The water area of Amity Gardens, PA was 0 in 2013. The water area of Spring City, PA was 0 in 2013.

Land Area

Water Area

Land area is a measurement providing the size, in square miles, of the land portions of geographic entities for which the Census Bureau tabulates and disseminates data. Area is calculated from the specific boundary recorded for each entity in the Census Bureau's geographic database. Land area is based on current information in the TIGER® data base, calculated for use with Census 2010.

Water Area figures include inland, coastal, Great Lakes, and territorial sea water. Inland water consists of any lake, reservoir, pond, or similar body of water that is recorded in the Census Bureau's geographic database. It also includes any river, creek, canal, stream, or similar feature that is recorded in that database as a two- dimensional feature (rather than as a single line). The portions of the oceans and related large embayments (such as Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound), the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea that belong to the United States and its territories are classified as coastal and territorial waters; the Great Lakes are treated as a separate water entity. Rivers and bays that empty into these bodies of water are treated as inland water from the point beyond which they are narrower than 1 nautical mile across. Identification of land and inland, coastal, territorial, and Great Lakes waters is for data presentation purposes only and does not necessarily reflect their legal definitions.

Above charts are based on data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey | ODN Dataset | API - Notes:

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Geographic and Area Datasets Involving Amity Gardens, PA or Spring City, PA

  • API

    Safe Drinking Water Facilities Information System for Pennsylvania 2018 - Current Environmental Protection

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-24T13:20:24.000Z

    Safe Drinking Water Information System (SDWIS) is EPA’s national database that manages and collects public water system information from states, including reports of drinking water standard violations, reporting and monitoring violations, and other basic information. The data derived in the State of Pennsylvania is published and searchable online on the www.pa.gov website. This set contains the Water System Facility data, which will be updated annually for the prior calendar year in the first Quarter of the following year.

  • API

    Pre-K Counts and Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program Funded Slots FY 2014-Current Quarterly County Education

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2024-08-02T13:55:44.000Z

    The dataset provides at a location level, the number of funded Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts (PKC) and Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program (HSSAP) slots. The dataset begins in program year 2014-15 and will be updated quarterly to reflect the current program year funding.

  • API

    Workforce Innovation Opportunity Act (WIOA) Title III Performance Accountability Metrics PY 2017-2018 - Current Annual Labor and Industry

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-06-09T15:50:25.000Z

    A comprehensive collection of data that assesses the effectiveness of Pennsylvania in achieving positive outcomes for individuals served by the workforce development system’s Title III Wagner-Peyser (Labor Exchange) program. Data is compiled in compliance with US Department of Labor’s Employment and Training Administration guidance on Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Performance Accountability. Data is available for the state and each of the CareerLink® offices in the commonwealth.

  • API

    Percentage of Persons with an Intellectual Disability and Autism served in Home and Community base program (Waiver) CY 2015 - Current Annual County Human Services

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-17T19:37:33.000Z

    Calculated percentage of persons with an intellectual disability or autism served by Department of Human Service's (DHS) Office of Developmental program (ODP) who are served in a community base setting as compared to the total served in an Intermediate Care Facility

  • API

    Rate of Hospitalizations for Opioid Overdose per 100,000 Residents County Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4)

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-24T13:17:19.000Z

    County rates of hospitalizations for opioid overdose per 100,000 residents ages 15 and older. This analysis is restricted to Pennsylvania residents age 15 and older who were hospitalized in Pennsylvania general acute care hospitals.

  • API

    Educational Attainment by Age Range and Gender 2009-2016 County Annual Education

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-17T19:34:54.000Z

    County level educational attainment data on the adult working aged population (25-64) by age range and gender. Data is sourced from the US Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) 5-year estimates allowing for increased statistical reliability of the data for less populated areas and small population subgroups. More information here - https://www.census.gov/data/developers/data-sets/acs-5year.html

  • API

    Area Agencies on Aging Current Statewide Aging

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-06-30T19:16:52.000Z

    Area Agencies on Aging from the PA Department of Again. While there are 67 counties in PA, thee are 52 Area Agencies on Aging covering all PA counties.

  • API

    Public Transit Services and Reduced-fare Programs by County, Current, Transportation

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2024-10-13T08:00:58.000Z

    This dataset lists all public transit services and reduced-fare programs currently provided in each county of PA. Public transportation is available in every county in Pennsylvania, with a wide range of services including: - Fixed-route transit service in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, 21 small urban areas, and 22 rural areas - 44 systems offering shared-ride services in all Pennsylvania counties - 13 intercity bus routes - Keystone Corridor Amtrak service, running from Harrisburg to New York by way of Philadelphia, and Pennsylvanian Amtrak service running from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia - 66 counties with rural transportation for persons with disabilities NOTE: Service providers offering two or more reduced-fare programs have duplicate records to reflect the various programs and to allow sorting by program type.

  • API

    Individuals with Medical Assistance (MA) receiving Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) CY 2015-Current Annual County Human Services

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2024-03-22T12:18:10.000Z

    This dataset contains the count of individuals with Medical Assistance coverage (MA) receiving any form of MAT (Medication-Assisted treatment) by case county. The counts cover calendar years 2015 - 2018. If a count field is null, then the count is suppressed due to low numbers. If the county is null, then the county is unknown.

  • API

    Drug and Alcohol Treatment Facilities May 2018 County Drug and Alcohol Programs

    data.pa.gov | Last Updated 2022-10-17T19:15:44.000Z

    This dataset reports the name, street address, city, county, zip code, telephone number, latitude, and longitude of Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs (DDAP) drug and alcohol treatment facilities in Pennsylvania as of May 2018. The primary difference between the three types of treatment facilities is their funding. Centers of Excellence (COEs) were grant funded by the Department of Human Services, PacMATs were grant funded by the Department of Health, and all other facilities are funded by either billing insurance or billing the county in the case of uninsured clients. Programmatically, COEs differ from the other types because they are designed to serve as “health homes” for individuals with Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). This means that the care coordination staff at the COE is charged with coordinating all kinds of health care (physical and behavioral health) as well as recovery support services. They do this by developing hub-and-spoke networks with other healthcare providers and other sources for recovery supports, such as housing, transportation, education and training, etc. All COEs are required to accept Medicaid. PacMATs also operate in a hub-and-spoke model, but it is different from COEs. PacMATs endeavor to coordinate the provision of Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT) by identifying a core hub of physicians in a health system that work with other providers in the health system (spokes) to train them about the safe and effective provision of MAT so that there are more providers in a health system that are able to confidently prescribe various forms of MAT. I do not know whether all PacMATs are required to accept Medicaid as a term of their receipt of the grant, but I do know that all currently designated PacMATs are health systems that do accept Medicaid. PacMAT services have been advertised as being available to all people regardless of insurance type, so I assume this means they are required to serve Medicaid clients, commercially insured clients, and uninsured clients. In the PacMAT program the Hub is supported right now by grant funding (in the future funding such as a per patient/per month capitated rate) and the spokes bill insurance (both Medicaid and Commercial) DDAP facilities may also be designated as COEs and/or PacMATs. If they are, it means they applied for a specific grant fund and have committed to carrying out the activities of the grant described above. To be clear, DDAP does not run any treatment facilities; they license them. These can be MAT providers such as methadone clinics, providers of outpatient levels of care (i.e., more traditional drug and alcohol counseling services) or inpatient levels of care, such as residential rehabilitation programs. Every facility is different in terms of the menu of services it provides. Every facility also gets to decide what forms of payment they will accept. Many accept Medicaid, but not all do. Some only accept private commercial insurance. Some accept payment from the county on behalf of uninsured clients. And some charge their clients cash for services.