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Benchmarking Coos County, New Hampshire against
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Only Coos County, New Hampshire has both so many vacant houses (4.86%) and so few households with utility gas or electric for home heating (2.12%).
So, any other county with as many vacant houses also has more households with utility gas or electric for home heating. Likewise, any other county with as few households with utility gas or electric for home heating also has fewer vacant houses.
Coos County, New Hampshire has these related standings among all the 3,142 counties:
So, any other county with as many vacant houses also has more households with utility gas or electric for home heating. Likewise, any other county with as few households with utility gas or electric for home heating also has fewer vacant houses.
Coos County, New Hampshire has these related standings among all the 3,142 counties:
- vacant houses = 4.86% (764th-most, tied)
- change in median household value = -4.71% (533rd-biggest drop, tied)
- households where housing costs (mortgage or rent and utilities) exceed 30% of household income = 31.28% (691st-most)
- households with utility gas or electric for home heating = 2.12% (20th-fewest)
- affordable housing relative to low-income population = -53.97 (875th-most, tied)
- overcrowded households = 0.80% (331st-fewest, tied)
- homeownership rate = 70.0% (1,112th-lowest, tied)
Insert recommendations for community action or improvement, based on the highlighted measures and their comparative outcomes, and optionally dependent on a specified geography or other attribute.
- households with utility gas or electric for home heating. Higher values are better. Source is the 2015 Census.
- vacant houses. Lower values are better. Percentage of residential addresses that are vacant. Source is HUD, 2016.
Coos County, New Hampshire is in New Hampshire, is on the East Coast, is rural high-performing, is better than the nationwide crime averages in both violent crime and homicides, is worse than the nationwide household averages in each of household income, homeownership, housing costs, and home heating, is worse than the nationwide employment averages in each of labor-force participation, job proximity, and new-business growth rate, is better than the nationwide public-safety averages in each of traffic fatalities, drinking water, airborne cancer risk, air quality, and toxic-chemical exposure, is better than the nationwide adult-disease averages in each of obesity, heart disease, and cancer, and is better than the nationwide black/hispanic disparity averages in each of income, pollution exposure, and premature death.
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Numeric values:
- median household income ($42,312)
- public-school spending per student ($16,520)
- average weekly wage ($707.00)
- per-capita spending on police and fire protection ($291.94)
- high-school graduation rate (88.38%)
- youth who live within 5 miles of a public school (85.95%)
- adults who don't eat enough daily fruits & vegetables (75.50%)
- homeownership rate (70.0%)
- households with internet access (69.23%)
- land area covered by tree canopy, weighted by population (63.43%)
- pre-school enrollment (59.15%)
- labor-force participation (58.17%)
- 4th-grade students who are proficient in English Language Arts (48.62%)
- population living close to emergency facilities (40.87%)
- racial integration (39.00%)
- households where housing costs (mortgage or rent and utilities) exceed 30% of household income (31.28%)
- adult obesity (30.70%)
- population age 25+ with an Associate Degree or higher (28.45%)
- adults who did NOT take part in leisure-time physical activity or exercise in the past month (25.10%)
- heart disease among older adults (21.18%)
- older adults (Medicare beneficiaries) who are diagnosed with depression (17.46%)
- adults of age 18+ who smoke tobacco (16.77%)
- population without nearby access to a large grocery store (16.11%)
- adults who self-report fair or poor general health within the last 30 days (14.13%)
- poverty rate (14.06%)
- teenage birth rate (14.01%)
- population without health insurance (11.74%)
- adult diabetes (9.8%)
- newborns with low birth weight (8.71%)
- new-business growth rate (8.03%)
- households with no vehicle (7.80%)
- households in a FEMA-designated flood hazard area (7.41%)
- households that receive public-assistance income (6.42%)
- cancer among older adults (6.42%)
- workers who commute 60 minutes or more (5.84%)
- vacant houses (4.86%)
- civilian labor-force unemployment (3.9%)
- youth of ages 16-19 who are neither working nor enrolled in school (2.26%)
- households with utility gas or electric for home heating (2.12%)
- tax returns that claim adult education tax credits (1.44%)
- unsafe drinking water exposure (1.08%)
- overcrowded households (0.80%)
- relative disparity in unemployment rates among the disabled, compared to the total population (0.72%)
- change in median household value (-4.71%)
- affordable housing relative to low-income population (-53.97)
- food environment index (7.9)
- jobs within a 45-minute commute by car (1,388)
- local food outlets per 100,000 in population (26.0)
- nonprofits per 100,000 population (45.7)
- variety of industries among available jobs (0.86)
- walkability index (6.59)
- airborne cancer risk per million in population (18.04)
- car crash fatalities per 100,000 population (13.37)
- chronic health risk from exposure to toxic chemicals (4.51)
- days per month that adults self-report 'not good' mental health (3.82)
- deaths due to drug overdose, alcohol, or suicide per 100,000 population (48.91)
- homicides per 100,000 population (1.850)
- preventable hospital admissions per 100,000 population (4,240)
- property crimes per 100,000 population (2,296)
- relative disparity in income among blacks and hispanics, compared to whites (0.43)
- relative disparity in pollution exposure among blacks, hispanics, and other, compared to whites (2.36)
- relative disparity in premature death among blacks and hispanics, compared to whites (0.00)
- risk of developing serious respiratory complications per 10,000 in population (0.47)
- very-hot days per year (10)
- violent crimes per 100,000 population (142.58)
- CMS-certified beds within active hospitals per 1,000 population (3.54)
- first responders per 1,000 population (1.070)
- population (31,634)
- primary-care doctors per 100,000 population (113.73)
Global References