Poverty rates are highest in the urban centers of Buffalo, Niagara Falls, and Lockport, and on the Tuscarora and Cattaraugus Reservations. The only major suburb with significant levels of poverty is Lackawanna. But although the rate of poverty is highest in the cities, many more people live outside of the cities than in them; thus, the number of people living in poverty outside the cities is roughly equal to that inside them
Unemployment in each geographic area shot upward in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, but decli...
Partridge and Rickman explore the wide geographic disparities in poverty across the United States. T...
Examines demographic, population, and economic markers between Buffalo, Amherst, and Erie County
The local economy is often discussed in terms of the Buffalo-Niagara Metropolitan Statistical Area (...
The combination of densely concentrated, racialized poverty with housing vacancy, abandonment, and b...
Between 2000 and 2010, several census tracts on the East and West Sides fell deeper into poverty. Br...
New York was the only state where both poverty and income exceeded national levels in 2005, with 13....
This policy report examines the scope of poverty and inequality in Buffalo-Niagara, the causes of po...
In 2010, the Buffalo-Cheektowaga-Niagara Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) encompassing both...
Buffalo is the nation’s third most impoverished city. Buffalo’s East Side and West Side neighborhood...
The Census Bureau reports poverty statistics annually based on American Community Survey (ACS) data....
The biggest problem facing Buffalo’s public schools is the fact that most of the students live in po...
While Erie County’s unemployment rate and levels of poverty are better than the state and national a...
The biggest problem facing Buffalo’s public schools is the fact that many students live in poverty, ...
High levels of poverty in the City of Buffalo continue to persist despite significant economic devel...
Unemployment in each geographic area shot upward in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, but decli...
Partridge and Rickman explore the wide geographic disparities in poverty across the United States. T...
Examines demographic, population, and economic markers between Buffalo, Amherst, and Erie County
The local economy is often discussed in terms of the Buffalo-Niagara Metropolitan Statistical Area (...
The combination of densely concentrated, racialized poverty with housing vacancy, abandonment, and b...
Between 2000 and 2010, several census tracts on the East and West Sides fell deeper into poverty. Br...
New York was the only state where both poverty and income exceeded national levels in 2005, with 13....
This policy report examines the scope of poverty and inequality in Buffalo-Niagara, the causes of po...
In 2010, the Buffalo-Cheektowaga-Niagara Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) encompassing both...
Buffalo is the nation’s third most impoverished city. Buffalo’s East Side and West Side neighborhood...
The Census Bureau reports poverty statistics annually based on American Community Survey (ACS) data....
The biggest problem facing Buffalo’s public schools is the fact that most of the students live in po...
While Erie County’s unemployment rate and levels of poverty are better than the state and national a...
The biggest problem facing Buffalo’s public schools is the fact that many students live in poverty, ...
High levels of poverty in the City of Buffalo continue to persist despite significant economic devel...
Unemployment in each geographic area shot upward in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, but decli...
Partridge and Rickman explore the wide geographic disparities in poverty across the United States. T...
Examines demographic, population, and economic markers between Buffalo, Amherst, and Erie County