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There’s No Place Like Home
The Dynamics of North Central Texas
www.interlink-ntx.org
©InterLink 2011
Featuring
A snapshot of Texas demographics What makes a regional workforce An overview of the 16 County North
Central Texas Region and the opportunities it offers
What Employers say – “Why Work in North Central Texas”
2010 Occupations recommended by employers to be high skill and high demand for North Central Texas careers
Emerging Occupations
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Fastest Growing States, 2000-2009
2000 Population*
2009 Population*
Numerical Change
2000-2009
Percent Change
2000-2009
United States 281,424,602 307,006,550 25,581,948 9.1 Texas 20,851,820 24,782,302 3,930,484 18.8 California 33,871,648 36,961,664 3,090,016 9.1 Florida 15,982,378 18,537,969 2,555,130 16.0 Georgia 8,186,453 9,829,211 1,642,430 20.1 Arizona 5,130,632 6,595,778 1,465,171 28.6 North Carolina 8,049,313 9,380,884 1,334,478 16.6 Virginia 7,078,515 7,882,590 803,542 11.4
* Population values are decennial census counts for April 1 for 2000 and estimates for July 1 for 2009.
Source: Derived from U.S. Bureau of the Census Estimates for dates indicated by the Texas State Data Center, University of Texas at San Antonio.
Geographic Patterns
North Central Texas
16 Counties
0.010.020.030.040.050.060.070.080.090.0
1980-1990 1990-2000 2000-2007 2000-2040
Anglo Black Hispanic Other
Percent of Population Growth and Projected Population Growth by Race/Ethnicity, Texas
Source: U.S. Census Counts, and Texas State Data Center 2008 Population Projections, 0.5 Scenario
Texas’ population will continue to grow, driven by both natural increase and net migration (internal and international)
The Hispanic origin population contributes significantly to overall growth of Texas’ total population
The population of school aged youth will continue to increase in major urbanized areas and along the south Texas border, with declining population in most rural areas
Current high school graduation rates, if they continue, imply that our labor force may become less educated over time.
Major Points
Source: Office of the State Demographer, Lloyd Potter, Ph.D.
The North Central Texas Labor Market
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North Central Texas 16 County Commute Patterns
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12,798 square miles
6,367,422 million citizens - more populous than 33 states
Population density of 497.52 residents per square mile (TX 91.95)
16 counties – Collin, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Ellis, Erath, Hunt, Hood, Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Navarro, Palo Pinto, Rockwall, Somervell, Tarrant and Wise
135 incorporated municipalities
16 County ~ North Central Texas Region
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Ten Largest U.S. Metro Areas
1. New York 2. Los Angeles 3. Chicago 4. Philadelphia 5. Dallas/Fort Worth 6. Miami 7. Houston 8. Washington, D.C. 9. Atlanta 10. Detroit Copyright InterLink 2011
Comparative Total Populations
Combined City Populations = 5,613,239
Dallas/Fort Worth Metro Population = 6,367,422
Leading the State’s Economy
3.5% of Texas land area
25% of Texas population
29% of Texas employment
33% of Texas gross sales
29% of Texas retail sales
30% of Texas personal income
29% of Texas property tax base
The D/FW Metroplex has:
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Califor
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New York
Texas
FloridaIlli
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Pennsy
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Ohio
New Je
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DFW CMSA
Washington
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Marylan
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Minneso
ta
Missou
ri
Tennes
see
Wisconsin
2000 Gross State Product ($1996B)
If the DFW CMSA were a State…
14th
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2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
United
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United
KingdomFran
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Spain
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South
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Taiwan
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Russia
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and
Belgium
Sweden
DFW CMSA
Turkey
Austria
Hong Kong
Norway
2000 Gross Domestic Product (Current $B)
If the DFW CMSA were a Nation…
22nd
Dallas/Fort Worth has the most in the nation with 24 Fortune 500 Companies calling the Metroplex home
AMR (104)
AT&T (8)
Affiliated Computer Services (401)
Atmos Energy (343)
Burlington Northern Santa Fe (142)
Celanese (368)
Centex (308)
Commercial Metals (251)
Crosstex Energy (479)
D.R. Horton (378)
Dean Foods 216)
Dr. Pepper, Snapple Group (427)
Energy Future Holdings (237)
Energy Transfer Equity (286)
Exxon Mobil (1)
Fluor (114)
GameStop (296)
Holly (420)
J.C. Penney (139)
Kimberly-Clark (128)
Southwest Airlines (246)
Tenet Healthcare (283)
Texas Instruments (215)
XTO Energy (330)
North Texas Fortune 500 Revenues = $623,768,300,000
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99,222
9,3673,649 2,438 794 402 276
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
0-19 20-49 50-99 100-249 250-499 500-999 1,000+
Source: Texas Workforce Commission UIL Accounts, 4th Quarter 2007
Dallas/Fort Worth Metro Area Employers by Business Size
408,219
286,047251,722
369,748
268,494 276,735
700,245
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
800,000
0-19 20-49 50-99 100-249 250-499 500-999 1,000+
Dallas/Fort Worth Metro Area Business by Employee Size
Source: Texas Workforce Commission UIL Accounts, 4th Quarter 2007
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA ($ billions)
1,056.4
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA 632.4
Chicago-Naperville-Joliet, IL-IN-WI 461.4
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV 347.6
Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX 316.3
Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX 315.5
Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD 295.2
San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA 268.3
Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH 261.1
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Marietta, GA 242.4
Gross Domestic Product by Metro Area
D/FW Employment Employment Distribution Natural Resources/ Mining/Construction 174,000 6.1% Manufacturing 293,400 10.4% Wholesale Trade 162,700 5.8% Retail Trade 306,300 10.8% Transportation/ Warehousing/Utilities 133,400 4.7% Information 91,000 3.2% Financial 226,600 8.0% Professional/Business Services 399,500 14.1% Education/Health 296,000 10.5% Leisure/Hospitality 266,400 9.4% Other Services 108,900 3.8% Government 371,300 13.1% Total 2,829,500
Source: 82nd Texas Legislature-THECB Recommendations
Averaged freshman graduation rate (percent) for public high school students, for the U.S. and selected states: 2006–07
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Common Core of Data (CCD), "NCES Common Core of Data State Dropout and Completion Data File," school year 2006-07
Educational attainment of persons 25+ years of age by ethnicity, Texas, 2009
Source: TX State Demographer from American Community Survey, 2009
Projected Percent of Labor Force by Educational Attainment in Texas, 2000 and 2040
* Projections are shown for the 1.0 scenario
18.8
29 28.7
18.2
5.3
30.128.7
23.9
12.9
4.4
No High School Diploma
High School Graduate
Some College
Bachelor's Degree
Graduate/Prof.Degree
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Percent
2000 2040
Source: THECB Accountability System Report for Very Large Community Colleges
38%
52%
2% 8%
Public Universities
Public Two Year Colleges
All Health Related Institutions
Independent Colleges &Universities
Two Year Colleges Enroll the Highest Percentage of Students in Texas
Source: Final Legislative Briefing
“The North Central Texas area ranks very high in meeting the business needs of our company, for several reasons: * Local high-tech workforce (engineers) * Affordable housing * Reasonable cost of living * Major airport (easy access to/from both coasts) * Telecommunications Center * Nice climate (except for the 100 plus days) “
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“I look at "economic sphere of influence.” With
that view, DFW rates very high as I see most of the
technological influence for not only TX, but also
OK, AR, and LA centered in DFW. “
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Information Technology Careers: Computer Programmers ~ Computer Support
Specs. ~ Computer Systems Analysts ~ Database Administrators
Hospitality Careers: Chefs ~ Head Cooks ~ Food Service Mgrs.
Education Careers: Teachers: Elementary ~ Secondary ~ Vocational ~
Special Ed
STEM CAREERS: Engineers: Aerospace ~ Civil ~
Computer Software Applications ~ Computer Systems Software ~
Electrical & Electronic ~ Industrial ~ Mechanical * Electrical & Electronic Eng. Techs.
Arts, AV Tech. & Communications Careers: Multimedia Artists/Animators
Architecture & Construction Careers: Architects & CAD Drafters ~ Carpenters ~
Electricians ~ Heating/AC Techs. ~ Gen. Maintenance Repairers ~ Heavy Equip. Operators ~
Plumbers/Pipefitters ~ Welders
Business, Finance, Management, Marketing & Sales Careers:
General & Operations Managers ~ Advertising Marketing Sales Mgrs. ~ Accountants & Auditors ~
Bookkeeping/Accounting/Auditing Clerks ~ Financial Mgrs.
Manufacturing Careers: Machinist - Computer Numeric Control (CNC)
Emerging & Evolving Occupations www.interlink-ntx.org
Advanced Manufacturing Machinest Techs.
Bioinformatics Technicians Biomedic Equipment Information
Systems Specialists (BEISS) Biotechnology Research Techs. Composite Techs. (Bond Assembly) Computer & Digital Forensics Techs. Computer Security Specialists Convergence Technology
Specialists/Techs. Data Mining Techs. Electronic Commerce Specialists Environmental Scientists &
Specialists
Gaming Techs. (Multimedia Artists & Animators)
Geographic Information Systems Techs. (GIS)
Global Positioning Techs. (GPS) High Performance Computing Mechatronics Technician Micro-electromechanical Systems (MEMS)
Techs Nanotechnology Techs. Nurse Practitioner Robotics Techs. Solar Photovoltaic (Electric) Installer Solar Thermal Installers & Techs.
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There is No Place Like Home
in North Central Texas!
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