This report presents statistics on characteristics of housing units defined as substandard by the Public Housing Administration and characteristics of families occupying these units.
Table 1: Owner-occupied and renter-occupied substandard units, separately for white and nonwhite households. Separate detail is shown for units with lead of household 65 years of age and over; figures for these units are also included in the figures for all occupied substandard units.
Table 2: Substandard units occupied by primary renter families. The number of primary families paying cash rent and the number paying no cash rent are shown at the beginning of the table. The percentage distributions and medians are for cash-rent units occupied by primary families.
Tables 3 and 4: Primary families in substandard units for which cash rent is paid.
Alabama, California, Connecticut, Florida
Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana
Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey
New York, North Caroling, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, U.S. Summary
Census statistics date back to 1790 and reflect the growth and change of the United States. Past census reports contain some terms that today’s readers may consider obsolete and inappropriate. As part of our goal to be open and transparent with the public, we are improving access to all Census Bureau original publications and statistics, which serve as a guide to the nation's history.