connected to a caring adult -- --
62% Students participating in enrichment activities (3X/week) -- --
48% Voted in 2014 election WORSE 5
35% Residents age 16+ who volunteer WORSE 4
70% Adult neighbors who help neighbors SAME 10
80% Children screened before age 5 SAME --
6% Low-weight births SAME 4
CHILDREN & YOUTH
AGING
NEW MEASURES!CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
EARLY CHILDHOOD
RECENT TRENDCURRENT
NATIONALRANK
(1=BEST)
Dig deeper. . .find data for specific populations, geographic areas, and where disparities occur at mncompass.org.Also find data sources, years, margins of error, and additional notes.
Updated February 2016 with the most recent data compiled by Minnesota Compass.
Minnesota’s population at a glance
Numbers may not add up to totals due to rounding.
2000 2014
Overall population 4.9 million 5.5 million
Twin Cities 2.6 million 3.0 million
Greater Minnesota 2.3 million 2.5 million
Children and youth (0-17) 1.3 million 1.3 million
Twin Cities 698,000 711,000
Greater Minnesota 589,000 571,000
Working-age residents (18-64) 3.0 million 3.4 million
Twin Cities 1.7 million 1.9 million
Greater Minnesota 1.3 million 1.5 million
Older adults (65+) 594,000 780,000
Twin Cities 255,000 366,000
Greater Minnesota 339,000 414,000
Foreign-born residents 260,000 428,000
Twin Cities 206,000 340,000
Greater Minnesota 54,000 88,000
People of color 582,000 1 million
Twin Cities 444,000 762,000
Greater Minnesota 138,000 252,000
New on Compass . . .
Build your own neighborhood interactive tool for Duluth, Minneapolis, and Saint Paul
Generation Next section in Education
Civic Engagement: Enhanced key measures and a new key measure, neighbors helping neighbors
Coming . . . a new arts topic
HEALTH
ECONOMY
ENVIRONMENT
EDUCATION
HOUSING
IMMIGRATION
PUBLIC SAFETY
TRANSPORTATION
WORKFORCE
CURRENT
* 25 largest U.S. metros
1% Annual change in Gross Domestic Product WORSE 27
2.8 M Number of available jobs BETTER --
$61,500 Median household income SAME 10
12% Poverty rate SAME 8
59% 3rd graders proficient in reading SAME --
58% 8th graders proficient in math SAME --
81% Students graduate high school on time BETTER 33
219 Days air quality was rated “good” (Twin Cities) SAME 6*
29 Tons of green house gas emissions per person BETTER --
28% Adults age 18+ who are obese SAME 10
7% Residents who are uninsured BETTER 4
7% Adults age 18+ with diabetes SAME 4
8 Psychiatric hospital admissions per 1,000 residents age 14+ SAME --
14,100 Estimated number of homeless people WORSE --
28% Households pay more than 30% of income for housing BETTER 11
35% Homeownership gap (white, of color) SAME 44
70% Proportion of immigrants age 16-64 working SAME 14
$49,500 Median household income SAME --
34% Immigrants age 25+ with bachelor's degree SAME --
25 Serious crimes committed per 1,000 residents BETTER --
17% Adults are victims of crime SAME --
87% Adults feel safe on their street after dark SAME --
546 Traffic injuries and fatalities per 100,000 residents SAME --
4% Highway miles rated in poor condition BETTER --
23% Average household income spent on transportation -- --
35% Roads congested during peak driving times (Twin Cities) SAME 3*
17,650 Average number of jobs reachable within 30-minute commute -- 11* by foot or transit (Twin Cities)
77% Proportion of adults working BETTER 3
34% Adults age 25+ with bachelor’s degree BETTER 10
63% Graduation rate at 4-year institutions (in 6 years) BETTER 15
50% Graduation rate at 2-year institutions (in 3 years) WORSE 12
MINNESOTA COMPASS | mncompass.orgMeasuring progress. Inspiring action.
RECENT TREND
NATIONALRANK
(1=BEST)
Initiatives and foundations contract with Minnesota Compass to provide data and trends specific to their work and then share the information on mncompass.org. These special projects include:
Addressing the achievement gap – Generation Next, a coalition of civic, business, and education leaders aims to close the sizeable achievement gaps between students of color and white students in Minneapolis and Saint Paul. Believing that the first step toward solving any problem is to understand the facts, the initiative engaged Compass to benchmark and track five goals. Find them in the Generation Next section under the Education topic.
Neighborhood profiles for Minneapolis, Saint Paul, and Duluth – Recognizing that building a better Minnesota starts in your own backyard, McKnight Foundation contracted with Compass to develop profiles for established Minneapolis, Saint Paul, and Duluth neighborhoods. The information has proven so useful that McKnight and a consortium of funders led by the Northland Foundation took it a step further, sponsoring a “build your own neighborhood” tool. The new tool allows users in those cities to create their own geographic areas of interest and access up-to-date information about population, housing, employment, and more.
Racial Equity Resource Directory – Facing the issue of race remains one of our most pressing challenges. In an effort to ensure all Minnesotans have tools and training opportunities to combat racial inequities, the Facing Race Initiative worked with Minnesota Compass to develop a comprehensive statewide listing of programs and trainings to address racial equity in the workplace and in educational and community settings. Facing Race is an initiative of The Minnesota Community Foundation and The Saint Paul Foundation.
STEM in Minnesota – Sponsored by Boston Scientific and Ecolab, the STEM section of Compass was developed to help STEM stakeholders better understand the state of Minnesota's STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) continuum and to help target resources most effectively. The project, nominated for a Tekne award, tracks 11 key measures and provides information on benchmarks, best practices, and disparities. Find it under the Education topic.
How can we help you?Does your initiative have a desire to identify needs, track progress, and share the information with a broader audience?
Contact Craig Helmstetter, Minnesota Compass Project Director, to learn more: [email protected]
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STAY INFORMED
3Mgives
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota Foundation
Boston Scientific
Otto Bremer Trust
Bush Foundation
Greater Twin Cities United Way
Initiative Foundation
Mardag Foundation
The McKnight Foundation
Community Leadership Fund of The Minneapolis Foundation
Northwest Minnesota Initiative Foundation
The Jay and Rose Phillips Family Foundation of Minnesota
The Saint Paul Foundation
Wells Fargo Foundation Minnesota
Amherst H. Wilder Foundation
Thank you!
Compass is led by Wilder Research and governed and funded by a collaborative of foundations:
Building a stronger Minnesota together!