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Population Age 15 to 17 by Race and Ethnicity: White (Number) – 2009

Data Provided by: Florida KIDS COUNT
TOOLBOX:

246 - 4,078
Lafayette 246
Liberty 279
Franklin 300
Hamilton 304
Jefferson 331
Glades 344
Madison 461
Union 502
Gulf 520
Calhoun 527
Dixie 574
Taylor 619
Gadsden 624
Gilchrist 642
Bradford 753
Holmes 791
Washington 882
Baker 926
Hardee 1,054
DeSoto 1,060
Wakulla 1,081
Jackson 1,243
Suwannee 1,258
Levy 1,523
Okeechobee 1,547
Hendry 1,609
Walton 1,903
Columbia 2,141
Monroe 2,216
Sumter 2,264
Putnam 2,308
Highlands 2,560
Nassau 2,869
Flagler 3,009
246 - 4,078
Indian River 4,078
4,079 - 10,968
Charlotte 4,332
Citrus 4,371
Martin 4,411
Alachua 4,819
Bay 4,834
Hernando 5,436
Leon 5,658
Santa Rosa 6,179
Okaloosa 6,212
St. Johns 6,682
Escambia 7,634
St. Lucie 7,747
Clay 8,105
Lake 8,468
Manatee 8,851
Collier 9,877
Marion 9,973
Sarasota 10,344
Osceola 10,968
10,969 - 30,346
Seminole 14,603
Pasco 15,271
Volusia 15,406
Lee 17,390
Polk 17,519
Brevard 18,037
Duval 20,033
Pinellas 24,352
Orange 30,346
30,347 - 74,193
Palm Beach 34,558
Hillsborough 36,393
Broward 43,115
Miami-Dade 74,193

Definitions:

Population age 15 to 17 by race and Hispanic origin.
White includes persons who designated white as their only racial category.
Black includes persons who designated black or African American as their only racial category.
Other alone or 2 or more races includes persons who designated a single racial category other than white or black or who designated two or more races on the 2010 US Census.
Hispanic includes persons who classified themselves in one of the specific Hispanic or Latino categories. Hispanic may be of any race.

Data Source: Office of Economic and Demographic Research, Florida Legislature, Talahassee, FL

Footnotes: Developed at annual Florida Consensus Estimating Conferences. Represents April 1 data.

Note: Maps use the natural break classification method, which reflects patterns in the data by dividing the map into naturally occurring groups. Using statistical tools, this method determines cut-off points for each group by identifying large gaps in data values.

Florida Grantee

Florida KIDS COUNT Department of Child & Family Studies
Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute
College of Behavioral and Community Sciences
University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida 33612

813.974.7411
weitzel@usf.edu
http://www.floridakidscount.org

Susan Weitzel, Director