Index Data

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Deprivation Index Rankings for the 100 Largest Cities & Their Suburbs, 1990, 2000, by Best 2000 Rank

  City State 2000
Rank
1990
Rank
NAPC
Member
Initiatives
and
Intervention
1 Lincoln    NE 1 1
  Suburbs Excluding City   1 1    
2 Colorado Springs    CO 2 3
  Suburbs Excluding City   9 11    
3 Norfolk/Va Beach/Chesapeake    VA 3 4
  Suburbs Excluding City   49 62    
4 Madison    WI 4 2
  Suburbs Excluding City   4 4    
5 Fort Wayne    IN 5 8
  Suburbs Excluding City   3 6    
6 Des Moines    IA 7 7
  Suburbs Excluding City   2 2    
7 Omaha    NE 8 6
  Suburbs Excluding City   5 3    
8 Wichita    KS 9 9
  Suburbs Excluding City   7 7    
9 Akron    OH 10 43
  Suburbs Excluding City   10 15    
10 Lexington    KY 11 10
  Suburbs Excluding City   30 65    
11 Columbus    OH 12 17
  Suburbs Excluding City   12 14    
12 Jacksonville    FL 13 26
  Suburbs Excluding City   53 43    
13 Spokane    WA 14 13
  Suburbs Excluding City   25 12    
14 Raleigh    NC 15 5
  Suburbs Excluding City   54 29    
15 Indianapolis    IN 16 14
  Suburbs Excluding City   11 17    
16 Oklahoma City    OK 17 27
  Suburbs Excluding City   28 36    
17 Honolulu    HI 18 19
  Suburbs Excluding City   39 33    
18 Albuquerque    NM 19 16
  Suburbs Excluding City   72 72    
19 Tulsa    OK 20 24
  Suburbs Excluding City   17 27    
20 Greensboro    NC 21 11
  Suburbs Excluding City   59 46    
21 Austin    TX 22 22
  Suburbs Excluding City   29 42    
22 Toledo    OH 23 41
  Suburbs Excluding City   13 18    
23 Montgomery    AL 24 18
  Suburbs Excluding City   47 48    
24 Pheonix/Mesa/Glendale/Scottsdale    AZ 25 15
  Suburbs Excluding City   52 59    
25 Denver/Aurora    CO 26 20
  Suburbs Excluding City   20 16    

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Notes
* Indicators included in index are the poverty rate, educational attainment, unemployment rate, percent of population that are non-English Speakers, per Capita Income, and crime rate.
* MSAs refers to the MSA excluding the city(ies).
* Where two or more cities are shown together, they belong to the same Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). In these cases, the city data were combined to create a single urban entity.
* Due to naming conventions and other reasons, MSA names may have changed over time.
* Due to Land Annexation and other reasons, MSA size may have changed over time.

Source
* Andrulis, Dennis, and Goodman, Nanette. Social Change and Health Landscape of Urban and Suburban America. Health Forum, Inc., 1999 and from the Suny Downstate Medical Center website: http://www.downstate.edu/urbansoc_healthdata/Urban Center Website/web design2/Home Page.htm
* Tabulations based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, 1980, 1990, 2000.

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