2002 Census of Governments

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Government Organization

Issued December 2002

GC02(1)-1

2002 Census of Governments


Volume 1, Number 1, Government Organization

U.S. Department of Commerce


Economics and Statistics Administration
U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This report was prepared in the Governments Division by the Census of Governments Staff, headed by Stephen M.
Poyta. Donna A. Hirsch directed planning and preparation of this report.
Robert M. Johnson, Deborah J.
Loretto-Domer, and Kelly D. Allmang
prepared and reviewed the tables.
John L. Curry, Meredith L. De Hart,
Gretchen A. Dickson, Brian T. Lavin,
Christopher C. Marston, and Debra A.
Spinazzolla performed legislative
research for this report and oversaw the
updating of the Governments Integrated
Directory File under the direction of
Robert H. McArthur, Chief of Program
Evaluation Branch.
John M. Sullivan, Chief of Systems
Development Branch, directed data processing operations, assisted by Joseph H.
Bacon, Michael T. Feldman, and
Christopher D. Rill.
Kim D. Ottenstein, Margaret A. Smith,
Meshel L. Butler, and Laurene V. Qualls
of the Administrative and Customer Services Division, Walter C. Odom, Chief,
provided publications and printing management, graphics design and composition, and editorial review for print and
electronic media. General direction and
production management were provided by
James R. Clark, Assistant Chief, and
Gary J. Lauffer, Chief, Publications Services Branch.
Special acknowledgment is also due the
many state and local government officials
whose cooperation has contributed to the
publication of these data.
For information regarding data in this
report, please contact Stephen M. Poyta
or Robert H. McArthur, Governments
Division, U.S. Census Bureau, Washington,
DC 20233-6800, or phone toll free 1-800242-2184.

Government Organization

Issued December 2002

GC02(1)-1

2002 Census of Governments


Volume 1, Number 1, Government Organization

U.S. Department of Commerce


Donald L. Evans,
Secretary
Samuel W. Bodman,
Deputy Secretary
Economics and Statistics Administration
Kathleen B. Cooper,
Under Secretary
for Economic Affairs
U.S. CENSUS BUREAU
Charles Louis Kincannon,
Director

SUGGESTED CITATION
U.S. Census Bureau,
2002 Census of Governments,
Volume 1, Number 1, Government
Organization, GC02(1)-1,
U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC, 2002.

ECONOMICS
AND STATISTICS
ADMINISTRATION

Economics
and Statistics
Administration
Kathleen B. Cooper,
Under Secretary
for Economic Affairs

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU


Charles Louis Kincannon,
Director
Hermann Habermann,
Deputy Director and
Chief Operating Officer
Nancy M. Gordon,
Acting Principal Associate
Director for Programs
Frederick T. Knickerbocker,
Associate Director
for Economic Programs
Thomas L. Mesenbourg,
Assistant Director
for Economic Programs
Vacant,
Chief, Governments Division

CONTENTS

Government Organization
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Government Units by State: Census Years 1942 to 2002 . . . . . . .


Summary of County-Type Areas by Number of Governments and
State: 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Local Governments and Public School Systems by Type and State:
2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General-Purpose Local Governments by State: 1952 to 2002 . . . . .
Special-Purpose Local Governments by State: 1952 to 2002 . . . . .
County Governments by Population-Size Group and State: 2002 . . .
Subcounty General-Purpose Governments by Population-Size Group
and State: 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Population of Subcounty General-Purpose Governments by
Population-Size Group and State: 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Special District Governments by Function and State: 2002 . . . . . .
Special District Governments by Area Served and State: 2002 . . . .
Special District Governments by Type of Operation and Function:
2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Public School Systems by Type of Organization and State: 2002 . . .
Public School Systems by Enrollment-Size Group and State: 2002 . .
Public School Systems by Grade Coverage and State: 2002 . . . . . .
Public School Systems by Area Served and State: 2002 . . . . . . . .
Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002 . . . . . . . . .
Local Government Participation in E-Government Activities by Type
of Government and State: 2002 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
County, Municipal, and Township Government Participation in
E-Government Activities by Population-Size Group and State: 2002 .

Introduction .
Tables
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.

2
3
4
6
7
9
11
13
15
16
17
18
20
21
22
61
64

Appendixes
A.
B.
C.

Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
County-Type Areas Without County Governments
Local Government Directory Survey Forms . . . .

Publication Program

GovernmentsGovernment Organization

. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . .

A1
B1
C1

(Inside back cover)

iii

Census of Governments
INTRODUCTION
A census of governments is taken at 5-year intervals as
required by law under Title 13, United States Code, Section 161. This 2002 Census of Governments, similar to
those taken since 1957, covers three major subject
fieldsgovernment organization, public employment, and
government finances.
Volume 1, No. 1, Government Organization, is the first volume of the 2002 Census of Governments to be released.
This report contains the official counts of the number of
state and local governments. It also includes tabulations
of governments by state, type of government, size, and
county location.
The Government Organization phase of the census, which
provides these data, also produces a universe list of governmental units, classified according to type of government, for use in the remaining phases of the census.
ORGANIZATION OF THIS REPORT
This introductory text describes the nature of Census
Bureau statistics on government organization. It also
explains and notes the limitations of the data.
Following this introductory text are 18 statistical tables.
Tables 1-5 provide summary data on the number of governments by type and state in 2002 and in prior census
years.
Tables 6-15 provide data on the numbers and characteristics of specific types of governments: general-purpose
governments (i.e., counties, municipalities, and towns or
townships) in Tables 6-8, special district governments in
Tables 9-11, and public school systems (both school district governments and dependent school systems) in
Tables 12-15.
Table 16 gives the number of local governments in each of
the 3,136 county or county-type geographic areas. Tables
17 and 18 provide information on E-Government activity
by state and type of government and population-size
groupings.
Following the tables is Appendix A, which contains definitions of various concepts used in this report, including
definitions of the various types of governments. Appendix
B contains a list of county-type areas without county governments.
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

The Individual State Descriptions, formerly found in


Appendix A of this publication, will be published separately, in Volume 1, No. 2 of the 2002 Census of Governments series.
SCOPE
Governmental Units
There were 87,576 governmental units in the United
States as of June 30, 2002. In addition to the federal government and the 50 state governments, there were 87,525
units of local government. Of these, 38,967 are generalpurpose local governments3,034 county governments,
and 35,933 subcounty general-purpose governments
(including 19,429 municipal governments and 16,504
town or township governments). The remainder, more
than half the total number, are special-purpose local governments, including 13,506 school district governments
and 35,052 special district governments. The total of
87,525 local governments in 2002 was only 72 more than
that reported for the 1997 census. The number of county,
township, and independent school district governments all
declined slightly compared to 1997, while the number of
municipalities negligibly increased. Special district governments again showed the greatest volatility from the 1997
census, increasing 1.1 percent over the 5-year period.
The following paragraphs summarize the characteristics
for each of the five major types of local governments. See
Criteria for Classifying Governments, under the Basic Concepts section, for a statement of the criteria used for the
classification of governments in census statistics on governments.
County Governments
Organized county governments are found throughout the
nation except in Connecticut, Rhode Island, the District of
Columbia, and limited portions of other states where certain county areas lack a distinct county government (see
Appendix B for a listing of county-type areas without
county government). In Louisiana, the county governments are officially designated as parish governments,
and the borough governments in Alaska resemble county
governments in other states. Both are classified as county
governments for census statistics on governments.
Not all geographic areas known as counties have county
governments. Where municipal and county governments
Census of Governments

have been consolidated, or substantially merged, the composite units are counted as municipal governments in census statistics on governments. Moreover, the cities of Baltimore and St. Louis are outside the areas of adjacent
counties, and a similar situation exists among 39 independent cities in Virginia. Since these exceptional areas also
include New York City, Philadelphia, and several other of
the most populous cities (or composite city-counties) in
the nation, more than 10 percent of the total United States
population is not served by a county government.
The number of county governments per state ranges
widely, from the Texas total of 254 down to fewer than 20
in several states.
There are 201 county governments, located in 40 states,
that serve populations of at least 250,000. These 201
county governments account for 56.5 percent of the population served by all county governments in the nation. The
overwhelming majority of county governments (71.8 percent) each serve fewer than 50,000 persons, and the 671
counties that serve fewer than 10,000 inhabitants each
serve altogether only 3.7 million persons. The number of
county governments in each state, by population size
group, appears in Table 6.
The average population served by a county government is
about 83,075, but Loving County, Texas had only 67
inhabitants in 2000, while Los Angeles County, California
had more than 9.5 million.
Municipal and Township Governments
The 35,933 subcounty general-purpose governments enumerated in 2002 include 19,429 municipal governments
and 16,504 town or township governments. A breakdown
by state between municipal and township governments
appears in Table 3. These two types of governments are
distinguished primarily by the historical circumstances
surrounding their incorporation. In many states, most
notably in the Northeast, municipal and township governments have similar powers and perform similar functions.
The scope of governmental services provided by these
two types of governments varies widely from one state to
another, and even within the same state.
As defined for census statistics on governments, the term
municipal governments refers to political subdivisions
within which a municipal corporation has been established
to provide general local government for a specific population concentration in a defined area, and includes all
active government units officially designated as cities, boroughs (except in Alaska), towns (except in Minnesota,
New York, Wisconsin, and the six New England states), and
villages. This concept corresponds generally to the incorporated places that are recognized in Census Bureau
reporting of population and housing statistics, except that
the count of municipal governments in this report
excludes places that are currently governmentally inactive.
vi

Census of Governments

The number of municipal governments per state varies


widely. Illinois, Pennsylvania, and Texas each has more
than 1,000, while at the other extreme, there are 8 states
with fewer than 50 municipal governments each: Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Six of these eight
states are in New England, where a town government
often provides urban services provided by municipal governments in other states.
In the United States, more than 174 million people live in
areas with municipal governments, and about 76 million
of these municipal residents live in cities of at least
100,000 population. Slightly less than one-half of all
municipalities have fewer than 1,000 inhabitants. However, these small municipalities account for only 2.2 percent of the total population served by municipal governments. The number of municipal governments in each
state, by population size group, appears in Table 7.
The 19,429 municipal governments reported in 2002
reflect an increase of 57 since 1997. Changes by state
ranged from a decrease of 10 in Kentucky to a gain of 19
in Texas. More than one half of the total gain of 57
occurred in 3 states: Florida, Texas, and North Carolina.
Most of the increase is the result of new incorporations.
The term town or township governments is applied here
to 16,504 organized governments located in the following
20 states in the Northeast and the Midwest:
Connecticut

New Hampshire

Illinois
Indiana
Kansas
Maine
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri
Nebraska

New Jersey
New York
North Dakota
Ohio
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Dakota
Vermont
Wisconsin

This category includes governmental units officially designated as towns in the six New England states, New York,
and Wisconsin and some plantations in Maine and locations in New Hampshire, as well as townships in other
areas. In Minnesota, the terms town and township are
used interchangeably with regard to township governments. Although towns in the six New England states and
New York, and townships in New Jersey and Pennsylvania,
are legally termed municipal corporations, perform
municipal-type functions, and frequently serve densely
populated urban areas, they have no necessary relation to
concentration of population, and are thus counted for census purposes as town or township governments.
Excluded from this count of town or township governments are unorganized township areas, townships coextensive with cities where the city governments have
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

absorbed the township functions, and townships known


to have ceased to perform governmental functions. Also
excluded are the townships in Iowa, which are not
counted as separate governments, but are classified as
subordinate agencies of county governments.
Of the 16,504 town or township governments in the
United States, only 1,179 (7.1 percent) had as many as
10,000 inhabitants in 2000 and 52.4 percent of all towns
or townships had fewer than 1,000 inhabitants. The number of town or township governments in each state, by
population-size group, appears in Table 7.
Consistent with past intercensal periods, there was a small
decrease in the number of town or township governments
from 16,629 in 1997 to 16,504 in 2002. Nearly all of the
decline in numbers of town or township governments
since 1997 occurred in the Midwest.
Only one state, Indiana, has township governments covering all its area and population. In six states (Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, and Wisconsin), operating towns or townships
comprise all territory other than that served by municipalities. The same is true for Maine, except for unorganized
territory that lacks any local government. Of the remaining
12 town or township states, there are 10 where this type
of government occurs only in certain county or countytype geographic areas as of early 2002: Illinois, in 85 of
the 102 county-type areas; Kansas, in 95 of 105; Minnesota, in 85 of 87; Missouri, in 22 of 115; Nebraska, in 27
of 93; North Dakota in 48 of 53; Pennsylvania, in 66 of 67;
South Dakota, in 52 of 66; and Wisconsin, in 71 of 72. In
New York, town governments exist in each county outside
New York City.
The area served by municipal and town or township governments may overlap in 11 states. All municipal governments in Indiana, and some but not all municipalities in 10
other town or township states (Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New York,
Ohio, and Vermont) operate within territory that is served
also by town or township governments. In the remaining 9
of the 20 town or township states (Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Dakota, and Wisconsin), there is no
geographic overlapping of these two kinds of units.
Special District Governments
Special district governments are independent, specialpurpose governmental units (other than school district
governments) that exist as separate entities with substantial administrative and fiscal independence from generalpurpose local governments. As defined for census purposes, the term special district governments excludes
school district governments.
Special district governments provide specific services that
are not being supplied by existing general-purpose governments. Most perform a single function, but, in some
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

instances, their enabling legislation allows them to provide several, usually related, types of services. The services provided by these districts range from such basic
social needs as hospitals and fire protection to the less
conspicuous tasks of mosquito abatement and upkeep of
cemeteries. The number of special district governments in
each state, by function performed, appears in Table 9.
The Census Bureau classification of special district governments covers a wide variety of entities, most of which are
officially called districts or authorities. Not all public agencies so termed, however, represent separate governments.
Many entities that carry the designation district or authority are, by law, so closely related to county, municipal,
town or township, or state governments that they are classified as subordinate agencies of those governments in
census statistics on governments, and are not counted as
separate special district governments.
In order to be counted as a special district government,
rather than be classified as a subordinate agency, an entity
must possess three attributes: existence as an organized
entity, governmental character, and substantial autonomy.
See Criteria for Classifying Governments, for an explanation of the criteria for determining whether an entity is
counted as a separate government. The subsequent publication, Volume 1, No. 2, Individual State Descriptions,
explains how these criteria were applied, including a summary description in each state of legally authorized special district governments. The publication also lists in each
state various statutory authorities, commissions, corporations, and other forms of organizations that have certain
governmental characteristics, but are subject by law to
administrative or fiscal control by the state or by independent local governments, and are, therefore, classified as
subordinate agencies of those governments.
Special district governments rose in number to a total of
35,052, an increase of 369, or 1.1 percent, since the 1997
Census of Governments. This small growth over the past 5
years on top of a 9.9 percent rise between 1992 and
1997, and a 10.4 percent rise between 1982 and 1992
reflects the continuing public demand for the provision of
specialized services either not offered or not performed by
existing governments. Since most special districts perform
only one function, or a very limited number of functions,
their establishment allows a greater degree of concentrated effort in providing services. As shown in Table 5,
the number of special district governments reported in
2002 is almost three times the number of special district
governments reported in 1952.
The creation of special districts often reflects financial
considerations. As new programs are initiated, or new services are required, the establishment of special districts
may eliminate the need to increase the burden on generalpurpose governments, which may be unable to meet the
fiscal requirements necessary to implement these new
Census of Governments

vii

programs. Debt and tax limitations are further stimulants


for creating special districts for raising both capital construction and operating expenditure funds.
The number of special district governments varies considerably among the states, and has only a weak relationship
to population size. The following 11 states, each having at
least 1,000 special district governments, account for more
than half of all such local governments: California (2,830),
Colorado (1,414), Illinois (3,145), Indiana (1,125), Kansas
(1,533), Missouri (1,514), Nebraska (1,146), New York
(1,135), Pennsylvania (1,885), Texas (2,245), and Washington (1,173). Four state or state-equivalent areas contained
fewer than 50 special district governments each: Alaska
(14), District of Columbia (1), Hawaii (15), and Louisiana
(45).
Of the 35,052 special district governments reported in
2002, over 90 percent performed a single function. More
than 36 percent of all special district governments perform functions related to natural resources, such as drainage and flood control, irrigation, and soil and water conservation. The next most frequent function performed by
such units is fire protection followed by housing and community development, and sewerage. A variety of functions
account for the remaining number of special district governments. Most of the units recognized as multiplefunction in nature involve some combination of water supply with other services, most commonly sewerage
services. A total of 5,011 special district governments
(14.3 percent) provide water supply either as the sole
function or as one of a combination of functions.
School District Governments and Public School
Systems
Public school systems provide or support elementary, secondary, and/or postsecondary education services. Of the
15,014 public school systems in the United States in
2002, only the 13,506 that are independent school districts are included in the count of governments. The 1,508
dependent public school systems are classified as agencies of other governments. State, county, municipal, and
town or township dependent systems are not counted as
separate governments. The number of public school systems in each state, by type of organization, appears in
Table 12.
Because of the variety of state legislative provisions for
the administration and operation of public schools,
marked diversity is found in school organization throughout the United States. There were 31 states providing for
public schools solely through independent school districts
in 2002. This independent district arrangement, which
prevails in most parts of the country, is practically universal in the western states.
A mixed situation is found in 15 states, with the public
schools that provide elementary and secondary education
operated in some areas by independent school districts
viii

Census of Governments

and elsewhere by a county, municipal, town or township,


or state government. In the District of Columbia and in
four states (Alaska, Hawaii, Maryland, and North Carolina),
there are no independent school districts; all public
schools in those jurisdictions are administered by systems
that are agencies of the county, municipal, or state government.
Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Texas each have one
or more state-dependent elementary-secondary public
school systems. The 19 state-dependent public school systems in Alaska serve sparsely-populated areas not served
by borough or city school systems. All public schools in
Hawaii are administered directly as part of the state government, but, in Maine, this arrangement applies only to
one sparsely populated area.
Public school systems operating as dependent agencies of
county governments appear mostly in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia, which contain nearly two-thirds of all
county-dependent systems. However, California has 59
county-dependent systems and New Jersey 50. Other
states with public school systems operating as dependent
agencies of county governments are Alaska (13), Arizona
(14), Maryland (38), Massachusetts (2), Mississippi (3),
New Hampshire (1), New York (25), and Wisconsin (2). Systems dependent on town or township governments are
found only in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Rhode Island. There are public school systems
operated by municipal governments in each of 13 states,
but in most of these states, some other pattern predominates. In the District of Columbia all public schools are
operated by a municipally dependent system.
The decrease in the number of school district governments reported since 1997 reflects a continued decline
over the past 50 years, primarily as a result of school district consolidation and reorganization. Most of this
decrease occurred among single-school and nonoperating
school districts. As shown in Table 5, the number of
school district governments in 2002 is approximately one
fifth of the total in 1952. Nebraska, declining by 106, California and Oregon, declining by 22, and Minnesota declining by 15 accounted for 75 percent of the decrease in
school districts since 1997. An additional 14 states had
decreases ranging from 1 to 11. There was either no
change or an increase in the total number of school districts in 32 states.
California and Texas, each of which had more than 1,000
school district governments, accounted for almost 16 percent of all school district governments in the nation. The
number of states having at least 1,000 school district governments decreased from 25 in 1942 to 20 in 1952, 15 in
1962, 4 in 1972 and 1982, 3 in 1987, and 2 in 1997 and
2002.
There are 641 higher education institutions operated by
local public school systems. Of these, 489 are operated by
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

independent school districts and 152 are associated with


county or municipal governments. Most of the 641 institutions provide advanced education only at the junior college level. In addition, every state has one or more stateoperated institutions of higher education, but these are
not included in the tables of this report.
BASIC CONCEPTS
Criteria for Classifying Governments
Census statistics on governments are designed to account
for the totality of public sector activity without omission
or duplication. Governmental services in the United States
are provided through a complex structure made up of
numerous public bodies and agencies. In addition to the
federal and state governments, the Census Bureau recognizes five basic types of local governments. Three of these
are general-purpose governments: county, municipal, and
township governments. The other two types are specialpurpose governments: school district governments and
special district governments.
County, municipal, and township governments are readily
recognized and generally present no serious problem of
classification. However, legislative provisions for school
district and special district governments are diverse.
Numerous single-function and multiple-function districts,
authorities, commissions, boards, and other entities,
which have varying degrees of autonomy, exist in the
United States. The basic pattern of these entities varies
widely from state to state. Moreover, various classes of
local governments within a particular state also differ in
their characteristics.
Before attempting to identify and count governments,
therefore, it is necessary to define what is to be counted
and to establish standards for classifying the various
types of governmental entities that exist. The discussion
below sets forth the definitions and criteria that the Census Bureau has used in classifying and counting governments for this report. A summary definition is as follows:
A government is an organized entity which, in addition to
having governmental character, has sufficient discretion in
the management of its own affairs to distinguish it as
separate from the administrative structure of any other
governmental unit.
To be counted as a government, an entity must possess all
three of the attributes reflected in the foregoing definition:
existence as an organized entity, governmental character,
and substantial autonomy. Some of the characteristics
which are taken as evidence of these attributes are
described below.
Existence as an Organized Entity
Evidence of this attribute is provided by the presence of
some form of organization and the possession of some
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

corporate powers, such as perpetual succession, the right


to sue and be sued, have a name, make contracts, acquire
and dispose of property, and similar provisions.
Designation of a class of governments in law as municipal
corporations, public corporations, bodies corporate and
politic, and the like, indicates that such units are organized entities. However, some entities not so specifically
stated by law to be corporations do have sufficient powers
to be counted as governments.
Obviously, the mere right to exist is not sufficient. Where a
former government has ceased to operate (i.e., receives
no revenue, conducts no activities, and has no officers at
present) it is not counted as an active government.
Governmental Character
This characteristic is indicated where officers of the entity
are popularly elected or are appointed by public officials.
A high degree of responsibility to the public, demonstrated by requirements for public reporting or for accessibility of records to public inspection, is also taken as critical evidence of governmental character.
Governmental character is attributed to any entity having
power to levy taxes, power to issue debt paying interest
exempt from federal taxation, or responsibility for performing a function commonly regarded as governmental
in nature. However, a lack of these attributes or of evidence about them does not preclude a class of units from
being recognized as having governmental character, if it
meets the indicated requirements as to officers or public
accountability. Thus, some special district governments
that have no taxing powers and provide electric power or
other public utility services also widely rendered privately
are counted as local governments because of provisions
regarding their administration and public accountability.
Substantial Autonomy
This requirement is met where, subject to statutory limitations and any supervision of local governments by the
state, an entity has considerable fiscal and administrative
independence. Fiscal independence generally derives from
power of the entity to determine its budget without review
and detailed modification by other local officials or governments, to determine taxes to be levied for its support,
to fix and collect charges for its services, or to issue debt
without review by another local government.
Administrative independence is closely related to the basis
for selection of the governing body of the entity. Accordingly, a public agency is counted as an independent government if it has independent fiscal powers and in addition (1) has a popularly elected governing body; (2) has a
governing body representing two or more state or local
governments; or (3) even in the event its governing body
Census of Governments

ix

is appointed, performs functions that are essentially different from those of, and are not subject to specification by,
its creating government(s).1
Conversely, separate existence is not attributed to entities
which lack either fiscal or administrative independence.
Some local government agencies having considerable fiscal autonomy are therefore not counted as governments,
but are classified as dependent agencies of another government, where one or more of the following characteristics is present:
1. Control of the agency by a board composed wholly or
mainly of parent government officials.
2. Control by the agency over facilities that supplement,
serve, or take the place of facilities ordinarily provided
by the creating government.
3. Provision that agency properties and responsibilities
revert to the creating government after agency debt
has been repaid.
4. Requirement for approval of agency plans by the creating government.
5. Legislative or executive specification by the parent
government as to the location and type of facilities
the agency is to construct and maintain.
6. Dependence of an agency for all or a substantial part
of its revenue on appropriations or allocations made
at the discretion of another state, county, municipal,
township, school district, or special district government.
7. Provision for the review and the detailed modification
of agency budgets by another local government. However, county review of agency budgets in connection
with statutory limitations on tax rates is not, by itself,
sufficient to establish lack of fiscal autonomy.
Other Factors
Application of the foregoing criteria involves little difficulty in many instances, but the variety of provisions
regarding local government entities and particularly some

of the resultant shadings of autonomy leave the classification of some types of entities subject to considerable
judgment. In such cases, the Census Bureau has taken
account of (1) local attitudes as to whether the type of
unit involved is independent or not, and (2) the effect of
the decision on collection and presentation of statistics of
governmental finances and employment.
Noncritical Characteristics
In addition to the essential characteristics described
above, there are other common attributes that are not
essential for the identification of governments. Among
such noncritical attributes are geographical area, population, taxing power, and internal uniformity of taxation and
services.
Most governments, but not all, serve and operate primarily within a specific geographical area for which a population can be determined. However, some entities having all
essential characteristics of local governments do not possess this attribute, but at best can be associated only with
an area unrelated to a specific population concentration.
An example is a special district government providing toll
road and bridge facilities. Even those governments which
can be directly associated with a defined territory for certain purposes, such as property taxation, often own and
operate facilities or provide services on one basis or
another to residents of a joining territory.
Most governments have the authority to levy taxes. Again,
however, this is not an essential attribute. Even for those
governments that have property taxing powers and serve
a precisely determined area, it cannot always be said that
a single level of taxation and services applies throughout
the area concerned. Differential taxation often occurs
legally where annexation or other boundary changes place
a burden of debt service on some but not all of the territory. Moreover, subordinate districts are sometimes provided for, with regard to particular types of improvements
or governmental services, resulting in differences of tax
level within the total area served by the government.
Governmental Functions

1
Exceptions to strict application of these tests of autonomy
have been made in a few instances, i.e., some joint exercise of
powers agencies in California, public building commissions in Illinois, school building corporations in Indiana, joint agencies for
electric power generation and many transmission in Louisiana;
certain New Jersey authorities; and municipal authorities in Pennsylvania. These exceptions have been indicated mainly by the difficult problems which the dependent-agency approach involved in
these instances for the development of reliable statistics on local
government finances. In cases where an operating local government coterminous with a minor civil division is designated as a
town (in the six New England states, Minnesota, New York, and
Wisconsin) or a township (in other states), it is counted as a township government rather than as a municipal government. However, if a municipal government is consolidated with a township
government, the consolidated government is counted only once
as a municipal government.

Census of Governments

Whereas the courts distinguish between governmental and


proprietary functions in determining the liability of governments for tort claims, census statistics on governments
do not make any distinction between governmental and
proprietary functions. Thus, census statistics on governments include many functions or activities that are also
widely performed by private firms, if the entity in question
is administered by officers who are popularly elected or
are selected by public officials, or if the entity is subject to
public accountability.
Examples of functions performed by special district governments are listed in Appendix A.
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Dependent Agencies
A critical element in defining a government is identifying
the full range of its activities and dependent agencies. The
latter include a wide variety of activities: school systems,
universities, utilities, toll highways, hospitals, etc. The
usual standards for determining dependency are enumerated above, under Substantial Autonomy.
Contrasting examples of the existence of dependent agencies are found in New York City and Chicago. Almost all
local government services in New York City are classified
as part of the city government (the school system, several
libraries, transit, and so forth). There are more than 100
dependent agencies in New York City alone. By contrast,
many of these services in Chicago are classified as functions of independent school district or special district governments.
Examples of dependent agencies in each state appear in
the subsequent publication, Volume 1, Number 2, Individual State Descriptions, under the heading, Subordinate
Agencies and Areas.
RELATION TO OTHER CLASSIFICATIONS AND
LISTINGS
Local Areas for Population Statistics
The designations for certain kinds of governments (counties, municipalities, townships, and towns) are the same
as those used for presenting statistics on population and
other subjects. However, there is an important difference
between governments, as defined for this report, and the
geographic areas similarly named.
The counts of governments in this report reflect only operating governments, whereas some of the areas similarly
designated in other statistical reports lack an organized
government. Thus, the number of county governments as
shown in this report is different from county areas
because in some county-type areas no distinct county government exists. A listing of county-type areas without
county governments is shown in Appendix B.
The count of municipal governments in this report generally corresponds to the incorporated places that are recognized in Census Bureau reporting of population and housing statistics. However, it excludes places that had no
municipal government in operation as of June 30, 2002.
Those areas that are designated as minor civil divisions
for population statistics are counted as municipal or township governments only if they had an operating municipal
or township government as of June 30, 2002. Many township areas do not have operating township governments.
Local Education Agencies
The number of public school systems shown in this volume generally corresponds to counts of local education
agencies in reports by state offices of education and presented in published reports by the National Center for
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Education Statistics, with the exception of privately operated charter schools, and certain administrative and other
education activities that do not meet Census Bureau classification criteria for school district governments or dependent public school systems.
Taxing Areas
The count of governments reported in this volume may
differ materially from the number of taxing units or taxing
areas as reported by official agencies in some states, for
two reasons. First, not all special district governments, as
counted in this report, are legally authorized to levy taxes,
and those without such power would be properly
excluded from any list of taxing units. Second, in some
states, there are legal provisions for subordinate districts
of counties or of other types of governments within which
supplementary property taxes can be imposed to finance
particular types of improvements or governmental services. In such instances, the number of taxing areas would
exceed the number of governments as defined for this
report.
County-Subordinate Taxing Areas
In many states, county governments are authorized by law
to establish taxing areas to provide specific improvements
or services within a defined area that individually serves a
portion rather than all of a county and to levy a tax on the
assessed value of the property within the area to pay for
such improvements or services. These county subordinate
taxing areas are not counted as separate governments.
In numerous instances, these special taxing areas have
been developed to supply urban-type services (such as
water or sewer facilities, fire protection, streets, or street
lighting) for unincorporated urban fringe portions of particular counties. However, a similar subcounty device is
also used in some states to provide services to rural areas,
particularly for road construction and maintenance; many
of the taxing areas in Illinois, Mississippi, and Texas are of
this nature. Similarly, the townships in Iowa have such limited discretion in the conduct of their affairs that they are
classified as county government agencies rather than as
independent governments. The county-dependent public
school systems in North Carolina that serve less than a
county-wide area are also classified as county-subordinate
taxing areas, and are not counted as governments.
In the subsequent Census of Governments publication,
Volume 1, No. 2, Individual State Descriptions, which
describes local government structure in each state, each
class of county agencies recognized for this report as a
special taxing area, is listed under Subordinate Agencies
and Areas and marked with a bullet.
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN COUNTY AREAS
Table 16 provides statistics on local governments and
public school systems for each of the 3,136 county or
Census of Governments

xi

county-type geographic areas in the United States.2 An


explanation of the difference between the number of
county governments and the total number of county or
county-type geographic areas appears in Appendix B.

the basis of information obtained through the annual


Boundary and Annexation Survey, conducted by the Geography Division of the Census Bureau.
Public School Systems

E-GOVERNMENT
Tables 17 and 18 present counts of governments reporting an official Web site and/or the ability of citizens to
interact with the government through computer-based
systems, such as e-mail or the Internet. The data are displayed by state and type of government, and by population size.

The universe list of public school systems, including both


independent school district governments and dependent
school systems, was updated for the 2002 census using
the directory file of local education agencies maintained
by the U.S. Department of Education, National Center for
Education Statistics. Discrepancies between the two files
were examined and the universe list was revised as necessary following Census Bureau classification criteria.

SOURCES OF DATA

Special District Governments

The Government Organization phase of the 2002 Census


of Governments consisted of two major activities: (1)
research to update the universe list of local governments;
and (2) a Local Government Directory Survey of all governments on the updated list. These activities are described
in detail below.

The process of updating the universe list of special district


governments involved several steps as follows: review of
state legislation enacted since 1997 creating or authorizing various types of special district governments; review
of published federal, state, and private sources that list
public corporations (e.g., Mergents Municipal and Government Manual; the Bond Buyer, etc.); and a mail survey of
individual county clerks requesting review of the list of
special district governments in their respective counties.

Updating the Universe List of Local Governments


The universe list of governments is a master file (named
the Governments Integrated Directory) that shows for
each governmental unit its name, unique identification
code, county location, mailing address, and selected characteristics. The universe list is used as the mail and control file for all phases of the Census of Governments. It is
also used as the basis for selecting samples of governments for surveys conducted in the years between censuses.
The universe list is updated periodically to add newly
established units that meet Census Bureau criteria for
independent governments, and to delete dissolved or
inactive units. A governmental unit is considered inactive
if it has no activity, receives no revenue, and has no officers currently. The procedures used to update the universe
list for the 2002 Census of Governments varied according
to the type of government.
General-Purpose Governments
The universe list of county, municipal, and township governments was continuously updated since the 1997 census as these units of governments became established,
dissolved, or reorganized. Decisions to add or delete a
county, municipal, or township government are made on

2002 Local Government Directory Survey


Following the update of the universe list of governments,
a Local Government Directory Survey was conducted, in
which all local governments were surveyed for the following purposes: to identify and delete inactive units; to identify file duplicates and units that were dependent on (i.e.,
part of) other governments; to update and verify the mailing addresses of governments; to produce the official
count of state and local government units in the United
States as displayed in this volume of the census; and to
obtain descriptive information on the basic characteristics
of governments for presentation in this volume and for
later use in selecting survey samples.
The survey was also used to obtain data on the area
served by each special district and public school system,
and on the delivery of services by general-purpose and
special district governments. and on the delivery of services by general-purpose and special district governments.
Survey coverage and collection methods used in the Local
Government Directory Survey are described below. The
definitions applied in the collection of data are presented
in Appendix A.
Survey Coverage

Kalawao County, Hawaii is a county-equivalent areas with no


local governments of any kind. The counties of Bronx, Kings, New
York, Queens, and Richmond in New York are substantially consolidated with the city of New York for governmental purposes,
and are not counted as separate county governments in census
statistics on governments.

xii

Census of Governments

The 2002 Local Government Directory Survey covered all


county, municipal, town or township, school district, and
special district governments that met the Census Bureau
criteria for independent governments. The survey also
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

covered dependent public school systems. An explanation


of these classification criteria appears earlier in this Introduction, under Criteria for Classifying Governments.
Survey Period
The counts of local governments reflect those in operation
on June 30, 2002. The survey was conducted over a
6-month period beginning in November 2001. The final
response rate was 70.3 percent.
LIMITATIONS OF DATA
Surveys are subject to two types of error, sampling error
and nonsampling error. Since the Local Government Directory Survey covered all governments in the universe, there
is no sampling error to be accounted for. However, the
data are subject to nonsampling error, which includes all
other sources of survey error such as coverage errors,
nonresponse, lost or mishandled questionnaires, incorrect
reporting, misclassification of governments, and inaccurate coding of data.
A variety of procedures were applied to keep nonsampling
errors to a minimum, including the following:
1. Review of questionnaires for completeness and
accuracyall questionnaires received were subjected
to intensive review of each data item, including clerical and computer checks for internal consistency
(agreement of information from one item to another)
and external consistency (agreement of the data with
other sources or previously reported data).
2. Review of tabulated datafinal data were compared
with data from the previous census to verify the reasonableness of each item; significant differences were
verified or reconciled where necessary.
Some error in survey results is inevitable despite steps
taken to prevent it. For example, some residual nonresponse is beyond practical control, since not all governments will cooperate in a voluntary survey. The following
section discusses the impact of nonresponse on the survey results.

The 26,010 local governments that did not respond to the


2002 Local Government Directory Survey accounted for
29.7 percent of all local governments. Rates of nonresponse, by type of local government, were as follows:

Local governments
County
Municipal
Town or township
School district
Special district

Total

Nonrespondent

Percent
nonresponse

87,525
3,034
19,429
16,504
13,506
35,052

26,010
747
4,027
5,409
2,153
13,674

29.7
24.6
20.7
32.8
15.9
39.0

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Multiple efforts were used to confirm the active status of


nonrespondent special district governments. One effort
involved a review of special district lists by individual
county clerks to identify any districts within their jurisdiction that were not active as of June 30, 2002. Additionally,
Census Bureau staff reviewed and researched (1) available
published or unpublished state listings of special districts,
(2) national directories of selected functional organizations (e.g., hospitals, public housing authorities, transit
authorities, etc.), and (3) any unique sources identified by
the Census Bureau personnel. Whenever these efforts produced convincing evidence that a particular special district
was no longer active, the district was removed from the
final count of active special district governments. Because
county clerks were sometimes unable to comply with the
Census Bureaus request to identify inactive special district
governments, and no alternative lists, directories, or other
sources were available for research, some of the nonrespondent special districts were retained in the final count
because there was no conclusive evidence available to
indicate that they were inactive as of June 30, 2002.
For a small number of individual items, item nonresponse
was supplemented from other internal sources of information. County area information maintained continually in
the Governments Integrated Directory system was used to
supplement the area-served item for special districts and
schools. Similarly, nonrespondents to the E-Government
question that asked whether the government had its central activity information available on an Internet Web site
was set to yes if there was a Web site already indicated
within the Directory. Finally, the property tax and nonproperty tax items in the special district data were supplemented using tax revenue information reported in the
public finance survey phase of the1997 Census of Governments.
Changes in Classification

NONRESPONSE

Type of government

These nonresponse rates indicate only that no reply was


received for this survey. The Census Bureau attempted,
however, to confirm the active status of each nonrespondent local government as of June 30, 2002, by researching
published state directories of these governments and by
performing cross reference checks to findings from the
Census Bureaus Boundary and Annexation Survey.

Since the 1997 Census of Governments, some governments have been reclassified on the basis of: (1) changes
in the legal provisions governing their operation; (2) new
information; or (3) the need to reflect the realities of existing fiscal arrangements in order to account for all governmental activities in statistical reporting. These classification changes should be taken into consideration when
analyzing changes in the number of governments over
time. Some of the more significant changes are listed
below, along with the number of units reclassified (these
changes will also be listed in Volume 1, No. 2, Individual
State Descriptions):
Census of Governments

xiii

Special district governments:


CaliforniaVarious entities, primarily financing authorities, public improvement corporations, and public facilities
corporations, counted as special district governments in
the 1997 Census of Governments, have been reclassified
as subordinate activities of other governments (219).
MarylandDrainage associations and community benefit
districts, counted as special district governments in the
1997 Census of Governments, have been reclassified as
subordinate activities of county governments (187).
UtahSpecial service districts, counted as special district
governments in the 1997 Census of Governments, have
been reclassified as subordinate activities of county and
municipal governments (102).
Population Data
The population data used in this report are as of April 1,
2000.
Interarea Comparisons
Use caution in attempting to draw conclusions from direct
interstate or intergovernmental comparisons of the number of governments by type. Such comparisons should
take into account the diversity of responsibilities for various functions between different governments. In some
states, for example, county or municipal governments
may perform functions that are performed by school district or special district governments elsewhere.
Even within the same state, one may observe marked
diversity in the scope of functions performed by individual
governments or governments of a particular type. In California, for example, transit service may be provided by
county or municipal governments in some localities and
by special district governments elsewhere.

xiv

Census of Governments

Some individual municipal governments operate in effect


as composite city-county units. See Appendix B for a list of
city-county governments counted as municipal governments.
In most states, the administration of local public elementary and secondary schools is by independent school districts. In many instances, however, including several of the
largest cities in the nation, the school system is operated
by the county, municipal, or town or township governments.
The number of governments in each county or countytype geographic area, presented in Table 16, represents all
local governments located entirely or primarily within
each particular county-type area. It should be noted that
the residents of a particular governmental jurisdiction or
even an entire county might not be the only beneficiaries
of local government operations in the area. For example,
public hospitals or solid waste processing facilities located
in one county area may provide service to a wider area.
AVAILABILITY OF DATA
Copies of Volume 1, No. 1, Government Organization, and
subsequent volumes of the 2002 Census of Governments
are available from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 and
U.S. Department of Commerce District Offices. All reports
from the 2002 Census of Governments will also be available in electronic format on the Internet at
www.census.gov/govs/www/index.html. For details, contact the Governments Division, Census Bureau, Washington DC 20233, or telephone 1-800-242-2184.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 1.

Government Units by State: Census Years 1942 to 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Federal, state, and local government units
Geographic area

2002

1997

1992

1987

1982

1977

1972

1967

1962

19571

19521

19421

10

11

12

United States2 

87,576

87,504

85,006

83,237

81,831

79,913

78,269

81,299

91,236

102,392

116,807

155,116

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

1,172
176
639
1,589
4,410

1,132
176
638
1,517
4,608

1,122
175
591
1,447
4,393

1,054
173
577
1,397
4,332

1,019
157
453
1,425
4,103

950
151
421
1,347
3,807

876
121
407
1,284
3,820

797
62
395
1,253
3,865

733
57
379
1,209
4,023

617
42
367
1,127
3,879

548
49
367
1,089
3,764

511

499
3,705
4,149

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

1,929
581
340
2
1,192

1,870
584
337
2
1,082

1,761
564
276
2
1,014

1,594
478
282
2
966

1,545
480
218
2
970

1,460
435
211
2
912

1,320
429
159
3
866

1,253
414
171
2
828

1,194
399
208
2
765

1,666
384
132
2
672

1,953
363
108
2
617

2,358
349
70
2
503

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

1,449
20
1,159
6,904
3,086

1,345
20
1,148
6,836
3,199

1,298
21
1,087
6,723
2,899

1,287
19
1,066
6,628
2,807

1,269
19
1,019
6,468
2,866

1,264
20
973
6,621
2,855

1,244
20
902
6,386
2,793

1,204
20
872
6,454
2,670

1,219
21
835
6,453
3,092

1,121
22
843
6,510
2,989

976
15
938
7,723
3,050

946

1,666
15,854
3,043

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

1,976
3,888
1,440
474
827

1,877
3,951
1,367
468
833

1,881
3,892
1,321
459
797

1,878
3,804
1,304
453
801

1,872
3,796
1,242
469
807

1,853
3,726
1,184
459
780

1,819
3,716
1,136
835
715

1,803
3,669
953
734
699

2,643
5,411
873
629
659

4,906
6,214
822
584
645

5,857
6,933
796
489
664

7,519
11,115
771
523
584

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

266
842
2,805
3,483
1,001

421
862
2,776
3,502
937

402
844
2,722
3,580
870

402
837
2,700
3,556
854

440
799
2,644
3,530
859

427
767
2,634
3,438
836

404
683
2,650
3,396
797

362
655
2,904
4,185
784

352
587
3,817
5,213
773

328
573
5,160
6,298
672

328
584
6,766
9,026
693

207
409
8,106
10,398
1,792

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

3,423
1,128
2,792
211
560

3,417
1,145
2,895
206
576

3,310
1,276
2,924
208
528

3,148
1,244
3,153
198
525

3,118
1,030
3,325
185
518

2,938
959
3,486
183
507

2,808
993
3,562
185
500

2,918
1,104
4,392
147
516

3,727
1,388
5,125
137
551

5,307
1,503
6,658
110
545

7,002
1,598
7,981
243
551

10,740
2,175
8,307
163
546

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

1,413
859
3,421
961
2,736

1,422
882
3,414
953
2,759

1,513
342
3,299
938
2,765

1,626
332
3,303
917
2,788

1,592
320
3,250
906
2,796

1,518
314
3,310
875
2,708

1,457
310
3,307
803
2,727

1,422
308
3,486
753
2,758

1,396
306
3,803
676
3,029

1,217
317
4,189
624
3,968

1,151
289
5,483
608
3,968

1,143
225
8,339
603
4,066

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

3,637
1,799
1,440
5,032
119

3,598
1,800
1,494
5,071
120

3,524
1,795
1,451
5,159
126

3,378
1,803
1,503
4,957
126

3,394
1,703
1,455
5,199
123

3,286
1,676
1,448
5,247
121

3,260
1,684
1,447
4,936
116

3,284
1,774
1,457
4,999
110

3,359
1,960
1,470
6,202
98

3,667
2,332
1,526
5,073
91

3,936
2,771
1,723
5,156
89

4,021
5,100
2,332
5,263
54

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

702
1,867
931
4,785
606

717
1,811
941
4,701
684

698
1,786
924
4,792
627

708
1,763
905
4,416
531

646
1,768
914
4,181
505

586
1,728
906
3,884
493

584
1,771
882
3,625
460

562
3,511
792
3,447
446

553
4,464
658
3,328
424

503
4,808
560
3,485
398

413
4,917
435
3,963
385

2,057
4,919
328
7,360
303

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

734
522
1,788
687
3,049
723

692
484
1,813
705
3,060
655

682
455
1,761
692
2,739
550

674
431
1,780
631
2,720
425

665
408
1,735
634
2,593
396

648
390
1,667
596
2,519
386

659
386
1,683
509
2,449
384

657
374
1,653
456
2,491
473

425
381
1,647
390
3,727
465

409
367
1,577
362
5,731
489

414
366
1,539
350
7,258
519

398
323
1,906
326
8,508
531

Represents zero.
1Counts for Alaska and Hawaii territories are included in 1957 and 1952, but are not available for 1942.
2Total include the federal government and the 50 state governments. For counts of local governments by

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

state, see Tables 2 and 3.

National Summary

Table 2.

Summary of County Type Areas by Number of Governments and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Number of local governments in county type areas
Geographic area

Local
governments

Total

100 or more

50 to 99

25 to 49

10 to 24

5 to 9

Less than 5

Average
number of local
governments
per county
area1

United States 

87,525

3,136

85

383

801

1,119

553

195

27.9

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

1,171
175
638
1,588
4,409

67
27
15
75
58

1
1
13

3
2
23

10

6
14
17

53
5
5
52
3

3
9

6
2

13

17.5
6.5
42.5
21.2
76

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

1,928
580
339
2
1,191

64
8
3
1
67

3
1
2

6
6
1

19
1

12

29

27

21

1
4

30.1
72.5
113
2
17.8

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

1,448
19
1,158
6,903
3,085

159
4
44
102
92

19

2
38
12

16
33
60

56

24
11
19

91
3
2
1
1

11
1

9.1
4.8
26.3
67.7
33.5

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

1,975
3,887
1,439
473
826

99
105
120
64
16

1
22

22
51
4

72
27
67
15
1

4
5
47
36

1
13

19.9
37
12
7.4
51.6

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

265
841
2,804
3,482
1,000

24
14
83
87
82

6
14
16
1

2
3
44
56
2

10
2
23
11
48

2
2
28

3
1

11
60.1
33.8
40
12.2

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

3,422
1,127
2,791
210
559

115
56
93
17
10

14
2
11

48
13
33
2
5

47
31
35
6

5
9
11
7

1
1
2

29.8
20.1
30
12.4
55.9

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

1,412
858
3,420
960
2,735

21
33
58
100
53

5
1
6

8
4
22

25

7
5
23
2
20

1
15
6
41
4

44
2

1
1
13

67.2
26
59
9.6
51.6

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

3,636
1,798
1,439
5,031
118

88
77
36
67
5

16

17

9
32
1

65
27
17
12
1

5
48
9
7
2

2
1

41.3
23.4
40
75.1
23.6

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

701
1,866
930
4,784
605

46
66
95
254
29

1
9

12
2

5
28

23
5

27
17
49
130
18

13
8
37
77
4

4
9
9

15.2
28.3
9.8
18.8
20.9

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

733
521
1,787
686
3,048
722

14
134
39
55
72
23

12

20
4

19
4
43
10

1
7
6
31
7
9

30
1
17

97

3
1

52.4
3.9
45.8
12.5
42.3
31.4

Represents zero.
1For

number of governments in each county area, see Table 20.

Local Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 3.

Local Governments and Public School Systems by Type and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose

Special purpose
Subcounty

Public school systems

Geographic area
Total

Total

County1

Total

Municipal

Town or
township

Total

Special
districts

Total

School
districts

Dependent
public school
systems2

10

11

United States 

87,525

38,967

3,034

35,933

19,429

16,504

48,558

35,052

15,014

13,506

1,508

Alabama 
Alaska 
Arizona 
Arkansas
California 

1,171
175
638
1,588
4,409

518
161
102
574
532

67
12
15
75
57

451
149
87
499
475

451
149
87
499
475

653
14
536
1,014
3,877

525
14
305
704
2,830

128
54
245
310
1,107

128

231
310
1,047

54
14

60

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia
Florida 

1,928
580
339
2
1,191

332
179
60
1
470

62

66

270
179
57
1
404

270
30
57
1
404

149

1,596
401
279
1
721

1,414
384
260
1
626

182
166
19
2
95

182
17
19

95

149

Georgia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 
Illinois 
Indiana 

1,448
19
1,158
6,903
3,085

687
4
244
2,824
1,666

156
3
44
102
91

531
1
200
2,722
1,575

531
1
200
1,291
567

1,431
1,008

761
15
914
4,079
1,419

581
15
798
3,145
1,125

180
1
116
934
294

180

116
934
294

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

1,975
3,887
1,439
473
826

1,047
2,030
543
362
505

99
104
119
60
16

948
1,926
424
302
489

948
627
424
302
22

1,299

467

928
1,857
896
111
321

542
1,533
720
45
222

386
324
176
66
295

386
324
176
66
99

196

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

265
841
2,804
3,482
1,000

180
356
1,858
2,734
378

23
5
83
87
82

157
351
1,775
2,647
296

157
45
533
854
296

306
1,242
1,793

85
485
946
748
622

85
403
366
403
458

39
330
739
345
167

82
580
345
164

39
248
159

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

3,422
1,127
2,791
210
559

1,372
183
1,070
35
244

114
54
93
16
10

1,258
129
977
19
234

946
129
531
19
13

312

446

221

2,050
944
1,721
175
315

1,514
592
1,146
158
148

536
352
575
17
177

536
352
575
17
167

10

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

1,412
858
3,420
960
2,735

587
134
1,602
641
1,745

21
33
57
100
53

566
101
1,545
541
1,692

324
101
616
541
360

242

929

1,332

825
724
1,818
319
990

276
628
1,135
319
764

624
96
715
175
226

549
96
683

226

75

32
175

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

3,636
1,798
1,439
5,031
118

2,338
667
276
2,630
39

88
77
36
66

2,250
590
240
2,564
39

942
590
240
1,018
8

1,308

1,546
31

1,298
1,131
1,163
2,401
79

631
560
927
1,885
75

667
571
236
516
36

667
571
236
516
4

32

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

701
1,866
930
4,784
605

315
1,314
441
1,450
265

46
66
92
254
29

269
1,248
349
1,196
236

269
308
349
1,196
236

940

386
552
489
3,334
340

301
376
475
2,245
300

85
176
138
1,090
40

85
176
14
1,089
40

124
1

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming

733
521
1,787
686
3,048
722

298
324
318
289
1,922
121

14
95
39
55
72
23

284
229
279
234
1,850
98

47
229
279
234
585
98

237

1,265

435
197
1,469
397
1,126
601

152
196
1,173
342
684
546

283
133
296
55
444
55

283
1
296
55
442
55

132

Represents zero.
1Excludes areas corresponding to counties but having no organized county governments; see "Relation to Other Classifications and
2Systems operated by a state, county, municipal, or township government. These are not included in the total of local governments.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Listings" in text.

Local Governments

Table 4.

General Purpose Local Governments by State: 1952 to 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


County governments

Subcounty general purpose governments


Total

Geographic area
2002

1997

1992

1982

1972

1962

19521

2002

1997

1992

1982

1972

1962

19521

10

11

12

13

14

United States 

3,034

3,043

3,043

3,041

3,044

3,043

3,052

35,933

36,001

35,935

35,810

35,508

35,141

34,009

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

67
12
15
75
57

67
12
15
75
57

67
12
15
75
57

67
8
14
75
57

67
8
14
75
57

67

14
75
57

67

14
75
57

451
149
87
499
475

446
149
87
491
471

438
148
86
489
460

434
142
76
472
428

396
112
65
454
407

349
40
61
417
373

302
28
48
360
306

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

62

66

62

66

62

66

62

66

62

66

62

67

62
8
3

67

270
179
57
1
404

269
179
57
1
394

266
178
57
1
390

267
182
56
1
391

258
183
52
1
390

253
186
51
1
366

241
185
49
1
294

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

156
3
44
102
91

156
3
44
102
91

157
3
44
102
91

158
3
44
102
91

158
3
44
102
91

159
3
44
102
92

159
3
44
102
92

531
1
200
2,722
1,575

535
1
200
2,721
1,577

536
1
199
2,715
1,574

533
1
198
2,714
1,572

530
1
197
2,699
1,554

561
1
200
2,684
1,555

475
1
193
2,590
1,549

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

99
104
119
60
16

99
105
119
60
16

99
105
119
61
16

99
105
119
62
16

99
105
120
62
16

99
105
120
62
16

99
105
120
62
16

948
1,926
424
302
489

950
1,997
434
302
489

952
1,980
435
301
490

955
1,994
425
301
497

951
2,143
378
287
494

944
2,164
365
258
491

934
2,119
313
215
515

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

23
5
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

23
12
83
87
82

157
351
1,775
2,647
296

156
351
1,776
2,648
295

155
351
1,776
2,657
294

152
351
1,777
2,650
292

151
351
1,780
2,652
270

152
351
1,768
2,667
266

146
351
1,753
2,640
263

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

114
54
93
16
10

114
54
93
16
10

114
54
93
16
10

114
54
93
16
10

114
56
93
16
10

114
56
93
17
10

114
56
93
17
10

1,258
129
977
19
234

1,268
128
990
19
234

1,257
128
986
18
234

1,251
126
1,005
17
234

1,237
126
1,013
17
237

1,221
124
1,015
17
234

1,110
121
1,010
15
234

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

21
33
57
100
53

21
33
57
100
53

21
33
57
100
53

21
33
57
100
53

21
32
57
100
53

21
32
57
100
53

21
32
57
100
53

566
101
1,545
541
1,692

567
99
1,544
527
1,704

567
98
1,548
516
1,714

568
96
1,543
484
1,725

567
89
1,549
454
1,726

567
80
1,544
449
1,743

567
72
1,542
401
1,741

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

88
77
36
66

2,250
590
240
2,564
39

2,251
592
240
2,569
39

2,256
588
239
2,570
39

2,259
581
241
2,568
39

2,256
547
231
2,564
39

2,260
533
222
2,558
39

2,242
499
208
2,554
39

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

46
66
92
254
29

46
66
93
254
29

46
64
93
254
29

46
64
94
254
29

46
64
94
254
29

46
64
95
254
29

46
64
95
254
29

269
1,248
349
1,196
236

269
1,265
343
1,177
230

269
1,279
339
1,171
228

265
1,308
335
1,121
224

262
1,342
316
981
214

255
1,379
280
866
212

239
1,397
241
738
209

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

14
95
39
55
72
23

14
95
39
55
72
23

14
95
39
55
72
23

14
95
39
55
72
23

14
96
39
55
72
23

14
98
39
55
72
23

14
100
39
55
71
23

284
229
279
234
1,850
98

286
231
275
232
1,849
97

287
230
268
231
1,849
97

294
229
265
231
1,849
91

298
231
305
226
1,838
87

306
236
329
224
1,834
90

309
223
310
216
1,815
86

See footnotes at end of table.

Local Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 4.

General Purpose Local Governments by State: 1952 to 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Subcounty general purpose governmentsCon.

Municipal governments

Geographic area

Town or township governments

2002

1997

1992

1982

1972

1962

19521

2002

1997

1992

1982

1972

1962

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

United States 

19,429

19,372

19,279

19,076

18,517

17,997

16,807

16,504

16,629

16,656

16,734

16,991

17,144

17,202

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

451
149
87
499
475

446
149
87
491
471

438
148
86
489
460

434
142
76
472
428

396
112
65
454
407

349
40
61
417
373

302
28
48
360
306

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

270
30
57
1
404

269
30
57
1
394

266
29
57
1
390

267
33
56
1
391

258
34
52
1
390

253
34
51
1
366

241
33
49
1
294

149

149

149

149

149

152

152

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

531
1
200
1,291
567

535
1
200
1,288
569

536
1
199
1,282
566

533
1
198
1,280
564

530
1
197
1,267
546

561
1
200
1,251
546

475
1
193
1,157
540

1,431
1,008

1,433
1,008

1,433
1,008

1,434
1,008

1,432
1,008

1,433
1,009

1,433
1,009

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

948
627
424
302
22

950
627
434
302
22

952
627
435
301
22

955
627
425
301
22

951
626
378
287
22

944
618
365
258
21

934
605
313
215
42

1,299

467

1,370

467

1,353

468

1,367

475

1,517

472

1,546

470

1,514

473

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

157
45
533
854
296

156
44
534
854
295

155
39
534
854
294

152
39
532
855
292

151
39
532
854
270

152
39
509
845
266

146
39
489
796
263

306
1,242
1,793

307
1,242
1,794

312
1,242
1,803

312
1,245
1,795

312
1,248
1,798

312
1,259
1,822

312
1,264
1,844

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

946
129
531
19
13

944
128
535
19
13

933
128
534
18
13

926
126
535
17
13

894
126
537
17
13

892
124
537
17
13

781
121
533
15
12

312

446

221

324

455

221

324

452

221

325

470

221

343

476

224

329

478

221

329

477

222

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

324
101
616
541
360

324
99
615
527
363

320
98
619
516
364

323
96
615
484
365

335
89
618
454
358

334
80
612
449
356

334
72
610
401
348

242

929

1,332

243

929

1,341

247

929

1,350

245

928

1,360

232

931

1,368

233

932

1,387

233

932

1,393

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

942
590
240
1,018
8

941
592
240
1,023
8

942
588
239
1,022
8

941
581
241
1,019
8

936
547
231
1,012
8

932
533
222
1,003
8

904
499
208
990
7

1,308

1,546
31

1,310

1,546
31

1,314

1,548
31

1,318

1,549
31

1,320

1,552
31

1,328

1,555
31

1,338

1,564
32

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

269
308
349
1,196
236

269
309
343
1,177
230

269
310
339
1,171
228

265
312
335
1,121
224

262
308
316
981
214

255
307
280
866
212

237
307
241
738
209

940

956

969

996

1,034

1,072

2
1,090

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

47
229
279
234
585
98

49
231
275
232
583
97

50
230
268
231
583
97

57
229
265
231
580
91

61
231
266
226
570
87

68
236
263
224
563
90

71
223
240
216
534
86

237

1,265

237

1,266

237

1,266

237

1,269

237

39

1,268

238

66

1,271

238

70

1,281

1952

Represents zero.
1Counts

for Alaska and Hawaii territories are included in 1952.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Local Governments

Table 5.

Special Purpose Local Governments by State: 1952 to 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


School district governments
Geographic area

2002

1997

1992

1982

Special district governments

1972

1962

19521

2002

1997

1992

1982

1972

1962

19521

10

11

12

13

14

United States 

13,506

13,726

14,422

14,851

15,781

34,678

67,355

35,052

34,683

31,555

28,078

23,885

18,323

12,340

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

128

231
310
1,047

127

231
311
1,069

129

228
321
1,078

127

232
372
1,111

126

237
388
1,132

114
10
251
417
1,630

108
9
270
422
2,010

525
14
305
704
2,830

491
14
304
639
3,010

487
14
261
561
2,797

390
6
130
505
2,506

286

90
366
2,223

202
6
52
299
1,962

70
11
34
231
1,390

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

182
17
19

95

180
17
19

95

180
17
19

95

185
16
19

95

187
14
25

94

312
8
90

67

1,352
3
15

67

1,414
384
260
1
626

1,358
387
257
1
526

1,252
368
196
1
462

1,030
281
139
1
417

812
231
78
2
315

566
204
63
1
264

297
166
40
1
188

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

180

116
934
294

180

114
944
294

183

115
985
294

187

117
1,049
305

189

117
1,177
315

197

121
1,540
884

187

305
3,484
1,115

581
15
798
3,145
1,125

473
15
789
3,068
1,236

421
16
728
2,920
939

390
14
659
2,602
897

366
15
543
2,407
832

301
16
469
2,126
560

154
10
395
1,546
293

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

386
324
176
66
99

394
324
176
66
98

441
324
176
66
91

456
326
180
66
98

463
331
191
66
78

1,336
2,261
208
67
26

4,653
3,984
232
67
4

542
1,533
720
45
222

433
1,524
637
39
229

388
1,482
590
30
199

361
1,370
517
39
195

305
1,136
446
419
126

263
880
179
241
125

170
724
130
144
128

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

82
580
345
164

85
584
360
164

84
585
458
173

81
599
436
169

51
647
445
162

29
1,866
2,343
158

4,845
6,227
93

85
403
366
403
458

241
413
332
406
395

223
396
277
377
320

264
354
184
356
315

229
268
139
211
282

176
194
99
115
266

158
220
84
71
254

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

536
352
575
17
167

537
362
681
17
166

552
537
797
17
167

557
399
1,069
17
160

636
552
1,374
17
158

1,649
1,015
3,264
17
221

4,891
1,287
6,392
166
228

1,514
592
1,146
158
148

1,497
600
1,130
153
165

1,386
556
1,047
156
116

1,195
450
1,157
134
113

820
258
1,081
134
94

742
192
752
85
85

886
133
485
44
78

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

549
96
683

226

552
96
686

237

550
94
713

275

548
89
726

325

527
89
746

386

512
91
1,231

986

481
106
2,915

2,079

276
628
1,135
319
764

281
653
1,126
325
764

374
116
980
321
722

454
101
923
321
692

341
99
954
248
561

295
102
970
126
246

81
78
968
106
94

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

667
571
236
516
4

666
578
258
516
4

666
605
340
516
3

669
638
352
514
3

640
657
353
528
3

833
1,225
484
2,179
2

1,465
2,100
1,071
2,506

631
560
927
1,885
75

592
552
959
1,919
76

513
524
835
2,006
83

377
406
825
2,050
80

275
402
826
1,777
73

177
124
727
1,398
56

140
94
407
29
49

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

85
176
14
1,089
40

91
177
14
1,087
40

91
180
14
1,100
40

92
196
15
1,124
40

93
228
14
1,174
40

109
2,940
14
1,474
40

49
3,399
13
2,479
40

301
376
475
2,245
300

310
302
490
2,182
384

291
262
477
2,266
329

242
199
469
1,681
211

182
136
457
1,215
176

142
80
268
733
142

78
56
85
491
106

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

283
1
296
55
442
55

279
1
296
55
442
56

276

296
55
440
56

273

300
55
408
56

272

317
55
417
70

32

411
55
1,752
207

20

545
55
5,298
318

152
196
1,173
342
684
546

112
156
1,202
362
696
478

104
129
1,157
350
377
373

83
83
1,130
292
263
225

74
58
1,021
172
121
203

72
46
867
55
68
144

70
42
644
23
73
91

Represents zero.
1Counts

for Alaska and Hawaii territories are included in 1952.

Local Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 6.

County Governments by Population Size Group and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Population size group1

Totals
500,000 or more

Geographic area
Number

Population1

Number

250,000 to 499,999

Population1

Number

100,000 to 249,999

Population1

Number

Population1

United States 

3,034

252,051,230

91

104,051,682

110

38,289,518

272

41,415,993

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

67
12
15
75
57

4,447,100
244,492
5,130,632
2,673,400
33,094,915

14

662,047

3,915,895

27,217,930

1
7

676,543

361,474
2,724,885

6
3
13

1,113,957

896,377
426,192
2,290,037

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

62

66

3,746,625

783,600

15,203,499

1,043,985

500,265

7,824,338

11

1,394,606

3,949,008

15

614,429

283,335

2,363,722

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

156
3
44
102
91

7,698,898
335,234
1,293,953
12,419,293
5,220,031

2,678,070

7,427,524

1
5
3

300,904
1,457,637
1,081,972

7
2
2
9
12

1,133,738
276,771
240,126
1,310,393
1,641,152

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

99
104
119
60
16

2,926,324
2,530,536
3,781,257
3,276,444
1,274,923

693,604

1
2

2
1

374,601
903,955

707,627
265,612

5
1
1
5
4

693,264
169,871
151,464
749,020
552,568

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

23
5
83
87
82

4,645,332
1,895,025
9,938,444
4,919,479
2,844,658

3
2
4
2

2,429,148
1,184,986
4,617,802
1,627,235

1
1
3
2
1

489,656
472,822
1,038,356
653,988
250,800

6
1
13
4
4

1,065,075
222,230
2,102,624
659,101
543,547

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

114
54
93
16
10

5,247,022
858,172
1,711,263
1,945,800
1,235,786

1,671,195

1,375,765

2
1
2

283,883

713,876
339,486
658,200

5
1
1

862,636
129,352
122,595

248,458

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

21
33
57
100
53

8,414,350
1,819,046
10,968,179
8,049,313
642,200

8
1
5
2

5,194,578
556,678
5,362,980
1,323,300

5
3

2,538,131

1,661,171
1,030,078

5
3
12
18
1

617,356
417,775
1,919,348
2,599,254
123,138

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

88
77
36
66

11,353,140
3,450,654
3,421,399
10,763,504

5
2
1
4

4,410,220
1,223,747
660,486
3,180,262

4
10

1,708,178

1,391,526
3,460,588

17
2
4
15

2,447,767
323,012
500,104
2,330,505

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

46
66
92
254
29

4,012,012
754,844
5,106,393
20,851,820
2,233,169

1
7
1

897,472
10,519,992
898,387

2
8
1

1,264,053

689,928
2,723,952
368,536

10
1
7
19
2

1,490,301
148,281
939,947
2,983,455
435,527

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

14
95
39
55
72
23

608,827
4,720,321
5,894,121
1,808,344
5,363,675
493,782

1
3

969,749
3,043,878

940,164

3
2

803,016
763,177

787,293

1
2
6
1
10

146,571
359,052
1,074,173
200,073
1,498,320

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Governments

Table 6.

County Governments by Population Size Group and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Population size group1Con.
50,000 to 99,999

25,000 to 49,999

10,000 to 24,999

Less than 10,000

Geographic area
Number

Population1

Number

Population1

Number

Population1

Number

Population1

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

United States 

383

27,160,047

638

22,913,074

869

14,488,370

671

3,732,546

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

13
2
3
11
8

908,179
142,162
218,228
754,591
539,530

17
1
2
13
6

635,772
49,691
71,870
421,461
207,743

25
2
1
37
6

440,628
27,983
19,715
623,249
100,578

1
7
1
10
3

9,974
24,656
8,547
86,433
14,212

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

404,899

11

263,973

408,924

17

15

290,598

238,565

28

139,034

14,043

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

22
1
3
11
10

1,677,073
58,463
222,371
688,354
716,714

25

6
23
37

879,457

207,512
839,149
1,304,383

66

13
36
24

1,117,070

211,066
602,657
435,933

32

19
14
5

213,490

111,974
93,579
39,877

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

4
6
12
11
4

306,977
409,365
900,403
803,619
231,372

14
13
27
16
6

517,976
420,080
954,656
590,413
208,136

57
20
57
22
1

893,831
318,745
925,604
390,113
17,235

18
62
21
4

139,675
308,520
155,526
35,652

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

15
9
7

406,299

1,039,341
590,199
490,715

23
23
27

211,210

780,532
784,122
924,065

2
1
18
31
36

43,944
14,987
305,717
497,847
581,478

7
16
7

54,072
106,987
54,053

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

9
5
1

638,330
374,177
53,534

211,893

22
2
7
4
3

782,026
62,577
248,041
153,536
117,235

49
10
16
2

824,876
131,607
258,482
40,088

26
36
66
8

184,076
160,459
314,735
36,925

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

1
7
21
23
3

64,285
461,707
1,512,658
1,658,138
194,320

7
11
27
1

227,952
462,798
1,025,456
25,303

8
2
22
8

128,375
43,845
379,459
132,207

7
1
5
40

26,559
5,379
33,628
167,232

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

21
8
7
12

1,459,799
544,171
498,353
939,538

32
24
4
18

1,188,106
909,476
155,284
761,737

8
24
9
4

139,070
350,619
180,058
73,398

17
7
3

99,629
35,588
17,476

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

10
1
14
20
2

679,774
88,565
931,880
1,474,584
181,745

11
3
31
42
5

371,981
89,577
1,095,787
1,559,075
172,219

10
12
30
69
8

195,945
203,962
502,491
1,168,746
129,291

1
49
7
89
10

9,958
224,459
48,888
422,016
47,464

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

3
16
8
9
14
2

178,857
1,104,016
561,319
661,580
1,029,830
148,140

7
23
8
19
18
6

246,806
782,861
311,040
617,913
673,688
191,475

1
37
7
16
23
7

23,233
607,759
113,117
249,287
410,656
104,256

2
13
5
10
4
8

13,360
93,868
27,417
79,491
23,724
49,911

Represents zero.
1Population

size groups and populations are based on population of county governments only as of April 1, 2000.

County Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 7.

Subcounty General Purpose Governments by Population Size Group and State:


2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Municipal governments
Population size group1
Geographic area
Total

Total

300,000 or
more

200,000 to
299,999

100,000 to
199,999

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,999

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

Less than
1,000

10

11

12

United States 

35,933

19,429

58

30

153

364

643

1,436

1,637

2,070

3,677

9,361

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

451
149
87
499
475

451
149
87
499
475

10

2
1
2

4
1
42

2
5
88

8
2
9
7
95

36

13
19
112

40
6
16
24
62

45
10
23
45
28

104
8
10
82
20

210
122
5
316
14

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

270
179
57
1
404

270
30
57
1
404

1
3

6
5

5
7
1

25

6
6
2

38

15
3

71

27

54

24
2
5

49

55
4
13

62

129
3
31

92

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

531
1
200
2,722
1,575

531
1
200
1,291
567

1
1

1
1

1
6
3

3
19
7

11

5
53
20

42

7
124
37

41

12
113
46

69

21
124
52

109

26
225
138

250

125
626
262

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

948
1,926
424
302
489

948
627
424
302
22

2
1

2
3

7
2
1
4
1

11
10
8
3
2

14
17
23
21
7

43
22
40
30
9

50
47
48
34
1

147
99
84
76
2

674
426
218
129

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

157
351
1,775
2,647
296

157
45
533
854
296

1
1
1
1

4
7

3
14
15
12
2

3
22
22
19
8

15
4
48
50
26

15

53
43
26

22

78
82
25

34

136
124
70

64

173
522
138

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

1,258
129
977
19
234

946
129
531
19
13

1
1

3
1

6
3

2
1

15
3
4

40
1
10
2
7

52
8
16
3
1

82
14
16
3

143
27
66
4

604
73
417
1

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

566
101
1,545
541
1,692

324
101
616
541
360

1
1
1

2
2

2
3

8
3
8
9
2

20
6
20
8
2

76
8
54
39
5

86
14
78
44
3

55
8
106
82
3

51
26
167
118
37

24
35
178
235
308

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

2,250
590
240
2,564
39

942
590
240
1,018
8

4
2
1
2

2
2
1

12
5
6
4
3

38
7
7
13
3

112
24
26
50
1

78
30
24
129

109
55
28
174

173
96
56
235

414
371
90
409

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

269
1,248
349
1,196
236

269
308
349
1,196
236

2
7

1
1
3
14
3

3
1
3
23
6

10

10
46
10

20
7
30
94
17

25
5
39
118
24

38
11
48
164
29

51
34
94
290
41

121
249
120
437
106

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

284
229
279
234
1,850
98

47
229
279
234
585
98

1
1

6
4

3
9
2
10
1

1
7
22
3
13
2

2
19
26
9
48
5

6
20
38
12
48
9

4
23
36
25
67
6

8
55
54
59
149
15

26
94
89
124
247
60

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Subcounty General Purpose Governments

Table 7.

Subcounty General Purpose Governments by Population Size Group and State:


2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Town or township governments
Population size group1
Geographic area
Total

300,000 or
more

200,000 to
299,999

100,000 to
199,999

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,000

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

Less than
1,000

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

United States 

16,504

30

97

273

773

1,085

1,909

3,679

8,652

Alabama 
Alaska 
Arizona 
Arkansas
California 

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia
Florida 

149

18

51

33

25

16

Georgia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 
Illinois 
Indiana 

1,431
1,008

19
7

27
15

45
29

70
61

83
93

155
195

350
369

682
239

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

1,299

467

14

31

31

72

152

141

1,099

215

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

306
1,242
1,793

4
7

26
18

98
67
2

70
109
3

37
283
37

41
464
173

30
294
1,578

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

312

446

221

13

31

15

53

36

33

66

250

409

55

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

242

929

1,332

17

11

40

39

74

86

49

158

38

210

21

307

108

1,319

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

1,308

1,546
31

27

21
7

78

134
14

164

181
7

282

325
2

519

518
1

233

361

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

940

930

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming

237

1,265

14

37

44

96

85

369

89

757

Represents zero.
1Population

10

size groups and populations are based on population of subcounty general purpose governments only as of April 1, 2000.

Subcounty General Purpose Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 8.

Population of Subcounty General Purpose Governments by Population Size Group


and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Population of municipal governments1

Total

300,000 or
more

200,000 to
299,999

100,000 to
199,999

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,999

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

Less than
1,000

Percent of
population in
areas with
municipal
governments

10

11

12

174,881,953 47,767,718

7,162,775

21,075,987 24,960,077 22,576,240 22,588,957 11,643,589

7,352,265

5,951,170

3,803,175

62.1

Population size group1


Geographic area

United States 


Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

2,595,533
457,965
4,045,436
1,643,052
27,584,219

2,204,119

8,951,563

444,388
260,283
421,517

949,407

357,131

553,267
183,133
5,650,543

252,314

130,409
309,348
6,116,862

259,171
60,935
300,889
247,574
3,482,289

568,122

211,723
306,701
1,834,001

288,946
40,973
118,295
176,928
450,111

162,602
37,779
83,852
161,956
106,761

171,657
14,222
18,008
136,480
34,288

91,202
43,773
3,357
120,932
8,394

58.4
73.0
78.8
61.5
81.4

Colorado 
Connecticut2 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

3,129,669
1,326,350
214,718
572,059
7,912,817

915,526

572,059
1,401,534

276,393

474,651

672,592
609,087

1,094,378

375,688
452,308
72,664

1,777,576

216,813
209,247
60,682

1,376,476

247,359
40,955

1,074,339

190,985

31,071

384,681

86,076
7,318
19,279

174,263

92,606
5,914
19,344

109,427

55,631
1,521
11,678

45,492

72.8
38.9
27.4
100.0
49.5

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois2 
Indiana2 

3,187,815
876,156
848,727
10,646,945
3,894,675

416,474
876,156

2,896,016
791,926

205,727

619,065

185,787
752,074
332,117

312,276

154,063
1,276,257
447,388

384,416

160,773
1,840,351
686,570

629,015

99,066
2,038,109
587,187

294,310

84,091
787,245
323,340

247,157

69,888
442,503
179,293

178,243

41,781
346,928
223,035

106,859

53,278
267,462
118,092

38.9
72.3
65.6
85.7
64.1

Iowa 
Kansas2 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

2,265,346
2,167,430
1,884,766
2,466,243
344,414

344,284

872,458

516,743
200,145

319,440
418,323

214,760

481,024
173,060
54,067
251,842
64,249

331,234
362,994
257,961
104,660
67,163

191,977
255,914
366,524
305,355
134,598

289,919
160,086
285,291
208,053
70,850

174,868
162,627
160,771
126,790
3,447

228,544
155,744
139,966
123,695
4,107

248,340
134,398
103,443
58,485

77.4
80.6
46.6
55.2
27.0

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan2 
Minnesota2 
Mississippi 

1,425,641
3,059,563
5,436,801
3,930,405
1,438,898

651,154
589,141
951,270
382,618

287,151

531,252
919,158

184,256

155,649
1,031,364
1,069,871
792,236
121,771

119,913
839,172
793,414
662,479
268,119

242,451
68,634
729,458
817,345
421,709

95,699

385,215
311,483
177,760

75,430

277,399
287,962
85,887

57,112

221,052
202,002
116,572

28,233

89,964
187,129
62,824

26.9
48.2
54.7
79.9
50.6

Missouri2 
Montana 
Nebraska2 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

3,653,993
485,098
1,323,618
1,142,955
405,333

789,734

390,007
478,434

225,581

264,868

471,349
107,006

391,420
203,590

118,803
86,605

525,406
87,895
139,927

96,032

586,948
14,223
169,655
31,674
107,285

374,709
57,204
107,641
24,099
8,405

297,842
49,067
57,984
11,645

227,693
42,625
98,638
6,633

195,373
30,494
134,185
318

65.3
53.8
77.3
57.2
32.8

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York2 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

4,096,522
1,126,538
12,146,122
4,054,417
467,809

448,607
8,008,278
540,828

513,601

512,421
499,984

269,790

343,392
493,826

566,865
188,235
523,917
630,440
146,131

720,930
205,668
645,087
303,902
85,888

1,106,774
104,601
824,620
660,859
75,707

613,550
103,833
546,725
327,993
22,634

204,062
25,238
369,212
293,818
10,607

88,279
38,938
271,640
194,298
55,677

12,671
11,418
100,830
108,469
71,165

48.7
61.9
64.0
50.4
72.8

Ohio2 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

7,484,966
2,611,996
2,277,619
5,671,340
548,968

1,834,777
899,181
529,121
1,852,113

217,074

166,179

274,817
210,349
173,618

767,888
385,713
404,567
285,299
238,035

1,299,386
254,917
251,131
462,137
118,387

1,800,406
391,886
408,957
740,304
18,928

555,752
214,556
174,501
909,084

381,206
190,423
102,333
623,531

282,238
145,769
91,008
390,642

180,060
129,551
41,184
197,881

65.9
75.7
66.6
46.2
52.4

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

1,430,830
503,286
3,344,547
15,747,352
1,865,940

1,219,991
6,374,744

715,252

116,278
123,975
432,899
1,938,437
395,805

232,293
59,607
183,928
1,594,105
434,217

348,611

360,333
1,566,803
333,214

290,289
117,254
479,081
1,479,741
303,867

176,706
37,046
275,099
816,332
172,540

131,763
36,472
174,393
579,955
109,846

85,924
52,181
156,324
470,485
69,173

48,966
76,751
62,499
211,498
47,278

35.7
66.7
58.8
75.5
83.6

Vermont2 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

153,374
2,793,670
3,515,109
644,404
3,694,996
335,508

425,257
563,374

596,974

234,403

208,054

952,409
642,314

102,313

223,857
609,268
104,896
655,101
53,011

38,889
270,687
743,350
91,327
456,190
76,848

33,106
331,250
407,105
135,746
720,676
77,473

45,133
140,748
285,147
80,973
353,963
63,884

11,662
87,690
130,067
80,084
240,530
18,927

12,375
85,872
90,575
92,264
237,070
24,122

12,209
41,497
43,909
59,114
124,125
21,243

25.2
39.5
59.6
35.6
68.9
67.9

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Subcounty General Purpose Governments

11

Table 8.

Population of Subcounty General Purpose Governments by Population Size Group


and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Population of township governments1

Total

300,000 or
more

200,000 to
299,999

100,000 to
199,999

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,000

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

Less than
1,000

Percent of
population in
areas with
township
governments

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

United States 

57,364,639

1,526,784

728,328

3,974,461

6,589,187

9,274,503

12,067,019

7,559,745

6,731,617

5,905,226

3,007,769

20.4

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

Colorado 
Connecticut2 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

2,103,978

293,683

608,736

833,442

244,572

94,289

28,563

693

61.8

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois2 
Indiana2 

9,139,340
6,080,481

2,488,065
949,977

1,989,518
1,018,036

1,577,427
1,039,665

1,083,696
970,128

570,463
678,378

546,560
686,057

543,290
584,619

340,321
153,621

73.6
100.0

Iowa 
Kansas2 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

787,307

920,814

48,580

121,633

97,660

224,240

105,416

260,054

236,620

222,595

299,031

92,292

29.3

72.2

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan2 
Minnesota2 
Mississippi 

3,289,534
4,791,653
964,161

229,706
477,283

783,884
617,945

1,542,785
1,027,085
23,040

506,298
746,602
20,586

138,084
979,453
129,490

70,219
770,436
262,229

18,558
172,849
528,816

51.8
48.2
19.6

Missouri2 
Montana 
Nebraska2 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

305,302

177,031

830,217

87,252

41,457

191,524

56,755

206,474

54,883

11,755

201,417

56,978

49,628

110,117

95,229

115,648

33,433

5.5

10.3

67.2

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York2 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

4,317,828

8,657,676

125,767

1,526,784

728,328

536,419

1,148,569

792,847

1,398,738

1,300,006

1,259,696

1,318,990

334,948

1,108,227

137,099

748,422

15,058

37,269

528,047

13,366

1,509

69,606

97,343

51.3

45.6

19.6

Ohio2 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

5,466,132

6,607,087
499,351

275,687

363,858

920,488

730,420
209,942

1,145,621

2,051,499
230,915

1,132,932

1,239,541
49,617

983,952

1,158,000
7,867

849,510

850,288
1,010

157,942

213,481

48.1

53.8
47.6

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

135,643

3,025

13,936

118,682

18.0

Vermont2 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

497,084

1,668,253

73,721

103,207

94,498

247,954

150,534

320,202

126,407

550,099

51,924

446,791

81.6

31.1

Population size group1


Geographic area

Represents zero.
1Population size groups
2Areas of municipal and

12

and populations are based on population of subcounty general purpose governments only as of April 1, 2000.
township governments may overlap in this state: see text; "Municipal and Township Governments."

Subcounty General Purpose Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 9.

Special District Governments by Function and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Single function districts
Environment and housing
Education services

Social services

Transportation
Natural resources3

Geographic area
All special
district
govern
ments

Total

Education1

Libraries

Hospitals

Health

Welfare

Highways

Air
transpor
taton

Other2

Drainage
and flood
control

Soil and
water
conser
vation

Other4

10

11

12

13

United States 

35,052

31,877

518

1,580

711

753

57

743

510

205

3,247

2,506

1,226

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

525
14
305
704
2,830

493
14
302
657
2,564

18
37

37

64

27

94

2
25
47

24

1
7
16

3
14

16
182
54

67

1
69
121

66
7
309

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

1,414
384
260
1
626

1,101
322
258
1
431

44

15

22

28

20

15

17
25

36
1
239

57

83

60

59

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

581
15
798
3,145
1,125

483
14
762
3,103
1,088

1
425

56
358
286

107

14
21
16

27

2
26

65
27

25

31

1
7

52
872
42

38
14
51
105
96

73
2
3

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

542
1,533
720
45
222

538
1,513
706
43
197

7
22
105
1

20
8

3
2
60

4
2
12
2
1

10
20
2

150
135
7

101
116
159
1
15

10

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

85
403
366
403
458

77
388
347
368
432

132
13
30

1
6
18

15
4
3

1
1

19
4
28

14

14
161

24
13
80
98
81

6
3

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

1,514
592
1,146
158
148

1,500
535
869
137
123

146

14
9
19

111
2
1
4

30
1

281

13
8
6

2
8
60
1

178
18
36
1

56
2
25
10

5
51
42
7

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

276
628
1,135
319
764

265
621
1,128
309
762

146

2
1

55
1
29

15
81

517

55
1

16
46
1
98
58

20
2
2
20

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

631
560
927
1,885
75

608
536
904
1,620
75

81

67
9
16
3

19
61

47
34
15
12

3
1
87
3

52

1
37

13
2
9
43

12
8
61
5

85
86
46

1
3
72
2

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

301
376
475
2,245
300

265
353
445
1,492
278

10
1

120
3

2
8

57
18

2
78

4
1
21
1

1
23

1
17
11
126
21

46
71
94
218
40

1
14
3
98
20

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

152
196
1,173
342
684
546

139
179
1,101
296
677
458

26
23
5

6
49

13

13
2
25

11

13

26
3
12

10

32

93
1
38
15

14
47

14
3
34

77

150
85

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Special District Governments

13

Table 9.

Special District Governments by Function and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Single function districtsCon.
Environment and housingCon.

Geographic area
Parks and
recreation

Housing
and
com
munity
develop
ment Sewerage

Multiple function districts

Utilities

Solid
waste
manage
ment

Water
supply

Other5

Fire
protection

Cemeter
ies

Industrial
develop
ment and
mortgage
revenue

Natural Sewerage
resources
and
and water
water
supply
supply

Other

Total

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

Other
27

United States 

1,287

3,399

2,004

455

3,405

485

5,725

1,666

234

1,161

3,175

102

1,446

1,627

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

1
9
156

152
13

122
71

21
60
130

16
23

134

15
49
344

19
1
11
3
71

12

151
80
368

256

10

7
374

32

3
47
266

2
14

11
99

24

3
34
153

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

65
21
1

16

91
93
3

105

100
3

7
5

107
9

14

3
19

1
12

250
64

57

81

103
82

313
62
2

195

111
3
1

193
59
1

183

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

14

31
366
5

201

10
112
63

45
119
69

3
7
63

28

37
96
7

20
2

142
823
1

178
73

11

14

1
36
10

98
1
36
42
37

1
2
2

32

32
18
12

65
1
3
22
23

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

2
2

23
199
17

23

32
11
4

53

21
1
17
2
5

19
310
135
1
85

6
2
4
3
6

67

163

667

5
1

100
10
5
4

4
20
14
2
25

5
1
2
1

1
2
7

15

3
13
6

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

1
1
2
2

21
250

167
57

1
10
25
16
7

2
6
13
3
5

1
65
16
6
6

1
19
27
6
9

16
4

34

3
1
6
13
5

8
15
19
35
26

14

4
1
16
1
17

4
13
3
20
9

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

1
7
1

136
12
125
5
21

29
30
11
8
2

27

32

240
33
24
16
30

1
3
33
7
1

317
155
421
19
14

76
79
2

3
53
2
19
5

14
57
277
21
25

55
19
7
3

14
1
258
13
22

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

2
1
245

2
6

91
39

29
1

10

11
4
5
3
2

5
9
3
23
2

1
6

196

911

281

1
1

2
12
1
1
3

11
7
7
10
2

2
5

9
2
6
4
1

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

101

48
64

77
105
20
90
25

9
3
43
637
2

18
2
1
32

21
255
112
287
10

17
1
16
45
1

73
26
256

34

65

4
1
4
150

13
67

23
24
23
265

1
2
2
1

9
9
4
200

13
13
17
64

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

16

3
8

46
40
98
398
16

8
28
1
9
17

2
3
6
2
4

29
7
181
231
34

12
1
17
9
6

86
72

141
19

45

2
11

12
10
41
23

36
23
30
753
22

14

10
2

19
5
17
550
15

17
4
13
193
5

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

2
5
55
2
6
16

10

41
39
164

12
34
52
307
13

10
9

48

16

68
8
129
112
3
49

3
4
38
10
3
1

19

387

64

100

41

1
14

1
1

31

1
2
75

13
17
72
46
7
88

2
10
28
43

41

11
7
40
3
7
46

Represents zero.
1Primarily school building authorities. Also includes the Chicago School Finance Authority
2Includes parking facilities and water transport and terminals.
3Functions within the "National resources" categories may overlap, see Appendix A.
4Includes irrigation, reclamation, and natural resources, not elsewhere classified.
5Includes electric power, gas supply, and public transit.

14

Special District Governments

and the educational facilities authorities in Florida.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 10.

Special District Governments by Area Served and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Located within one
county but legal
boundaries not the
same as county,
municipality, town, or
township

Legal boundaries are


located within part or
all of two or more
county areas

All special district


governments

Has the same legal


boundaries as one
county

Has the same legal


boundaries as one
municipality, town, or
township

United States 

35,052

3,751

2,836

10,872

4,458

13,135

Alabama 
Alaska 
Arizona 
Arkansas
California 

525
14
305
704
2,830

106
2
9
108
157

39
3
9
41
155

76

179
143
1,289

77
3
15
73
349

227
6
93
339
880

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia
Florida 

1,414
384
260
1
626

66
11
22

108

51
50
5

23

596
116
54

154

212
16
13
1
55

489
191
166

286

Georgia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 
Illinois 
Indiana 

581
15
798
3,145
1,125

89

54
216
169

49

21
278
172

45
6
324
1,054
321

94

85
577
73

304
9
314
1,020
390

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

542
1,533
720
45
222

170
146
197
7
15

20
97
9
2
60

116
463
145
6
72

75
268
89
14
14

161
559
280
16
61

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

85
403
366
403
458

25
30
82
104
74

8
119
18
64
14

14
66
110
44
34

5
23
68
91
83

33
165
88
100
253

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

1,514
592
1,146
158
148

115
69
47
13
5

120
23
54
10
25

512
220
254
51
40

222
46
264
12
9

545
234
527
72
69

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

276
628
1,135
319
764

19
23
18
106
85

55
12
236
22
122

103
102
476
43
170

17
47
62
39
132

82
444
343
109
255

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

631
560
927
1,885
75

196
82
59
190
3

25
48
19
392
12

133
146
495
482
21

89
108
80
135
2

188
176
274
686
37

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

301
376
475
2,245
300

58
54
95
255
33

13
17
20
110
17

104
108
108
500
114

38
75
100
273
28

88
122
152
1,107
108

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming

152
196
1,173
342
684
546

8
18
80
56
44
53

15
6
46
10
92
8

35
23
607
97
295
206

10
91
73
69
41
23

84
58
367
110
212
256

Geographic area

Not reported

Represents zero.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Special District Governments

15

Table 11.

Special District Governments by Type of Operation and Function: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]

All special district


governments1

Directly provides
program or
service with own
employees

Indirectly provides
program or
service by
contractual
arrangements

Constructs public
facilities by
contract or with
own employees

Finances public
facilities or
services by
issuing public
debt

Leases public
buildings or
facilities to others

Not answered



35,052

13,833

6,785

3,736

2,997

1,752

16,154



31,877

12,973

6,188

3,114

2,459

1,632

14,294

Education services:
Education2 
Libraries

518
1,580

72
1,128

23
221

54
67

132
105

100
35

287
401

Social services:
Hospitals 
Health 
Welfare 

711
753
57

314
364
32

170
157
17

45
15
1

102
10
4

95
17
3

283
303
18

Transportation:
Highways
Air transportation 
Other3 

743
510
205

149
177
80

183
149
52

88
132
66

21
74
42

3
178
75

386
216
89



5,725

2,666

663

177

338

48

2,522

Environment and housing:


Natural resources, total4 
Drainage and flood control 
Irrigation 
Soil and water conservation 
Other natural resources 

6,979
3,247
837
2,506
389

2,204
300
369
1,460
75

1,631
774
120
623
114

382
207
86
51
38

162
91
38
8
25

60
13
8
36
3

3,614
2,130
385
883
216

Parks and recreation 


Housing and community development 
Sewerage 
Solid waste management 

1,287
3,399
2,004
455

577
1,663
793
222

372
595
454
163

328
232
485
54

217
105
419
33

174
589
72
7

556
1,375
776
170

Utilities:
Water supply 
Electric power 
Gas supply 
Transit 

3,405
150
50
285

1,495
80
31
145

560
41

113

745
49
8
48

422
44
7
19

62
11

24

1,469
47
19
92

Other functions:
Cemeteries 
Industrial development and mortgage credit 
Other single function districts 

1,666
234
1,161

513
33
235

338
44
242

48
23
67

36
41
126

5
24
50

858
141
672

Multiple function districts 

3,175

860

597

622

538

120

1,860

Natural resources and water supply 


Sewerage and water supply
Other multiple function districts5 

102
1,446
1,627

39
476
345

36
241
320

25
315
282

13
277
248

3
39
78

48
769
1,043

Function

All special district governments1


Single function districts

Public safety:
Fire protection

Represents zero.
1Total number of special districts governments, including those not reporting detail by type of operation. Detail does not add to total since reporting governments may have more than one type of
operation.
2Primarily school building authorities. Also includes the Chicago School Finance Authority and the educational facilities authorities in Florida.
3Includes parking facilities and water transport and terminals.
4Functions within the "National resources" categories may overlap, see Appendix A.
5Includes fire protection and water supply and other multiple function districts not elsewhere classified.

16

Special District Governments

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 12.

Public School Systems by Type of Organization and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Dependent school systems
Systems operated by subcounty general purpose
governments
Geographic area
All systems

Independent
school district
governments

Total

State dependent
systems

County
dependent
systems

Total

Municipal
dependent
systems

Town or township
dependent
systems

United States 

15,014

13,506

1,508

178

567

763

227

536

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

128
54
245
310
1,107

128

231
310
1,047

54
14

60

19

13
14

59

22

22

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

182
166
19
2
95

182
17
19

95

149

148

19

129

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

180
1
116
934
294

180

116
934
294

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

386
324
176
66
295

386
324
176
66
99

196

195

17

178

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

39
330
739
345
167

82
580
345
164

39
248
159

1
150

38
2

1
245
9

1
44
9

201

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

536
352
575
17
177

536
352
575
17
167

10

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

624
96
715
175
226

549
96
683

226

75

32
175

50

25
175

22

18

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

667
571
236
516
36

667
571
236
516
4

32

31

24

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

85
176
138
1,090
40

85
176
14
1,089
40

124
1

91

33

33

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

283
133
296
55
444
55

283
1
296
55
442
55

132

94

38

38

Represents zero.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

School Systems

17

Table 13.

Public School Systems by Enrollment Size Group and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Independent school districts
Enrollment size group1
Geographic area

All
systems

Total

100,000
or more

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,999

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

500 to
999

250 to
499

100 to
249

Less than
100

None2

10

11

12

13

14

United States 

15,014

13,506

15

47

134

514

949

1,881

3,381

2,306

1,684

1,328

963

304

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

128
54
245
310
1,107

128

231
310
1,047

5
1
31

16
4
117

25

16
10
143

52

31
28
148

40

51
72
158

20
100
120

18
69
96

28
24
113

30
2
92

14

19

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

182
166
19
2
95

182
17
19

95

15

10

14

20

19
2
6

17

29
11
4

15

30
3
1

40
1

26

11

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

180
1
116
934
294

180

116
934
294

1
2
2

22

4
21
16

30

6
50
35

55

15
116
57

50

30
271
140

22
220
36

15
140
2

15
84
4

6
25

2
4
2

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

386
324
176
66
295

386
324
176
66
99

1
3

1
2
1
4

6
5
7
13

7
9
16
15

24
22
54
22
11

89
72
62
9
27

153
84
23

23

75
86
10

12

28
36
2

10

3
8

11

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

39
330
739
345
167

82
580
345
164

2
4
1

24
11
3

2
50
19
18

13
125
40
53

39
218
101
71

19
82
88
13

5
36
48
1

4
14
25
1

29
5

4
3

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

536
352
575
17
177

536
352
575
17
167

15
2
1
1

16
4
5
4
3

49
3
11
2
12

109
24
22
3
39

128
32
48
2
34

104
46
99
2
19

76
76
96
1
27

34
155
252

19

3
10
39

14

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

624
96
715
175
226

549
96
683

226

9
6
11

42
9
75

79
14
134

158
16
272

110
21
109

18

76
14
49

51

45
12
21

77

8
3
11

62

22

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

667
571
236
516
36

667
571
236
516
4

3
2
2
1

15
8
9
14

52
10
19
64

144
19
28
172
2

290
90
46
211
2

97
99
34
45

8
160
25
6

1
125
18

3
30
33

52
28
21
2

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

85
176
138
1,090
40

85
176
14
1,089
40

11
3

22
3

14
2

52
6

21

74
5

24
8
3
128
9

19
14
7
240
8

1
28
2
217
2

54
2
159
3

56

143
1

11

38

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

283
133
296
55
444
55

283
1
296
55
442
55

4
1
1

26
6
10
2

28
12
18
1

32
18
67
7

18

63
18
130
16

39

42

134
17

49

31

59
9

79

36

20
3

52

34

43
1

See footnotes at end of table.

18

School Systems

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 13.

Public School Systems by Enrollment Size Group and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Dependent school systems
Enrollment size group1
Geographic area
Total

100,000 or
more

50,000 to
99,999

25,000 to
49,999

10,000 to
24,999

5,000 to
9,999

2,500 to
4,999

1,000 to
2,499

500 to
999

250 to
499

100 to
249

Less than
100

None2

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

United States 

1,508

12

25

92

161

296

297

171

174

132

67

72

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

54
14

60

6
2

13

10

14

15

9
3

4
3

10

1
6

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

149

23

42

34

19

14

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

196

13

18

20

31

36

22

55

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

39
248
159

2
1

4
2

7
7

6
30
1

8
74

5
66
4

2
23
29

1
22
62

17
39

4
21

1
2
2

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

10

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

75

32
175

1
1

3
3

2
30

13

4
30

9
38

16

12
45

12

20

11

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

32

14

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

124
1

10

23

40

32

10

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

132

16

22

37

36

Represents zero.
1Enrollment used for enrollment size groups represents fall 2000 membership.
2Includes systems that pay tuition for resident pupils attending schools operated

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

by another school system or that provide special educational or support services to public school systems.

School Systems

19

Table 14.

Public School Systems by Grade Coverage and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Independent school districts

Dependent school systems

Grades provided1

Grades provided1

Geographic area
All
systems

Elementary
Total grades only

Secondary
grades
only

Elementary
and
secondary
grades

Vocational,
special, or
college
grades
only

None2

Elementary
Total grades only

Secondary
grades
only

Elementary
and
secondary
grades

Vocational,
special, or
college
grades
only

None2

10

11

12

13

United States 

15,014

13,506

2,598

356

9,914

514

124

1,508

333

22

873

219

61

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

128
54
245
310
1,107

128

231
310
1,047

102

555

17

83

128

91
310
338

11

71

10

54
14

60

53
6

1
6

58

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

182
166
19
2
95

182
17
19

95

178
8
16

67

28

149

45

104

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

180
1
116
934
294

180

116
934
294

6
383
1

100

173

108
410
291

2
39

2
2

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

386
324
176
66
295

386
324
176
66
99

20

371
304
171
66
63

15
20

196

92

49

55

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

39
330
739
345
167

82
580
345
164

5
30
11
1

16

34
523
327
148

27
27
1
15

39
248
159

68
103

3
16

24
175
38

15

2
2

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

536
352
575
17
177

536
352
575
17
167

73
179
267
1
88

7
18

449
158
266
16
59

14
3
24

13

10

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

624
96
715
175
226

549
96
683

226

281

44

50

47

199
89
633

168

7
1

22

75

32
175

16

5
117

50

27
58

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

667
571
236
516
36

667
571
236
516
4

2
113
18
2

610
430
179
498
4

54
28
23
15

15
1

32

28

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

85
176
138
1,090
40

85
176
14
1,089
40

5
3
64

85
168
11
975
40

50

124
1

11
1

112

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

283
133
296
55
444
55

283
1
296
55
442
55

182

50

47
2

24

11

37

246
55
368
46

16
7

40

132

132

Represents zero.
1Systems that provide vocational, special, or college grade education in addition to elementary and/or secondary grades are shown under "secondary grades only" or "elementary and secondary
grades" as appropriate.
2Includes systems that pay tuition for resident pupils attending schools operated by another school system or that provide special educational or support services to public school systems.

20

School Systems

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 15.

Public School Systems by Area Served and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Located within one
county but legal
boundaries not the
same as county,
municipality, town, or
township

Legal boundaries are


located within part of
all of two or more
county areas

Total public school


systems

Has the same legal


boundaries as one
county

Has the same legal


boundaries as one
municipality, town, or
township

United States 

15,014

1,323

1,389

5,722

4,329

2,251

Alabama 
Alaska 
Arizona 
Arkansas
California 

128
54
245
310
1,107

39
11
17
12
70

33
17
8
6
49

25
5
153
146
653

3
5
11
117
138

28
16
56
29
197

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia
Florida 

182
166
19
2
95

12
4
3

61

4
93

86
18
7

59
3
3

20

21
48
6
1
11

Georgia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 
Illinois 
Indiana 

180
1
116
934
294

118

8
24
15

13

1
27
41

15

47
452
140

1
1
50
361
38

33

10
70
60

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

386
324
176
66
295

4
10
87
49
5

6
3
10

82

93
105
59
3
56

270
195
3

23

13
11
17
14
129

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

39
330
739
345
167

27
9
31
9
39

151
30
6
12

57
219
94
59

7
24
310
216
22

5
89
149
20
35

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

536
352
575
17
177

7
18
19
15
6

12
7
10
1
70

224
229
183

28

276
35
267

11

17
63
96
1
62

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

624
96
715
175
226

42
10
22
89
5

288
6
38
1
3

100
48
339
24
81

16
25
233
30
116

178
7
83
31
21

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

667
571
236
516
36

24
15
12
23

56
14
5
59
19

245
270
124
251
7

265
237
60
94

77
35
35
89
10

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

85
176
138
1,090
40

22
9
71
61
23

2
1
23
39
3

42
48
18
556
10

6
107
3
357

13
11
23
77
4

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming

283
133
296
55
444
55

13
76
10
41
15
11

85
32
5

17

16
8
194
1
156
25

5
1
63

230
12

164
16
24
13
26
7

Geographic area

Not reported

Represents zero.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

School Systems

21

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

United States 


Alabama

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

280,849,847

87,525

3,034

35,933

19,429

16,504

35,052

13,506

1,330



4,447,100

1,171

67

451

451

525

128

Autauga 
Baldwin
Barbour 
Bibb
Blount 

43,671
140,415
29,038
20,826
51,024

14
36
16
9
20

1
1
1
1
1

3
12
5
4
11

3
12
5
4
11

9
22
8
3
6

1
1
2
1
2

Bullock 
Butler 
Calhoun 
Chambers 
Cherokee 

11,714
21,399
112,249
36,583
23,988

10
10
23
15
11

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
8
5
5

2
3
8
5
5

6
5
9
7
4

1
1
5
2
1

Chilton 
Choctaw 
Clarke 
Clay
Cleburne 

39,593
15,922
27,867
14,254
14,123

11
13
14
12
10

1
1
1
1
1

4
7
5
2
4

4
7
5
2
4

5
4
6
8
4

1
1
2
1
1

Coffee 
Colbert 
Conecuh
Coosa 
Covington

43,615
54,984
14,089
12,202
37,631

16
20
11
7
26

1
1
1
1
1

4
6
3
2
14

4
6
3
2
14

8
9
6
3
8

3
4
1
1
3

Crenshaw
Cullman 
Dale 
Dallas 
De Kalb 

13,665
77,483
49,129
46,365
64,452

13
22
21
11
35

1
1
1
1
1

6
11
10
2
16

6
11
10
2
16

5
8
7
6
16

1
2
3
2
2

Elmore 
Escambia 
Etowah 
Fayette 
Franklin 

65,874
38,440
103,459
18,495
31,223

17
16
28
11
15

1
1
1
1
1

7
6
12
4
5

7
6
12
4
5

7
7
12
5
7

2
2
3
1
2

Geneva
Greene 
Hale 
Henry 
Houston 

25,764
9,974
17,185
16,310
88,787

19
10
10
11
25

1
1
1
1
1

8
4
4
4
12

8
4
4
4
12

8
4
4
5
10

2
1
1
1
2

Jackson 
Jefferson 
Lamar 
Lauderdale
Lawrence 

53,926
662,047
15,904
87,966
34,803

24
60
17
17
15

1
1
1
1
1

13
32
6
7
5

13
32
6
7
5

8
17
9
7
8

2
10
1
2
1

Lee 
Limestone 
Lowndes
Macon
Madison 

115,092
65,676
13,473
24,105
276,700

15
15
13
12
23

1
1
1
1
1

3
5
7
4
6

3
5
7
4
6

8
7
4
6
13

3
2
1
1
3

Marengo 
Marion 
Marshall 
Mobile 
Monroe 

22,539
31,214
82,231
399,843
24,324

16
20
25
29
12

1
1
1
1
1

8
7
7
10
5

8
7
7
10
5

4
10
13
17
5

3
2
4
1
1

Montgomery 
Morgan 
Perry 
Pickens
Pike 

223,510
111,064
11,861
20,949
29,605

16
19
10
18
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
7
2
8
4

2
7
2
8
4

12
8
6
8
5

1
3
1
1
2

Randolph 
Russell 
Shelby 
St Clair 
Sumter 

22,380
49,756
143,293
64,742
14,798

11
8
26
28
13

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
12
11
7

4
2
12
11
7

4
3
12
14
4

2
2
1
2
1

Talladega 
Tallapoosa 
Tuscaloosa 
Walker 
Washington 
Wilcox 
Winston 

80,321
41,475
164,875
70,713
18,097
13,183
24,843

23
20
27
23
13
11
12

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

8
7
7
11
3
5
6

8
7
7
11
3
5
6

11
10
17
9
8
4
3

3
2
2
2
1
1
2

Alaska 

626,932

175

12

149

149

14

35

Aleutians East Borough 


Aleutians West Census Area4 
Anchorage City and Borough4 
Bethel Census Area4 
Bristol Bay Borough 

2,697
5,465
260,283
16,006
1,258

6
4
4
19
1

5
4
1
18

5
4
1
18

3
1

1
1
1

Denali Borough 


Dillingham Census Area4 
Fairbanks North Star Borough 
Haines Borough 
Juneau City and Borough4 

1,893
4,922
82,840
2,392
30,711

2
8
4
2
3

1
1

1
7
2
1
1

1
7
2
1
1

1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Kanai Peninsula Borough 


Ketchikan Gateway Borough 
Kodiak Island Borough 
Lake and Peninsula Borough 
Matanuska Susitna Borough 

49,691
14,070
13,913
1,823
59,322

7
3
8
7
4

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
6
6
3

6
2
6
6
3

1
1
1
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

22

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

16
7
10

16
7
10

1
1
1

1
2
1

6
1

6
1

3
1

5
2
4
12
5
1
18

5
2
3
12
5
1
18

5
2
3
12
5
1
18

2
1
3
1
3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Nome Census Area4 


North Slope Borough 
Northwest Arctic Borough 
Prince of Wales Outer Ketchikan Census
Area4 
Sitka City and Borough4 

9,196
7,385
7,208

17
9
12

1
1

6,146
8,835

7
1

Skagway Hoonah Angoon Census Area4 


Southeast Fairbanks Census Area4 
Valdez Cordova Census Area4 
Wade Hampton Census Area4 
Wrangell Petersburg Census Area4 
Yakutat City and Borough4 
Yukon Kayukuk Census Area4 

3,436
6,174
10,195
7,028
6,684
808
6,551

AlaskaCon.



5,130,632

638

15

87

87

305

231

14

Apache 
Cochise 
Coconino 
Gila 
Graham 

Arizona

69,423
117,755
116,320
51,335
33,489

24
51
38
31
19

1
1
1
1
1

3
7
4
5
3

3
7
4
5
3

9
20
24
17
7

11
23
9
8
8

1
1

Greenlee 
La Paz 
Maricopa 
Mohave 
Navajo 

8,547
19,715
3,072,149
155,032
97,470

10
19
153
45
40

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
24
4
6

2
2
24
4
6

2
10
71
24
21

5
6
57
16
12

1
2
2

Pima 
Pinal 
Santa Cruz
Yavapai 
Yuma 

843,746
179,727
38,381
167,517
160,026

46
61
13
55
33

1
1
1
1
1

5
8
2
8
4

5
8
2
8
4

23
33
4
22
18

17
19
6
24
10

2
2

Arkansas

2,673,400

1,588

75

499

499

704

310

Arkansas 
Ashley
Baxter 
Benton 
Boone 

20,749
24,209
38,386
153,406
33,948

20
18
25
32
23

1
1
1
1
1

6
7
8
18
11

6
7
8
18
11

9
7
13
6
5

4
3
3
7
6

Bradley 
Calhoun 
Carroll 
Chicot 
Clark 

12,600
5,744
25,357
14,117
23,546

8
7
13
18
14

1
1
1
1
1

3
4
6
3
7

3
4
6
3
7

2
1
3
11
4

2
1
3
3
2

Clay
Cleburne 
Cleveland 
Columbia 
Conway 

17,609
24,046
8,571
25,603
20,336

20
17
8
18
21

1
1
1
1
1

12
5
2
5
4

12
5
2
5
4

4
6
2
6
13

3
5
3
6
3

Craighead 
Crawford 
Crittenden 
Cross 
Dallas 

82,148
53,247
50,866
19,526
9,210

64
30
37
18
10

1
1
1
1
1

10
8
12
4
3

10
8
12
4
3

45
16
19
10
3

8
5
5
3
3

Desha 
Drew 
Faulkner 
Franklin 
Fulton 

15,341
18,723
86,014
17,771
11,642

24
10
23
15
10

1
1
1
1
1

6
5
10
6
3

6
5
10
6
3

13
2
6
3
3

4
2
6
5
3

Garland 
Grant 
Greene 
Hempstead 
Hot Spring 

88,068
16,464
37,331
23,587
30,353

27
10
27
21
15

1
1
1
1
1

4
5
5
10
5

4
5
5
10
5

15
2
17
6
4

7
2
4
4
5

Howard 
Independence 
Izard 
Jackson 
Jefferson 

14,300
34,233
13,249
18,418
84,278

13
25
17
36
38

1
1
1
1
1

4
8
8
11
6

4
8
8
11
6

4
9
4
21
26

4
7
4
3
5

Johnson 
Lafayette 
Lawrence 
Lee 
Lincoln 

22,781
8,559
17,774
12,580
14,492

13
14
40
17
14

1
1
1
1
1

5
4
14
6
3

5
4
14
6
3

3
6
19
9
7

4
3
6
1
3

Little River 


Logan 
Lonoke 
Madison 
Marion 

13,628
22,486
52,828
14,243
16,140

15
19
31
9
12

1
1
1
1
1

5
9
10
3
5

5
9
10
3
5

7
5
16
2
3

2
4
4
3
3

Miller 
Mississippi 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Nevada 

40,443
51,979
10,254
9,245
9,955

19
40
14
10
14

1
1
1
1
1

3
17
5
4
7

3
17
5
4
7

11
16
5
2
3

4
6
3
3
3

Newton 
Ouachita
Perry 
Phillips 
Pike 

8,608
28,790
10,209
26,445
11,303

10
15
16
22
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
7
7
6
5

2
7
7
6
5

3
3
5
10
2

4
4
3
5
4

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

23

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

ArkansasCon.
Poinsett 
Polk 
Pope 
Prairie 
Pulaski 

25,614
20,229
54,469
9,539
361,474

23
16
24
14
127

1
1
1
1
1

8
6
6
5
8

8
6
6
5
8

9
4
12
5
115

5
5
5
3
3

Randolph 
Saline 
Scott 
Searcy 
Sebastian 

18,195
83,529
10,996
8,261
115,071

17
32
7
12
24

1
1
1
1
1

6
6
1
5
11

6
6
1
5
11

6
20
4
2
6

4
5
1
4
6

Sevier 
Sharp 
St Francis
Stone 
Union 

15,757
17,119
29,329
11,499
45,629

11
19
17
7
20

1
1
1
1
1

5
8
8
2
8

5
8
8
2
8

2
6
5
1
2

3
4
3
3
9

Van Buren 


Washington 
White 
Woodruff 
Yell 
California 
Alameda 
Alpine 
Amador
Butte 
Calaveras

16,192
157,715
67,165
8,741
21,139
33,871,648
1,443,741
1,208
35,100
203,171
40,554

12
31
54
14
19
4,409
86
6
33
72
47

1
1
1
1
1
57
1
1
1
1
1

4
13
16
5
7
475
14

5
5
1

4
13
16
5
7
475
14

5
5
1

2
8
28
5
5
2,830
50
4
26
51
41

5
9
9
3
6
1,047
21
1
1
15
4

60
1
1
1
1
1

Colusa 
Contra Costa 
Del Norte 
El Dorado 
Fresno 

18,804
948,816
27,507
156,299
799,407

51
110
24
78
160

1
1
1
1
1

2
19
1
2
15

2
19
1
2
15

44
71
21
59
107

4
19
1
16
37

1
1
1
1
1

Glenn 
Humboldt 
Imperial 
Inyo 
Kern 

26,453
126,518
142,361
17,945
661,645

45
98
50
35
161

1
1
1
1
1

2
7
7
1
11

2
7
7
1
11

33
57
25
26
100

9
33
17
7
49

1
1
2
1
1

Kings
Lake 
Lassen 
Los Angeles
Madera 

129,461
58,309
33,828
9,519,338
123,109

64
44
38
347
33

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
1
88
2

4
2
1
88
2

45
34
25
165
20

14
7
11
93
10

1
1
1
1
1

Marin
Mariposa 
Mendocino 
Merced 
Modoc

247,289
17,130
86,265
210,554
9,449

85
8
71
84
43

1
1
1
1
1

11

4
6
1

11

4
6
1

54
6
53
56
38

19
1
13
21
3

1
1
1
1
1

Mono
Monterey 
Napa 
Nevada 
Orange 

12,853
401,762
124,279
92,033
2,846,289

29
97
25
47
137

1
1
1
1
1

1
12
5
3
33

1
12
5
3
33

25
58
13
33
72

2
26
6
10
31

1
1
1
1
1

Placer 
Plumas 
Riverside 
Sacramento 
San Benito 

248,399
20,824
1,545,387
1,223,499
53,234

72
49
147
134
25

1
1
1
1
1

6
1
24
6
2

6
1
24
6
2

46
45
95
110
11

19
2
27
17
11

1
1
1
1
1

San Bernardino 


San Diego 
San Francisco4 
San Joaquin 
San Luis Obispo 

1,709,434
2,813,833
776,733
563,598
246,681

156
169
13
127
64

1
1

1
1

24
18
1
7
7

24
18
1
7
7

94
103
10
103
45

37
47
2
16
11

1
1
1
1
1

San Mateo 


Santa Barbara 
Santa Clara 
Santa Cruz
Shasta 

707,161
399,347
1,682,585
255,602
163,256

85
76
91
50
71

1
1
1
1
1

20
7
15
4
3

20
7
15
4
3

40
44
38
34
41

24
24
37
11
26

2
1
1
1
1

Sierra 
Siskiyou 
Solano 
Sonoma 
Stanislaus 

3,555
44,301
394,542
458,614
446,997

16
84
66
104
101

1
1
1
1
1

1
9
7
9
9

1
9
7
9
9

13
45
51
55
65

1
29
7
39
26

1
1
1
1
1

Sutter 
Tehama 
Trinity 
Tulare 
Tuolumne 

78,930
56,039
13,022
368,021
54,501

44
50
30
165
35

1
1
1
1
1

2
3

8
1

2
3

8
1

29
28
18
108
21

12
18
11
48
12

1
1
1
1
1

Ventura
Yolo
Yuba 
Colorado 

753,197
168,660
60,219
4,301,261

78
54
45
1,928

1
1
1
62

10
4
2
270

10
4
2
270

46
44
36
1,414

21
5
6
182

1
1
1

Adams 
Alamosa 
Arapahoe 
Archuleta 
Baca 

363,857
14,966
487,967
9,898
4,517

69
16
148
16
30

1
1
1
1
1

7
2
12
1
6

7
2
12
1
6

54
11
128
13
18

7
2
7
1
5

See footnotes at end of table.

24

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

1
9
1
3
2

1
9
1
3
2

11
50
1
10
14

2
2

2
2

1
1
1
1
1

4
5
2
4
2

4
5
2
4
2

6
18
8
3
6

1
3
2
1
1

33
26
10
98
50

1
1
1

6
1
2
4
7

6
1
2
4
7

25
24
6
92
41

1
1
1
1
1

516,929
19,872
46,145
43,791
4,757

93
22
20
31
9

1
1
1
1
1

8
3
6
6
2

8
3
6
6
2

69
13
10
21
5

15
5
3
3
1

Grand 
Gunnison 
Hinsdale 
Huerfano 
Jackson 

12,442
13,956
790
7,862
1,577

38
19
7
18
7

1
1
1
1
1

6
5
1
2
1

6
5
1
2
1

29
12
4
13
4

2
1
1
2
1

Jefferson 
Kiowa 
Kit Carson 
La Plata 
Lake 

527,056
1,622
8,011
43,941
7,812

104
17
29
36
12

1
1
1
1
1

8
3
6
3
1

8
3
6
3
1

94
11
17
29
8

1
2
5
3
2

Larimer 
Las Animas 
Lincoln 
Logan 
Mesa 

251,494
15,207
6,087
20,504
116,255

51
22
18
24
48

1
1
1
1
1

6
6
4
6
5

6
6
4
6
5

41
9
10
12
39

3
6
3
5
3

Mineral 
Moffat 
Montezuma 
Montrose 
Morgan 

831
13,184
23,830
33,432
27,171

5
12
33
27
28

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
3
4
5

1
2
3
4
5

2
8
26
20
18

1
1
3
2
4

Otero 
Ouray 
Park 
Phillips 
Pitkin 

20,311
3,742
14,523
4,480
14,872

29
14
24
15
25

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
2
3
2

6
2
2
3
2

16
9
19
9
21

6
2
2
2
1

Prowers 
Pueblo 
Rio Blanco 
Rio Grande 
Routt 

14,483
141,472
5,986
12,413
19,690

31
28
23
19
35

1
1
1
1
1

5
3
2
3
4

5
3
2
3
4

21
22
17
12
27

4
2
3
3
3

Saguache
San Juan 
San Miguel
Sedgwick 
Summit 

5,917
558
6,594
2,747
23,548

16
4
22
19
28

1
1
1
1
1

5
1
5
3
6

5
1
5
3
6

7
1
14
13
20

3
1
2
2
1

Teller
Washington 
Weld 
Yuma 

20,555
4,926
180,936
9,841

23
16
120
26

1
1
1
1

3
2
26
3

3
2
26
3

17
8
80
18

2
5
13
4

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Bent 
Boulder 
Broomfield4 
Chaffee
Cheyenne 

5,998
291,288
38,272
16,242
2,231

15
62
2
16
19

1
1

1
1

Clear Creek 


Conejos 
Costilla 
Crowley 
Custer 

9,322
8,400
3,663
5,518
3,503

12
27
13
9
10

Delta 
Denver4 
Dolores 
Douglas 
Eagle 

27,834
554,636
1,844
175,766
41,659

El Paso 
Elbert 
Fremont 
Garfield
Gilpin 

ColoradoCon.

Connecticut 

3,405,565

580

179

30

149

384

17

148

Fairfield4 
Hartford4 
Litchfield4 
Middlesex4 
New Haven4 

882,567
857,183
182,193
155,071
824,008

124
82
69
51
87

24
29
28
16
28

6
3
3
2
9

18
26
25
14
19

99
52
36
32
56

1
1
5
3
3

23
27
17
11
23

New London4 


Tolland4 
Windham4 

259,088
136,364
109,091

77
40
50

25
13
16

19
13
15

51
25
33

1
2
1

19
13
15

Delaware 

783,600

339

57

57

260

19

Kent 
New Castle 
Sussex 

126,697
500,265
156,638

106
53
180

1
1
1

19
13
25

19
13
25

81
33
146

5
6
8



572,059

Washington DC4 

District of Columbia

572,059

Florida 

15,982,378

1,191

66

404

404

626

95

Alachua 
Baker 
Bay 
Bradford 
Brevard

217,955
22,259
148,217
26,088
476,230

18
8
19
7
36

1
1
1
1
1

9
2
8
4
15

9
2
8
4
15

6
4
8
1
18

2
1
2
1
2

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

25

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

30
2
1
2
4

30
2
1
2
4

45
1
10
4
7

2
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1

3
2
1
2
5

3
2
1
2
5

22
3
4
1
2

1
2
1
1
2

9
11
11
10
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
2
6
3

2
5
2
6
3

4
4
7
2
2

2
1
1
1
1

10,576
13,332
13,327
26,938
36,210

6
5
8
7
23

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
3
3
2

1
2
3
3
2

3
1
3
2
19

1
1
1
1
1

Hernando 
Highlands 
Hillsborough 
Holmes 
Indian River 

130,802
87,366
998,948
18,564
112,947

10
10
36
11
18

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
3
5
5

2
3
3
5
5

6
4
30
4
11

1
2
2
1
1

Jackson 
Jefferson 
Lafayette 
Lake 
Lee 

46,755
12,902
7,022
210,528
440,888

19
4
4
28
55

1
1
1
1
1

11
1
1
14
5

11
1
1
14
5

5
1
1
11
47

2
1
1
2
2

Leon 
Levy 
Liberty
Madison 
Manatee 

239,452
34,450
7,021
18,733
264,002

14
12
3
9
39

1
1
1
1
1

1
7
1
3
6

1
7
1
3
6

10
3

3
30

2
1
1
2
2

Marion 
Martin 
Miami Dade 
Monroe 
Nassau 

258,916
126,731
2,253,362
79,589
57,663

19
11
40
15
9

1
1
1
1
1

5
4
30
5
3

5
4
30
5
3

11
5
7
7
4

2
1
2
2
1

Okaloosa 
Okeechobee 
Orange 
Osceola 
Palm Beach 

170,498
35,910
896,344
172,493
1,131,184

30
9
38
16
85

1
1
1
1
1

9
1
13
2
37

9
1
13
2
37

18
6
22
12
45

2
1
2
1
2

Pasco 
Pinellas
Polk 
Putnam 
Santa Rosa 

344,765
921,482
483,924
70,423
117,743

28
47
35
12
11

1
1
1
1
1

6
24
17
5
3

6
24
17
5
3

19
20
15
4
6

2
2
2
2
1

Sarasota
Seminole 
St Johns 
St Lucie 
Sumter 

325,957
365,196
123,135
192,695
53,345

16
14
16
21
11

1
1
1
1
1

3
7
3
3
5

3
7
3
3
5

11
4
11
15
4

1
2
1
2
1

Suwannee 
Taylor 
Union 
Volusia 
Wakulla 
Walton 
Washington 

34,844
19,256
13,442
443,343
22,863
40,601
20,973

8
4
7
31
6
13
9

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

2
1
3
16
2
3
5

2
1
3
16
2
3
5

4
1
2
12
2
8
2

1
1
1
2
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Broward 
Calhoun 
Charlotte 
Citrus 
Clay

1,623,018
13,017
141,627
118,085
140,814

78
5
13
8
13

1
1
1
1
1

Collier 
Columbia 
De Soto 
Dixie 
Duval4 

251,377
56,513
32,209
13,827
778,879

27
8
7
5
9

Escambia 
Flagler 
Franklin 
Gadsden 
Gilchrist 

294,410
49,832
11,057
45,087
14,437

Glades 
Gulf 
Hamilton 
Hardee 
Hendry 

FloridaCon.

Georgia 

8,186,453

1,448

156

531

531

581

180

Appling 
Atkinson 
Bacon 
Baker 
Baldwin

17,419
7,609
10,103
4,074
44,700

9
7
5
4
9

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
1
1
1

3
2
1
1
1

4
3
2
1
6

1
1
1
1
1

Banks 
Barrow 
Bartow 
Ben Hill 
Berrien 

14,422
46,144
76,019
17,484
16,235

5
11
15
6
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
7
1
4

2
5
7
1
4

1
4
5
3
1

1
1
2
1
1

Bibb
Bleckley 
Brantley 
Brooks 
Bryan 

153,887
11,666
14,629
16,450
23,417

13
5
5
7
6

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
2
2
2

2
1
2
2
2

9
2
1
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

Bulloch 
Burke 
Butts 
Calhoun 
Camden 

55,983
22,243
19,522
6,320
43,664

10
12
8
9
10

1
1
1
1
1

4
6
3
4
3

4
6
3
4
3

4
4
3
3
5

1
1
1
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

26

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

2
7
2
2
8

2
7
2
2
8

3
8
5
4
10

1
2
1
1
1

1
1
1

1
4
5
2
2

1
4
5
2
2

3
4
6
2

1
2
1
1
1

15
8
24
10
14

1
1
1
1
1

6
4
6
4
7

6
4
6
4
7

7
2
15
4
5

1
1
2
1
1

89,288
15,771
89,215
12,495
21,996

6
9
15
4
8

1
1
1
1
1

2
4
7
1
2

2
4
7
1
2

2
3
6
1
4

1
1
1
1
1

Dade 
Dawson 
DeKalb4 
Decatur
Dodge 

15,154
15,999
665,865
28,240
19,171

5
4
21
10
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
8
4
4

1
1
8
4
4

2
1
10
4
4

1
1
2
1
1

Dooly 
Dougherty 
Douglas 
Early 
Echols

11,525
96,065
92,174
12,354
3,754

12
10
8
7
3

1
1
1
1
1

6
1
1
3

6
1
1
3

4
7
5
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Effingham
Elbert 
Emanuel 
Evans 
Fannin 

37,535
20,511
21,837
10,495
19,798

6
8
13
9
9

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
7
4
3

3
2
7
4
3

1
4
4
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

Fayette 
Floyd 
Forsyth 
Franklin 
Fulton 

91,263
90,565
98,407
20,285
816,006

10
10
6
11
33

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
1
5
10

5
2
1
5
10

3
5
3
4
20

1
2
1
1
2

Gilmer 
Glascock 
Glynn 
Gordon 
Grady 

23,456
2,556
67,568
44,104
23,659

7
6
6
11
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
1
5
2

2
3
1
5
2

3
1
3
3
3

1
1
1
2
1

Greene 
Gwinnett 
Habersham 
Hall 
Hancock 

14,406
588,448
35,902
139,277
10,076

10
24
14
16
6

1
1
1
1
1

5
11
7
6
1

5
11
7
6
1

3
10
5
7
3

1
2
1
2
1

Haralson
Harris 
Hart 
Heard 
Henry 

25,690
23,695
22,997
11,012
119,341

15
8
9
8
12

1
1
1
1
1

4
4
2
3
4

4
4
2
3
4

8
2
5
3
6

2
1
1
1
1

Houston 
Irwin 
Jackson 
Jasper
Jeff Davis 

110,765
9,931
41,589
11,426
12,684

14
7
19
8
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
8
2
2

3
1
8
2
2

9
4
7
4
2

1
1
3
1
1

Jefferson 
Jenkins 
Johnson 
Jones 
Lamar 

17,266
8,575
8,560
23,639
15,912

10
6
9
3
11

1
1
1
1
1

6
1
3
1
3

6
1
3
1
3

2
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

Lanier 
Laurens 
Lee 
Liberty
Lincoln 

7,241
44,874
24,757
61,610
8,348

4
14
6
12
6

1
1
1
1
1

1
7
2
7
1

1
7
2
7
1

1
4
2
3
3

1
2
1
1
1

Long 
Lowndes
Lumpkin 
Macon
Madison 

10,304
92,115
21,016
14,074
25,730

3
17
8
7
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
5
1
4
6

1
5
1
4
6

9
5
1
2

1
2
1
1
1

Marion 
McDuffie 
McIntosh 
Meriwether 
Miller 

7,144
21,231
10,847
22,534
6,383

5
9
3
13
5

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
1
7
1

1
2
1
7
1

2
5

4
2

1
1
1
1
1

Mitchell 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Morgan 
Murray 

23,932
21,757
8,270
15,457
36,506

11
5
9
9
9

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
6
4
2

4
2
6
4
2

4
1
1
3
5

2
1
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Candler
Carroll 
Catoosa 
Charlton 
Chatham 

9,577
87,268
53,282
10,282
232,048

7
18
9
8
20

1
1
1
1
1

Chattahoochee 
Chattooga 
Cherokee 
Clarke4 
Clay

14,882
25,470
141,903
101,489
3,357

3
10
11
9
6

Clayton 
Clinch 
Cobb 
Coffee 
Colquitt 

236,517
6,878
607,751
37,413
42,053

Columbia 
Cook 
Coweta 
Crawford 
Crisp 

GeorgiaCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

27

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

GeorgiaCon.
Muscogee4 
Newton 
Oconee
Oglethorpe 
Paulding 

186,291
62,001
26,225
12,635
81,678

9
12
6
7
7

1
1
1
1

1
5
4
4
3

1
5
4
4
3

7
5

1
2

1
1
1
1
1

Peach 
Pickens
Pierce 
Pike 
Polk 

23,668
22,983
15,636
13,688
38,127

10
7
6
7
9

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
3
5
3

2
3
3
5
3

6
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Pulaski 
Putnam 
Quitman 
Rabun 
Randolph 

9,588
18,812
2,598
15,050
7,791

8
6
3
9
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
5
3

1
1
1
5
3

5
3

2
5

1
1
1
1
1

Richmond4 
Rockdale 
Schley
Screven 
Seminole 

199,775
70,111
3,766
15,374
9,369

11
9
5
11
5

1
1
1
1

3
1
1
5
2

3
1
1
5
2

7
6
2
4
1

1
1
1
1
1

Spalding 
Stephens 
Stewart 
Sumter 
Talbot 

58,417
25,435
5,252
33,200
6,498

10
9
5
16
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
2
5
4

3
3
2
5
4

5
4
1
9

1
1
1
1
1

Taliaferro 
Tattnall 
Taylor 
Telfair 
Terrell 

2,077
22,305
8,815
11,794
10,970

5
9
5
12
8

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
2
6
4

2
5
2
6
4

1
2
1
4
2

1
1
1
1
1

Thomas 
Tift 
Toombs 
Towns 
Treutlen 

42,737
38,407
26,067
9,319
6,854

15
11
9
7
6

1
1
1
1
1

7
3
3
2
1

7
3
3
2
1

5
6
3
3
3

2
1
2
1
1

Troup 
Turner 
Twiggs 
Union 
Upson 

58,779
9,504
10,590
17,289
27,597

11
6
5
6
8

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
1
1
2

3
3
1
1
2

6
1
2
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

Walker 
Walton 
Ware 
Warren 
Washington 

61,053
60,687
35,483
6,336
21,176

12
16
7
7
12

1
1
1
1
1

4
7
1
3
7

4
7
1
3
7

5
6
4
2
3

2
2
1
1
1

Wayne 
Webster 
Wheeler 
White 
Whitfield 

26,565
2,390
6,179
19,944
83,525

8
4
6
6
12

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
2
2
4

3
2
2
2
4

2
2
5

1
1
1
1
2

Wilcox 
Wilkes 
Wilkinson 
Worth 
Hawaii5 

8,577
10,687
10,220
21,967

8
8
9
8

1
1
1
1

4
3
7
4

4
3
7
4

2
3

1
1
1
1

Hawaii
Honolulu City and County4 
Kauai 
Maui 
Idaho 

1,211,537
148,677
876,156
58,463
128,094
1,293,953

19
5
5
3
6
1,158

3
1

1
1
44

200

200

15
4
4
2
5
798

116

Ada 
Adams 
Bannock 
Bear Lake 
Benewah 

300,904
3,476
75,565
6,411
9,171

46
18
28
24
20

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
7
5
3

6
2
7
5
3

36
13
18
17
14

3
2
2
1
2

Bingham 
Blaine 
Boise
Bonner 
Bonneville 

41,735
18,991
6,670
36,835
82,522

39
24
18
48
30

1
1
1
1
1

6
5
4
9
6

6
5
4
9
6

27
17
10
36
20

5
1
3
2
3

Boundary 
Butte 
Camas 
Canyon 
Caribou

9,871
2,899
991
131,441
7,304

23
11
8
56
20

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
1
8
3

2
3
1
8
3

19
6
5
39
13

1
1
1
8
3

Cassia 
Clark 
Clearwater 
Custer 
Elmore 

21,416
1,022
8,930
4,342
29,130

40
7
38
19
23

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
4
4
2

5
2
4
4
2

33
3
32
12
17

1
1
1
2
3

Franklin 
Fremont 
Gem 
Gooding 
Idaho

11,329
11,819
15,181
14,155
15,511

26
23
16
28
42

1
1
1
1
1

6
8
1
4
7

6
8
1
4
7

17
13
13
19
32

2
1
1
4
2

See footnotes at end of table.

28

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

IdahoCon.
Jefferson 
Jerome 
Kootenai 
Latah
Lemhi 

19,155
18,342
108,685
34,935
7,806

29
17
58
44
16

1
1
1
1
1

7
3
14
9
2

7
3
14
9
2

18
11
38
28
11

3
2
5
6
2

Lewis 
Lincoln 
Madison 
Minidoka
Nez Perce 

3,747
4,044
27,467
20,174
37,410

21
18
18
17
24

1
1
1
1
1

5
3
2
5
4

5
3
2
5
4

12
11
13
10
16

3
3
2
1
3

Oneida 
Owyhee 
Payette 
Power 
Shoshone

4,125
10,644
20,578
7,538
13,771

13
30
22
21
32

1
1
1
1
1

1
3
3
2
7

1
3
3
2
7

10
22
15
15
20

1
4
3
3
4

Teton 
Twin Falls
Valley 
Washington 

5,999
64,284
7,651
9,977

14
41
20
28

1
1
1
1

3
8
3
3

3
8
3
3

9
23
14
21

1
9
2
3



12,419,293

6,903

102

2,722

1,291

1,431

3,145

934

Adams 
Alexander
Bond 
Boone 
Brown 

Illinois

68,277
9,590
17,633
41,786
6,950

74
20
29
32
23

1
1
1
1
1

37
4
16
15
13

14
4
7
6
4

23

9
9
9

30
13
10
14
8

6
2
2
2
1

Bureau 
Calhoun 
Carroll 
Cass 
Champaign 

35,503
5,084
16,674
13,695
179,669

106
18
43
38
178

1
1
1
1
1

47
5
19
16
53

23
5
7
5
23

24

12
11
30

43
10
18
18
108

15
2
5
3
16

Christian 
Clark 
Clay
Clinton 
Coles 

35,372
17,008
14,560
35,535
53,196

104
35
30
73
79

1
1
1
1
1

30
19
18
28
18

13
4
6
13
6

17
15
12
15
12

67
12
8
32
56

6
3
3
12
4

Cook 
Crawford 
Cumberland 
De Kalb 
De Witt 

5,376,741
20,452
11,253
88,969
16,798

539
37
26
80
51

1
1
1
1
1

150
16
12
31
20

121
6
4
12
7

29
10
8
19
13

236
16
11
40
28

152
4
2
8
2

Douglas 
Du Page 
Edgar 
Edwards 
Effingham

19,922
904,161
19,704
6,971
34,264

87
169
72
19
47

1
1
1
1
1

17
38
23
4
25

8
29
8
4
10

9
9
15

15

65
85
43
13
16

4
45
5
1
5

Fayette 
Ford 
Franklin 
Fulton 
Gallatin 

21,802
14,241
39,018
38,250
6,445

54
54
56
120
30

1
1
1
1
1

27
21
26
46
17

7
9
14
20
7

20
12
12
26
10

22
30
18
64
11

4
2
11
9
1

Greene 
Grundy 
Hamilton 
Hancock 
Hardin 

14,761
37,535
8,621
20,121
4,800

40
60
29
70
8

1
1
1
1
1

22
29
17
40
3

9
12
5
15
3

13
17
12
25

14
18
10
22
3

3
12
1
7
1

Henderson 
Henry 
Iroquois 
Jackson 
Jasper

8,213
51,020
31,334
59,612
10,117

32
93
159
58
30

1
1
1
1
1

19
38
47
27
18

8
14
21
11
7

11
24
26
16
11

10
45
101
22
10

2
9
10
8
1

Jefferson 
Jersey 
Jo Daviess 
Johnson 
Kane 

40,045
21,668
22,289
12,878
404,119

54
28
60
20
108

1
1
1
1
1

25
17
33
7
38

9
6
10
7
22

16
11
23

16

10
9
20
6
58

18
1
6
6
11

Kankakee 
Kendall 
Knox 
La Salle 
Lake 

103,833
54,544
55,836
111,509
644,356

105
37
68
135
194

1
1
1
1
1

34
15
35
60
63

17
6
14
23
45

17
9
21
37
18

57
15
26
45
84

13
6
6
29
46

Lawrence 
Lee 
Livingston
Logan 
Macon

15,452
36,062
39,678
31,183
114,706

46
67
99
69
90

1
1
1
1
1

15
34
44
28
29

6
12
14
11
12

9
22
30
17
17

28
25
41
33
52

2
7
13
7
8

Macoupin 
Madison 
Marion 
Marshall 
Mason

49,019
258,941
41,691
13,180
16,038

83
144
61
37
58

1
1
1
1
1

53
51
31
20
21

27
27
14
8
8

26
24
17
12
13

20
77
14
14
33

9
15
15
2
3

Massac 
McDonough 
McHenry
McLean 
Menard 

15,161
32,913
260,077
150,433
12,486

14
54
103
132
26

1
1
1
1
1

3
29
44
52
5

3
10
27
21
5

19
17
31

8
19
39
68
17

2
5
19
11
3

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

29

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

25
6
39
10
14

10
6
20
10
6

15

19

19
15
41
14
34

3
3
4
5
3

1
1
1
1
1

36
35
6
16
42

12
15
6
8
18

24
20

8
24

26
33
8
44
17

11
17
5
5
5

10
14
22
41
25

1
1
1
1
1

2
7
10
14
14

2
7
6
14
5

6
4
10
19
7

1
2
1
7
3

149,374
26,733
188,951
7,189
5,537

83
41
105
26
17

1
1
1
1
1

33
19
51
17
7

15
6
25
4
7

18
13
26
13

39
16
39
7
7

10
5
14
1
2

Shelby 
St Clair 
Stark 
Stephenson 
Tazewell 

22,893
256,082
6,332
48,979
128,485

68
131
26
61
108

1
1
1
1
1

35
49
12
29
35

11
27
4
11
16

24
22
8
18
19

27
53
11
25
53

5
28
2
6
19

Union 
Vermilion 
Wabash 
Warren 
Washington 

18,293
83,919
12,937
18,735
15,148

26
118
26
37
48

1
1
1
1
1

6
40
4
20
28

6
21
4
5
12

19

15
16

11
64
19
11
12

8
13
2
5
7

Wayne 
White 
Whiteside 
Will 
Williamson 
Winnebago 
Woodford 

17,151
15,371
60,653
502,266
61,296
278,418
35,469

53
38
86
162
46
75
65

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

29
20
33
49
16
25
32

9
10
11
25
16
11
15

20
10
22
24

14
17

15
14
42
82
23
37
23

8
3
10
30
6
12
9

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Mercer 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Morgan 
Moultrie 

16,957
27,619
30,652
36,616
14,287

48
25
85
30
52

1
1
1
1
1

Ogle 
Peoria 
Perry 
Piatt
Pike 

51,032
183,433
23,094
16,365
17,384

74
86
20
66
65

Pope 
Pulaski 
Putnam 
Randolph 
Richland 

4,413
7,348
6,086
33,893
16,149

Rock Island 


Saline 
Sangamon 
Schuyler 
Scott 

IllinoisCon.

Indiana

6,080,485

3,085

91

1,575

567

1,008

1,125

294

Adams 
Allen 
Bartholomew 
Benton 
Blackford 

33,625
331,849
71,435
9,421
14,048

32
55
30
36
19

1
1
1
1
1

16
28
18
17
7

4
8
6
6
3

12
20
12
11
4

12
22
9
17
10

3
4
2
1
1

Boone 
Brown 
Carroll 
Cass 
Clark 

46,107
14,957
20,165
40,930
96,472

37
13
33
32
39

1
1
1
1
1

19
5
19
19
18

7
1
5
5
6

12
4
14
14
12

14
6
11
9
17

3
1
2
3
3

Clay
Clinton 
Crawford 
Daviess 
De Kalb 

26,556
33,866
10,743
29,820
40,285

25
33
20
31
39

1
1
1
1
1

18
20
14
17
23

7
6
5
7
8

11
14
9
10
15

5
8
4
10
12

1
4
1
3
3

Dearborn 
Decatur
Delaware 
Dubois 
Elkhart 

46,109
24,555
118,769
39,674
182,791

38
25
40
38
60

1
1
1
1
1

21
15
19
17
23

7
6
7
5
7

14
9
12
12
16

13
7
13
16
29

3
2
7
4
7

Fayette 
Floyd 
Fountain 
Franklin 
Fulton 

25,588
70,823
17,954
22,151
20,511

17
17
32
26
28

1
1
1
1
1

10
8
19
18
12

1
3
8
5
4

9
5
11
13
8

5
7
9
6
12

1
1
3
1
3

Gibson 
Grant 
Greene 
Hamilton 
Hancock 

32,500
73,403
33,157
182,740
55,391

35
42
40
61
37

1
1
1
1
1

20
23
22
17
17

10
10
7
8
8

10
13
15
9
9

11
14
12
37
15

3
4
5
6
4

Harrison 
Hendricks 
Henry 
Howard 
Huntington 

34,325
104,093
48,508
84,964
38,075

32
65
54
35
35

1
1
1
1
1

21
23
28
14
18

9
11
15
3
6

12
12
13
11
12

7
35
20
15
15

3
6
5
5
1

Jackson 
Jasper
Jay 
Jefferson 
Jennings

41,335
30,043
21,806
31,705
27,554

32
30
25
24
20

1
1
1
1
1

16
17
18
14
13

4
4
6
4
2

12
13
12
10
11

11
10
5
7
5

4
2
1
2
1

Johnson 
Knox 
Kosciusko 
La Porte 
Lagrange 

115,209
39,256
74,057
110,106
34,909

45
33
50
61
27

1
1
1
1
1

17
19
30
32
14

8
9
13
11
3

9
10
17
21
11

21
10
15
20
9

6
3
4
8
3

See footnotes at end of table.

30

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

30
12
29
24
16

19
3
15
15
6

11
9
14
9
10

40
11
18
33
14

16
2
5
11
5

1
1
1
1
1

9
20
14
22
21

3
6
3
11
7

6
14
11
11
14

6
7
13
15
11

2
4
2
3
4

27
41
9
30
23

1
1
1
1
1

15
20
5
14
15

5
7
1
4
2

10
13
4
10
13

9
17
2
12
6

2
3
1
3
1

17,241
18,899
12,837
146,798
27,061

32
23
21
53
28

1
1
1
1
1

19
10
12
23
15

6
3
3
11
5

13
7
9
12
10

9
9
7
22
9

3
3
1
7
3

Pulaski 
Putnam 
Randolph 
Ripley 
Rush 

13,755
36,019
27,401
26,523
18,261

26
38
36
32
24

1
1
1
1
1

16
19
20
18
15

4
6
9
7
3

12
13
11
11
12

7
14
10
9
7

2
4
5
4
1

Scott 
Shelby 
Spencer 
St Joseph 
Starke 

22,960
43,445
20,391
265,559
23,556

19
30
30
52
28

1
1
1
1
1

7
16
15
22
12

2
2
6
9
3

5
14
9
13
9

9
9
12
24
12

2
4
2
5
3

Steuben 
Sullivan
Switzerland 
Tippecanoe 
Tipton 

33,214
21,751
9,065
148,955
16,577

39
27
14
40
19

1
1
1
1
1

18
16
8
19
10

6
7
2
6
4

12
9
6
13
6

17
8
4
17
6

3
2
1
3
2

Union 
Vanderburgh 
Vermillion 
Vigo
Wabash 

7,349
171,922
16,788
105,848
34,960

14
18
24
31
25

1
1
1
1
1

8
10
12
16
12

2
2
7
4
5

6
8
5
12
7

4
6
9
13
9

1
1
2
1
3

Warren 
Warrick 
Washington 
Wayne 
Wells 
White 
Whitley 

8,419
52,383
27,223
71,097
27,600
25,267
30,707

25
31
35
48
23
39
25

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

16
16
21
29
14
19
13

4
6
8
14
5
7
4

12
10
13
15
9
12
9

7
13
10
13
5
15
9

1
1
3
5
3
4
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Lake 
Lawrence 
Madison 
Marion4 
Marshall 

484,564
45,922
133,358
860,454
45,128

87
26
53
68
36

1
1
1

Martin 
Miami 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Morgan 

10,369
36,082
120,563
37,629
66,689

18
32
30
41
37

Newton 
Noble 
Ohio 
Orange 
Owen 

14,566
46,275
5,623
19,306
21,786

Parke 
Perry 
Pike 
Porter 
Posey 

IndianaCon.

Iowa 

2,926,324

1,975

99

948

948

542

386

Adair 
Adams 
Allamakee 
Appanoose 
Audubon

8,243
4,482
14,675
13,721
6,830

12
9
14
17
12

1
1
1
1
1

5
4
6
11
5

5
4
6
11
5

4
2
4
2
4

2
2
3
3
2

Benton 
Black Hawk 
Boone 
Bremer 
Buchanan

25,308
128,012
26,224
23,325
21,093

25
23
18
17
18

1
1
1
1
1

14
9
9
8
11

14
9
9
8
11

7
8
3
2
3

3
5
5
6
3

Buena Vista 


Butler 
Calhoun 
Carroll 
Cass 

20,411
15,305
11,115
21,421
14,684

20
18
19
22
15

1
1
1
1
1

10
10
11
13
8

10
10
11
13
8

4
2
3
4
2

5
5
4
4
4

Cedar 
Cerro Gordo 
Cherokee 
Chickasaw 
Clarke 

18,187
46,447
13,035
13,095
9,133

16
40
15
15
8

1
1
1
1
1

8
10
8
8
3

8
10
8
8
3

2
23
3
3
2

5
6
3
3
2

Clay
Clayton 
Clinton 
Crawford 
Dallas 

17,372
18,678
50,149
16,942
40,750

21
27
26
21
25

1
1
1
1
1

10
18
14
13
14

10
18
14
13
14

7
3
5
3
4

3
5
6
4
6

Davis
Decatur
Delaware 
Des Moines 
Dickinson 

8,541
8,689
18,404
42,351
16,424

11
17
20
19
18

1
1
1
1
1

4
10
11
5
10

4
10
11
5
10

5
3
5
8
3

1
3
3
5
4

Dubuque 
Emmet 
Fayette 
Floyd 
Franklin 

89,143
11,027
22,008
16,900
10,704

29
15
23
18
33

1
1
1
1
1

21
6
13
7
8

21
6
13
7
8

5
5
4
7
21

2
3
5
3
3

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

31

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

IowaCon.
Fremont 
Greene 
Grundy 
Guthrie 
Hamilton 

8,010
10,366
12,369
11,353
16,438

21
14
16
17
17

1
1
1
1
1

8
7
9
9
9

8
7
9
9
9

8
3
3
3
3

4
3
3
4
4

Hancock 
Hardin 
Harrison 
Henry 
Howard 

12,100
18,812
15,666
20,336
9,932

17
32
34
21
10

1
1
1
1
1

8
12
10
11
5

8
12
10
11
5

4
14
18
5
2

4
5
5
4
2

Humboldt 
Ida 
Iowa 
Jackson 
Jasper

10,381
7,837
15,671
20,296
37,213

18
10
22
24
25

1
1
1
1
1

12
5
7
12
13

12
5
7
12
13

2
2
9
6
6

3
2
5
5
5

Jefferson 
Johnson 
Jones 
Keokuk 
Kossuth 

16,181
111,006
20,221
11,400
17,163

10
19
18
24
23

1
1
1
1
1

6
11
9
16
12

6
11
9
16
12

2
3
4
3
5

1
4
4
4
5

Lee 
Linn 
Louisa 
Lucas 
Lyon 

38,052
191,701
12,183
9,422
11,763

18
41
25
12
17

1
1
1
1
1

8
17
9
5
8

8
17
9
5
8

6
11
11
4
4

3
12
4
2
4

Madison 
Mahaska 
Marion 
Marshall 
Mills

14,019
22,335
32,052
39,311
14,547

16
17
19
21
25

1
1
1
1
1

8
9
9
13
7

8
9
9
13
7

4
4
4
2
14

3
3
5
5
3

Mitchell 
Monona 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Muscatine 

10,874
10,020
8,016
11,771
41,722

13
25
7
14
26

1
1
1
1
1

8
10
3
6
8

8
10
3
6
8

2
10
2
4
14

2
4
1
3
3

OBrien 
Osceola 
Page 
Palo Alto
Plymouth 

15,102
7,003
16,976
10,147
24,849

15
9
19
20
19

1
1
1
1
1

8
5
11
9
11

8
5
11
9
11

2
2
3
6
2

4
1
4
4
5

Pocahontas 
Polk 
Pottawattamie 
Poweshiek 
Ringgold 

8,662
374,601
87,704
18,815
5,469

13
56
33
15
16

1
1
1
1
1

8
17
14
8
10

8
17
14
8
10

2
28
9
3
3

2
10
9
3
2

Sac 
Scott 
Shelby 
Sioux
Story 

11,529
158,668
13,173
31,589
79,981

16
34
18
23
26

1
1
1
1
1

9
16
11
13
14

9
16
11
13
14

2
12
3
4
4

4
5
3
5
7

Tama 
Taylor 
Union 
Van Buren 
Wapello 

18,103
6,958
12,309
7,809
36,051

23
15
18
15
16

1
1
1
1
1

12
8
8
8
7

12
8
8
8
7

6
2
6
3
4

4
4
3
3
4

Warren 
Washington 
Wayne 
Webster 
Winnebago 

40,671
20,670
6,730
40,235
11,723

31
17
14
31
25

1
1
1
1
1

13
8
8
13
7

13
8
8
13
7

12
5
2
13
14

5
3
3
4
3

Winneshiek 
Woodbury 
Worth 
Wright 

21,310
103,877
7,909
14,334

17
29
12
16

1
1
1
1

8
15
7
8

8
15
7
8

4
5
2
3

4
8
2
4



2,688,418

3,887

104

1,926

627

1,299

1,533

324

Allen 
Anderson 
Atchison 
Barber
Barton 

Kansas

14,385
8,110
16,774
5,307
28,205

47
38
37
44
46

1
1
1
1
1

21
20
13
25
31

9
6
5
7
9

12
14
8
18
22

21
15
21
16
9

4
2
2
2
5

Bourbon 
Brown 
Butler 
Chase 
Chautauqua 

15,379
10,724
59,482
3,030
4,359

42
43
70
25
36

1
1
1
1
1

17
20
42
14
10

6
10
13
5
6

11
10
29
9
4

21
20
17
9
23

3
2
10
1
2

Cherokee 
Cheyenne 
Clark 
Clay
Cloud 

22,605
3,165
2,390
8,822
10,268

39
17
13
46
52

1
1
1
1
1

22
9
6
8
24

8
2
3
8
6

14
7
3

18

12
5
4
36
24

4
2
2
1
3

Coffey 
Comanche 
Cowley 
Crawford 
Decatur

8,865
1,967
36,291
38,242
3,472

42
15
61
38
45

1
1
1
1
1

20
6
32
19
29

6
3
7
10
4

14
3
25
9
25

18
7
22
13
13

3
1
6
5
2

See footnotes at end of table.

32

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

33
17
13
14
15

9
8
4
4
5

24
9
9
10
10

37
18
19
5
14

5
6
3
2
2

1
1
1
1
1

13
24
9
18
24

4
5
2
4
8

9
19
7
14
16

14
5
6
9
20

3
2
3
4
4

28
21
22
6
20

1
1
1
1
1

11
14
16
1
11

3
5
3
1
5

8
9
13

15
3
3
3
4

1
3
2
1
4

1,534
7,673
2,670
6,536
32,869

7
41
10
33
41

1
1
1
1
1

2
22
5
13
22

2
7
2
7
7

15
3
6
15

3
15
3
17
13

1
3
1
2
5

Haskell 
Hodgeman 
Jackson 
Jefferson 
Jewell 

4,307
2,085
12,657
18,426
3,791

13
18
33
72
51

1
1
1
1
1

5
11
9
20
32

2
2
9
8
7

3
9

12
25

5
4
20
45
15

2
2
3
6
3

Johnson 
Kearny 
Kingman 
Kiowa 
Labette 

451,086
4,531
8,673
3,278
22,835

56
18
37
13
43

1
1
1
1
1

29
9
30
3
21

20
2
7
3
8

9
7
23

13

19
6
4
6
16

7
2
2
3
5

Lane 
Leavenworth 
Lincoln 
Linn 
Logan 

2,155
68,691
3,578
9,570
3,046

14
41
24
38
19

1
1
1
1
1

6
16
14
18
14

1
6
4
7
3

5
10
10
11
11

5
18
7
16
2

2
6
2
3
2

Lyon 
Marion 
Marshall 
McPherson 
Meade 

35,935
13,361
10,965
29,554
4,631

38
71
75
55
25

1
1
1
1
1

20
36
34
33
12

9
12
9
8
3

11
24
25
25
9

14
29
36
16
10

3
5
4
5
2

Miami 
Mitchell 
Montgomery 
Morris 
Morton 

28,351
6,932
36,252
6,104
3,496

38
62
64
34
11

1
1
1
1
1

17
27
21
14
3

4
7
9
7
3

13
20
12
7

17
32
36
18
5

3
2
6
1
2

Nemaha 
Neosho 
Ness 
Norton
Osage 

10,717
16,997
3,454
5,953
16,712

57
58
24
26
60

1
1
1
1
1

28
19
15
10
25

8
7
5
5
9

20
12
10
5
16

25
35
4
12
29

3
3
4
3
5

Osborne 
Ottawa 
Pawnee 
Phillips 
Pottawatomie 

4,452
6,163
7,233
6,001
18,209

47
48
36
46
59

1
1
1
1
1

27
25
25
33
34

5
5
4
8
11

22
20
21
25
23

18
20
8
9
20

1
2
2
3
4

Pratt 
Rawlins
Reno 
Republic 
Rice

9,647
2,966
64,790
5,835
10,761

23
20
74
71
45

1
1
1
1
1

14
13
45
27
29

7
3
14
8
9

7
10
31
19
20

5
4
21
40
11

3
2
7
3
4

Riley 
Rooks 
Rush 
Russell 
Saline 

62,843
5,685
3,551
7,370
53,597

39
48
26
36
42

1
1
1
1
1

19
18
20
20
24

5
6
8
8
6

14
12
12
12
18

16
26
3
13
14

3
3
2
2
3

Scott 
Sedgwick 
Seward 
Shawnee 
Sheridan

5,120
452,869
22,510
169,871
2,813

10
89
13
49
12

1
1
1
1
1

5
46
5
17
7

1
19
2
5
2

4
27
3
12
5

3
32
4
25
3

1
10
3
6
1

Sherman 
Smith 
Stafford 
Stanton 
Stevens 

6,760
4,536
4,789
2,406
5,463

16
47
48
7
9

1
1
1
1
1

12
31
27
2
2

2
6
6
2
2

10
25
21

2
13
17
3
4

1
2
3
1
2

Sumner
Thomas 
Trego 
Wabaunsee 
Wallace 

25,946
8,180
3,319
6,885
1,749

71
30
15
40
11

1
1
1
1
1

41
18
9
20
6

11
5
2
7
2

30
13
7
13
4

22
7
4
17
2

7
4
1
2
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Dickinson 
Doniphan 
Douglas 
Edwards 
Elk 

19,344
8,249
99,962
3,449
3,261

76
42
36
22
32

1
1
1
1
1

Ellis 
Ellsworth 
Finney
Ford 
Franklin 

27,507
6,525
40,523
32,458
24,784

31
32
19
32
49

Geary 
Gove 
Graham 
Grant 
Gray 

27,947
3,068
2,946
7,909
5,904

Greeley
Greenwood 
Hamilton 
Harper 
Harvey 

KansasCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

33

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

35
1
21
9
3

10
1
7
3
3

25

14
6

31
3
33
15
7

4
1
3
1
5

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Washington 
Wichita 
Wilson
Woodson 
Wyandotte4 

6,483
2,531
10,332
3,788
157,882

71
6
58
26
15

1
1
1
1

KansasCon.

Kentucky

4,041,769

1,439

119

424

424

720

176

Adair 
Allen 
Anderson 
Ballard 
Barren

17,244
17,800
19,111
8,286
38,033

8
8
7
11
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
4
4

1
1
1
4
4

5
5
4
5
2

1
1
1
1
3

Bath 
Bell 
Boone 
Bourbon 
Boyd 

11,085
30,060
85,991
19,360
49,752

11
10
24
9
20

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
3
3
2

3
2
3
3
2

6
4
18
3
14

1
3
2
2
3

Boyle
Bracken 
Breathitt 
Breckinridge 
Bullitt 

27,697
8,279
16,100
18,648
61,236

10
12
9
10
17

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
1
3
8

3
3
1
3
8

4
6
5
4
7

2
2
2
2
1

Butler 
Caldwell 
Calloway 
Campbell 
Carlisle 

13,010
13,060
34,177
88,616
5,351

10
10
14
31
9

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
2
15
2

3
2
2
15
2

5
6
9
8
5

1
1
2
7
1

Carroll 
Carter 
Casey 
Christian 
Clark 

10,155
26,889
15,447
72,265
33,144

12
8
8
13
7

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
1
5
1

5
2
1
5
1

5
4
5
6
4

1
1
1
1
1

Clay
Clinton 
Crittenden 
Cumberland 
Daviess 

24,556
9,634
9,384
7,147
91,545

6
5
6
7
9

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
2

1
1
1
1
2

3
2
3
4
4

1
1
1
1
2

Edmonson 
Elliott 
Estill 
Fayette4 
Fleming 

11,644
6,748
15,307
260,512
13,792

7
8
10
3
10

1
1
1

1
1
2
1
2

1
1
2
1
2

4
5
6
1
6

1
1
1
1
1

Floyd 
Franklin 
Fulton 
Gallatin 
Garrard 

42,441
47,687
7,752
7,870
14,792

29
10
11
15
11

1
1
1
1
1

5
1
2
3
1

5
1
2
3
1

22
6
6
10
8

1
2
2
1
1

Grant 
Graves 
Grayson 
Green 
Greenup 

22,384
37,028
24,053
11,518
36,891

11
20
12
7
27

1
1
1
1
1

4
3
3
1
8

4
3
3
1
8

4
14
7
4
15

2
2
1
1
3

Hancock 
Hardin 
Harlan 
Harrison 
Hart 

8,392
94,174
33,202
17,983
17,445

6
14
16
6
9

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
7
2
3

2
5
7
2
3

2
5
6
2
4

1
3
2
1
1

Henderson 
Henry 
Hickman 
Hopkins 
Jackson 

44,829
15,060
5,262
46,519
13,495

10
18
7
20
7

1
1
1
1
1

3
5
2
9
1

3
5
2
9
1

5
10
3
8
4

1
2
1
2
1

Jefferson 
Jessamine 
Johnson 
Kenton 
Knott 

693,604
39,041
23,445
151,464
17,649

119
10
9
38
11

1
1
1
1
1

85
2
1
20
2

85
2
1
20
2

31
6
5
12
7

2
1
2
5
1

Knox 
Larue 
Laurel 
Lawrence 
Lee 

31,795
13,373
52,715
15,569
7,916

11
8
10
10
6

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
1
2
1

1
2
1
2
1

7
4
6
6
3

2
1
2
1
1

Leslie 
Letcher 
Lewis 
Lincoln 
Livingston

12,401
25,277
14,092
23,361
9,804

6
12
13
11
12

1
1
1
1
1

1
4
2
3
4

1
4
2
3
4

3
5
9
6
6

1
2
1
1
1

Logan 
Lyon 
Madison 
Magoffin 
Marion 

26,573
8,080
70,872
13,332
18,212

13
11
13
7
10

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
2
1
4

4
2
2
1
4

6
7
8
4
4

2
1
2
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

34

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

3
2
3
2

3
2
3
2

16
5
6
13
11

1
1
1
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

4
3
1
2
1

4
3
1
2
1

5
10
3
4
3

1
1
1
3
1

10
11
7
12
12

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
1
6
4

3
3
1
6
4

5
6
4
4
5

1
1
1
1
2

6,813
22,916
46,178
10,547
4,858

8
12
23
8
5

1
1
1
1
1

1
6
7
3
1

1
6
7
3
1

5
4
14
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

Pendleton
Perry 
Pike 
Powell 
Pulaski 

14,390
29,390
68,736
13,237
56,217

9
10
10
8
14

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
3
2
5

2
3
3
2
5

5
4
4
4
5

1
2
2
1
3

Robertson 
Rockcastle 
Rowan 
Russell 
Scott 

2,266
16,582
22,094
16,315
33,061

5
9
9
7
7

1
1
1
1
1

1
3
2
2
3

1
3
2
2
3

2
4
5
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

Shelby 
Simpson 
Spencer 
Taylor 
Todd 

33,337
16,405
11,766
22,927
11,971

15
8
11
7
11

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
1
1
3

2
1
1
1
3

11
5
8
3
6

1
1
1
2
1

Trigg 
Trimble 
Union 
Warren 
Washington 

12,597
8,125
15,637
92,522
10,916

6
8
13
11
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
4
5
3

1
2
4
5
3

3
4
7
3
5

1
1
1
2
1

Wayne 
Webster 
Whitley 
Wolfe 
Woodford 

19,923
14,120
35,865
7,065
23,208

8
15
10
5
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
6
2
1
2

1
6
2
1
2

4
6
4
2
6

2
2
3
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Marshall 
Martin 
Mason
McCracken 
McCreary 

30,125
12,578
16,800
65,514
17,080

21
9
11
18
13

1
1
1
1
1

McLean 
Meade 
Menifee 
Mercer 
Metcalfe 

9,938
26,349
6,556
20,817
10,037

11
15
6
10
6

Monroe 
Montgomery 
Morgan 
Muhlenberg 
Nelson 

11,756
22,554
13,948
31,839
37,477

Nicholas 
Ohio 
Oldham
Owen 
Owsley 

KentuckyCon.



4,468,976

473

60

302

302

45

66

Acadia 
Allen 
Ascension 
Assumption 
Avoyelles 

Louisiana

58,861
25,440
76,627
23,388
41,481

9
7
5
3
11

1
1
1
1
1

7
5
3
1
9

7
5
3
1
9

1
1
1
1
1

Beauregard 
Bienville 
Bossier 
Caddo 
Calcasieu 

32,986
15,752
98,310
252,161
183,577

4
12
6
14
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
10
4
11
6

2
10
4
11
6

1
4

1
1
1
1
1

Caldwell 
Cameron 
Catahoula 
Claiborne 
Concordia 

10,560
9,991
10,920
16,851
20,247

5
2
5
7
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
4
4

3
4
4

1
1
1
1
1

De Soto 
East Baton Rouge4 
East Carroll 
East Feliciana 
Evangeline 

25,494
412,852
9,421
21,360
35,434

10
6
3
8
9

1
1
1

8
3
1
5
6

8
3
1
5
6

1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Franklin 
Grant 
Iberia
Iberville 
Jackson 

21,263
18,698
73,266
33,320
15,397

6
7
7
8
10

1
1
1
1
1

4
5
3
6
7

4
5
3
6
7

1
1
1
1
1

Jefferson 
Jefferson Davis 
La Salle 
Lafayette4 
Lafourche 

455,466
31,435
14,282
190,503
89,974

8
8
7
8
8

1
1
1

6
5
4
6
3

6
5
4
6
3

1
1
1
3

1
1
1
1
1

Lincoln 
Livingston
Madison 
Morehouse
Natchitoches 

42,509
91,814
13,728
31,021
39,080

8
11
6
7
12

1
1
1
1
1

6
8
4
5
9

6
8
4
5
9

1
1
1
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

35

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

1
4

4
10

1
4

4
10

1
3

1
2
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

4
3
7

4
3
7

1
1
1
1
1

4
4
16
6
10

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
12
4
5

2
2
12
4
5

1
1
1
1
1

191,268
43,044
100,588
6,618
104,503

13
3
11
5
3

1
1
1
1

8
3
1

8
3
1

3
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Union 
Vermilion 
Vernon 
Washington 
Webster 

22,803
53,807
52,531
43,926
41,831

9
10
8
7
14

1
1
1
1
1

7
6
6
4
11

7
6
6
4
11

1
1
1
2
1

West Baton Rouge 


West Carroll
West Feliciana 
Winn 

21,601
12,314
15,111
16,894

6
7
3
7

1
1
1
1

3
5
1
5

3
5
1
5

1
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Orleans4 
Ouachita
Plaquemines 
Pointe Coupee 
Rapides 

484,674
147,250
26,757
22,763
126,337

4
7
2
7
15

1
1
1
1

Red River 


Richland 
Sabine 
St Bernard 
St Charles 

9,622
20,981
23,459
67,229
48,072

8
5
9
3
2

St Helena 
St James 
St Landry 
St Martin 
St Mary 

10,525
21,216
87,700
48,583
53,500

St Tammany 
St. John the Baptist 
Tangipahoa 
Tensas 
Terrebone4 

LouisianaCon.

Maine 

1,274,923

826

16

489

22

467

222

99

195

Androscoggin 
Aroostook
Cumberland 
Franklin 
Hancock 

103,793
73,938
265,612
29,467
51,791

28
110
52
36
53

1
1
1
1
1

14
67
27
21
37

2
2
3

12
65
24
21
36

11
29
19
11
8

2
13
5
3
7

9
19
13
8
25

Kennebec
Knox 
Lincoln 
Oxford 
Penobscot 

117,114
39,618
33,616
54,755
144,919

57
33
37
60
95

1
1
1
1
1

29
18
19
36
59

4
1

25
17
19
36
56

19
6
14
14
23

8
8
3
9
12

16
3
16
6
19

Piscataquis 
Sagadahoc 
Somerset 
Waldo 
Washington 
York 

17,235
35,214
50,888
36,280
33,941
186,742

31
19
53
40
60
62

1
1
1
1
1
1

19
10
33
26
45
29

1
2
2

19
9
33
25
43
27

8
7
11
8
8
26

3
1
8
5
6
6

7
7
4
3
31
9

Maryland 

5,296,486

265

23

157

157

85

39

Allegany 
Anne Arundel 
Baltimore 
Baltimore City4 
Calvert 

74,930
489,656
754,292
651,154
74,563

23
7
3
5
5

1
1
1

7
2

1
2

7
2

1
2

15
4
2
4
2

2
2
2
1
1

Caroline 
Carroll 
Cecil 
Charles 
Dorchester 

29,772
150,897
85,951
120,546
30,674

11
10
12
6
13

1
1
1
1
1

9
8
8
3
9

9
8
8
3
9

1
1
3
2
3

1
2
2
2
1

Frederick 
Garrett 
Harford 
Howard 
Kent 

195,277
29,846
218,590
247,842
19,197

15
11
7
3
7

1
1
1
1
1

11
8
3

11
8
3

3
2
3
2
1

2
2
2
2
1

Montgomery 
Prince Georges 
Queen Annes 
Somerset 
St Marys 

873,341
801,515
40,563
24,747
86,211

26
31
9
8
4

1
1
1
1
1

19
27
6
2
1

19
27
6
2
1

6
3
2
5
2

2
2
2
1
1

Talbot 
Washington 
Wicomico 
Worcester 

33,812
131,923
84,644
46,543

9
13
12
15

1
1
1
1

5
9
8
4

5
9
8
4

3
3
3
10

1
2
2
1



6,349,097

841

351

45

306

403

82

247

Barnstable 
Berkshire4 
Bristol 
Dukes 
Essex4 

Massachusetts

222,230
134,953
534,678
14,987
723,419

47
63
59
15
86

1
1

15
32
20
7
34

1
2
4

14
30
16
7
25

27
24
32
5
44

4
7
6
2
8

13
11
18
4
26

Franklin4 
Hampden4 
Hampshire4 
Middlesex4 
Nantucket4 

71,535
456,228
152,251
1,465,396
9,520

64
49
40
126
4

26
23
20
54
1

5
2
12

26
18
18
42
1

30
23
15
60
3

8
3
5
12

10
15
12
48
1

See footnotes at end of table.

36

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

MassachusettsCon.
Norfolk 
Plymouth 
Suffolk4 
Worcester4 

650,308
472,822
689,807
750,963

63
63
11
151

1
1

28
27
4
60

2
1
3
4

26
26
1
56

30
29
7
74

4
6

17

29
24
4
32

Michigan 

9,938,444

2,804

83

1,775

533

1,242

366

580

Alcona 
Alger 
Allegan 
Alpena 
Antrim 

11,719
9,862
105,665
31,314
23,110

16
16
52
15
30

1
1
1
1
1

13
10
33
9
20

2
2
9
1
5

11
8
24
8
15

1
1
8
3
3

1
4
10
2
6

Arenac 
Baraga 
Barry 
Bay 
Benzie 

17,269
8,746
56,755
110,157
15,998

24
12
32
30
28

1
1
1
1
1

18
7
21
18
19

6
2
5
4
7

12
5
16
14
12

2
1
7
6
6

3
3
3
5
2

Berrien 
Branch 
Calhoun 
Cass 
Charlevoix 

162,453
45,787
137,985
51,104
26,090

69
29
43
30
31

1
1
1
1
1

39
21
27
20
19

17
5
8
5
4

22
16
19
15
15

12
3
4
4
6

17
4
11
5
5

Cheboygan 
Chippewa 
Clare 
Clinton 
Crawford 

26,448
38,543
31,252
64,753
14,273

32
29
28
36
11

1
1
1
1
1

22
18
19
24
7

3
2
3
8
1

19
16
16
16
6

5
4
4
5
2

4
6
4
6
1

Delta 
Dickinson 
Eaton 
Emmet 
Genesee 

38,520
27,472
103,655
31,437
436,141

27
18
43
31
62

1
1
1
1
1

17
10
26
20
31

3
3
10
4
14

14
7
16
16
17

2
3
7
5
8

7
4
9
5
22

Gladwin 
Gogebic 
Grand Traverse 
Gratiot 
Hillsdale 

26,023
17,370
77,654
42,285
46,527

22
18
28
31
43

1
1
1
1
1

17
9
16
22
27

2
3
3
6
9

15
6
13
16
18

2
2
6
2
7

2
6
5
6
8

Houghton 
Huron 
Ingham 
Ionia 
Iosco 

36,016
36,079
279,320
61,518
27,339

37
59
46
40
22

1
1
1
1
1

21
39
24
26
14

7
11
8
10
3

14
28
16
16
11

6
4
8
4
3

9
15
13
9
4

Iron 
Isabella 
Jackson 
Kalamazoo
Kalkaska 

13,138
63,351
158,422
238,603
16,571

19
27
44
44
19

1
1
1
1
1

12
20
26
24
13

5
4
7
9
1

7
16
19
15
12

4
3
4
9
3

2
3
13
10
2

Kent 
Keweenaw 
Lake 
Lapeer 
Leelanau 

574,335
2,301
11,333
87,904
21,119

62
8
19
37
23

1
1
1
1
1

34
6
17
27
14

13
1
2
9
3

21
5
15
18
11

4
4

20
1
1
5
4

Lenawee 
Livingston
Luce 
Mackinac 
Macomb 

98,890
156,951
7,024
11,943
788,149

50
35
9
21
56

1
1
1
1
1

34
20
5
13
27

12
4
1
2
15

22
16
4
11
12

3
9
2
1
6

12
5
1
6
22

Manistee 
Marquette 
Mason
Mecosta 
Menominee 

24,527
64,634
28,274
40,553
25,326

29
38
29
28
26

1
1
1
1
1

20
22
20
21
19

6
3
5
5
5

14
19
15
16
14

4
7
3
3
2

4
8
5
3
4

Midland
Missaukee 
Monroe 
Montcalm 
Montmorency 

82,874
14,478
145,945
61,266
10,315

26
22
38
39
14

1
1
1
1
1

19
17
23
29
9

3
2
8
9
1

16
15
15
20
8

2
2
4
1
2

4
2
10
8
2

Muskegon 
Newaygo 
Oakland 
Oceana
Ogemaw

170,200
47,874
1,194,156
26,873
21,645

44
40
99
32
23

1
1
1
1
1

27
28
60
23
17

11
4
39
7
3

16
24
21
16
14

3
5
9
4
4

13
6
29
4
1

Ontonagon 
Osceola 
Oscoda 
Otsego 
Ottawa 

7,818
23,197
9,418
23,301
238,314

18
30
10
16
39

1
1
1
1
1

12
22
6
11
24

1
6

2
7

11
16
6
9
17

2
3
1
1
5

3
4
2
3
9

Presque Isle 


Roscommon 
Saginaw 
Sanilac 
Schoolcraft

14,411
25,469
210,039
44,547
8,903

25
18
58
52
12

1
1
1
1
1

18
12
35
39
9

4
1
8
13
1

14
11
27
26
8

3
2
9
5
1

3
3
13
7
1

Shiawassee 
St Clair 
St Joseph 
Tuscola
Van Buren 

71,687
164,235
62,422
58,266
76,263

40
43
37
53
53

1
1
1
1
1

27
31
24
34
29

11
8
8
11
11

16
23
16
23
18

4
3
2
9
11

8
8
10
9
12

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

37

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

28
44
21

8
34
5

20
10
16

13
17
5

11
35
3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Washtenaw 
Wayne 
Wexford 

322,895
2,061,162
30,484

53
97
30

1
1
1

MichiganCon.

Minnesota 

4,919,479

3,482

87

2,647

854

1,793

403

345

Aitkin 
Anoka 
Becker 
Beltrami 
Benton 

15,301
298,084
30,000
39,650
34,226

53
35
53
59
23

1
1
1
1
1

46
21
44
50
17

6
18
7
8
5

40
3
37
42
12

3
7
5
4
3

3
6
3
4
2

Big Stone 


Blue Earth 
Brown 
Carlton 
Carver

5,820
55,941
26,911
31,671
70,205

29
44
31
43
33

1
1
1
1
1

22
34
23
29
22

8
11
7
10
11

14
23
16
19
11

4
5
3
6
6

2
4
4
7
4

Cass 
Chippewa 
Chisago 
Clay
Clearwater 

27,150
13,088
41,101
51,229
8,423

78
27
30
53
32

1
1
1
1
1

64
21
20
41
26

14
5
10
11
5

50
16
10
30
21

8
3
5
6
3

5
2
4
5
2

Cook 
Cottonwood 
Crow Wing 
Dakota 
Dodge 

5,168
12,167
55,099
355,904
17,731

9
33
61
47
24

1
1
1
1
1

4
24
47
33
18

1
6
18
20
6

3
18
29
13
12

3
5
10
4
2

1
3
3
9
3

Douglas 
Faribault 
Fillmore 
Freeborn 
Goodhue 

32,821
16,181
21,122
32,584
44,127

40
39
45
43
42

1
1
1
1
1

31
31
37
34
30

11
11
14
14
9

20
20
23
20
21

4
5
2
5
5

4
2
5
3
6

Grant 
Hennepin 
Houston 
Hubbard 
Isanti 

6,289
1,116,200
19,718
18,376
31,287

29
79
32
39
24

1
1
1
1
1

23
43
24
32
16

7
42
7
4
3

16
1
17
28
13

2
20
3
2
5

3
15
4
4
2

Itasca 
Jackson 
Kanabec 
Kandiyohi 
Kittson 

43,992
11,268
14,996
41,203
5,285

67
33
25
46
45

1
1
1
1
1

58
26
19
36
36

16
6
4
12
9

42
20
15
24
27

4
4
3
6
5

4
2
2
3
3

Koochiching 
Lac Qui Parle 
Lake 
Lake of the Woods 
Le Sueur 

14,355
8,067
11,058
4,522
25,426

15
38
14
8
32

1
1
1
1
1

6
29
8
2
23

6
7
3
2
9

22
5

14

5
5
4
4
3

3
3
1
1
5

Lincoln 
Lyon 
Mahnomen
Marshall 
Martin 

6,429
25,425
5,190
10,155
21,802

28
44
23
69
36

1
1
1
1
1

20
31
19
59
29

5
11
3
11
9

15
20
16
48
20

3
5
1
5
2

4
7
2
4
4

McLeod 
Meeker 
Mille Lacs 
Morrison 
Mower

34,898
22,644
22,330
31,712
38,603

34
34
33
57
44

1
1
1
1
1

23
26
25
47
34

9
9
8
16
14

14
17
17
31
20

6
3
3
4
4

4
4
4
5
5

Murray 
Nicollet 
Nobles 
Norman 
Olmsted 

9,165
29,771
20,832
7,442
124,277

34
23
42
38
32

1
1
1
1
1

29
18
31
32
24

9
5
11
8
6

20
13
20
24
18

2
2
5
2
2

2
2
5
3
5

Otter Tail 


Pennington 
Pine
Pipestone 
Polk 

57,159
13,584
26,530
9,895
31,369

101
31
57
27
87

1
1
1
1
1

82
24
47
21
73

20
3
14
9
15

62
21
33
12
58

10
4
5
2
6

8
2
4
3
7

Pope 
Ramsey 
Red Lake 
Redwood 
Renville 

11,236
511,035
4,299
16,815
17,154

36
33
23
49
43

1
1
1
1
1

29
16
17
41
37

9
15
4
15
10

20
1
13
26
27

4
11
2
2
2

2
5
3
5
3

Rice
Rock 
Roseau 
Scott 
Sherburne 

56,665
9,721
16,338
89,498
64,417

28
26
50
31
22

1
1
1
1
1

20
19
39
19
15

6
7
6
8
5

14
12
33
11
10

5
4
6
6
3

2
2
4
5
3

Sibley 
St Louis 
Stearns 
Steele 
Stevens 

15,356
200,528
133,166
33,680
10,053

29
135
86
23
28

1
1
1
1
1

24
97
65
17
21

7
26
30
4
5

17
71
35
13
16

2
22
10
2
3

2
15
10
3
3

Swift 
Todd 
Traverse 
Wabasha 
Wadena 

11,956
24,426
4,134
21,610
13,713

37
50
24
35
28

1
1
1
1
1

29
38
19
27
21

8
10
4
10
6

21
28
15
17
15

5
6
2
3
2

2
5
2
4
4

See footnotes at end of table.

38

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

16
32
20
31
30
34
30

4
24
8
9
11
16
9

12
8
12
22
19
18
21

5
6
2
3
5
7
6

3
4
3
3
3
8
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Waseca 
Washington 
Watonwan 
Wilkin 
Winona 
Wright 
Yellow Medicine 

19,526
201,130
11,876
7,138
49,985
89,986
11,080

25
43
26
38
39
50
39

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

MinnesotaCon.

Mississippi 

2,844,658

1,000

82

296

296

458

164

Adams 
Alcorn 
Amite 
Attala 
Benton 

34,340
34,558
13,599
19,661
8,026

8
14
5
12
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
5
2
4
3

1
5
2
4
3

5
6
1
5
5

1
2
1
2
1

Bolivar 
Calhoun 
Carroll 
Chickasaw 
Choctaw 

40,633
15,069
10,769
19,440
9,758

50
17
7
13
7

1
1
1
1
1

15
7
3
4
3

15
7
3
4
3

28
8
2
5
2

6
1
1
3
1

Claiborne 
Clarke 
Clay
Coahoma 
Copiah 

11,831
17,955
21,979
30,622
28,757

4
11
7
27
12

1
1
1
1
1

1
5
1
6
5

1
5
1
6
5

1
3
3
17
3

1
2
2
3
3

Covington
Desoto 
Forrest 
Franklin 
George 

19,407
107,199
72,604
8,448
19,144

6
16
17
6
5

1
1
1
1
1

3
5
2
3
1

3
5
2
3
1

1
9
11
1
2

1
1
3
1
1

Greene 
Grenada 
Hancock 
Harrison 
Hinds 

13,299
23,263
42,967
189,601
250,800

5
6
20
26
22

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
2
5
8

2
1
2
5
8

1
3
15
15
9

1
1
2
5
4

Holmes 
Humphreys 
Issaquena 
Itawamba 
Jackson 

21,609
11,206
2,274
22,770
131,420

15
11
2
10
19

1
1
1
1
1

7
4
1
3
4

7
4
1
3
4

4
5

4
10

3
1

2
4

Jasper
Jefferson 
Jefferson Davis 
Jones 
Kemper

18,149
9,740
13,962
64,958
10,453

9
5
8
17
7

1
1
1
1
1

4
1
2
4
2

4
1
2
4
2

2
2
4
9
2

2
1
1
3
2

Lafayette 
Lamar 
Lauderdale
Lawrence 
Leake 

38,744
39,070
78,161
13,258
20,940

11
13
11
6
7

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
2
3
3

3
3
2
3
3

5
7
5
1
2

2
2
3
1
1

Lee 
Leflore 
Lincoln 
Lowndes
Madison 

75,755
37,947
33,166
61,586
74,674

21
17
10
15
15

1
1
1
1
1

7
5
1
4
4

7
5
1
4
4

10
9
6
8
8

3
2
2
2
2

Marion 
Marshall 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Neshoba

25,595
34,993
38,014
12,189
28,684

7
10
13
10
6

1
1
1
1
1

1
3
6
3
1

1
3
6
3
1

3
4
3
4
2

2
2
3
2
2

Newton 
Noxubee
Oktibbeha 
Panola 
Pearl River 

21,838
12,548
42,902
34,274
48,621

14
7
11
23
11

1
1
1
1
1

5
3
3
6
2

5
3
3
6
2

4
2
5
14
4

4
1
2
2
4

Perry 
Pike 
Pontotoc 
Prentiss 
Quitman 

12,138
38,940
26,726
25,556
10,117

9
16
15
12
16

1
1
1
1
1

3
4
6
3
5

3
4
6
3
5

3
7
6
4
9

2
4
2
4
1

Rankin 
Scott 
Sharkey 
Simpson 
Smith 

115,327
28,423
6,580
27,639
16,182

24
10
11
8
9

1
1
1
1
1

7
4
3
4
5

7
4
3
4
5

14
3
6
2
2

2
2
1
1
1

Stone 
Sunflower 
Tallahatchie 
Tate
Tippah 

13,622
34,369
14,903
25,370
20,826

6
21
16
12
16

1
1
1
1
1

1
7
5
2
5

1
7
5
2
5

2
9
8
6
8

2
4
2
3
2

Tishomingo 
Tunica
Union 
Walthall 
Warren 

19,163
9,227
25,362
15,156
49,644

10
8
14
4
12

1
1
1
1
1

6
1
3
1
1

6
1
3
1
1

2
5
8
1
9

1
1
2
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

39

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

5
2
4
3
2
3
4

5
2
4
3
2
3
4

10
3
1
1
4
8
8

4
1
1
1
1
2
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

62,977
21,216
10,294
10,312
20,160
13,051
28,149

20
7
7
6
8
14
15

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

MississippiCon.
Washington 
Wayne 
Webster 
Wilkinson 
Winston 
Yalobusha 
Yazoo 


5,595,211

3,422

114

1,258

946

312

1,514

536

Adair 
Andrew 
Atchison 
Audrain 
Barry 

Missouri

24,977
16,492
6,430
25,853
34,010

14
24
34
25
52

1
1
1
1
1

5
8
5
8
11

5
8
5
8
11

5
12
25
13
33

3
3
3
3
7

Barton 
Bates 
Benton 
Bollinger 
Boone 

12,541
16,653
17,180
12,029
135,454

30
53
20
13
28

1
1
1
1
1

22
34
4
4
9

7
10
4
4
9

15
24

4
11
12
4
12

3
7
3
4
6

Buchanan
Butler 
Caldwell 
Callaway 
Camden 

85,998
40,867
8,969
40,766
37,051

30
21
36
25
24

1
1
1
1
1

6
4
19
7
8

6
4
7
7
8

12

19
12
8
13
11

4
4
8
4
4

Cape Girardeau 


Carroll 
Carter 
Cass 
Cedar 

68,693
10,285
5,941
82,092
13,733

33
63
16
57
27

1
1
1
1
1

10
27
3
18
4

10
7
3
18
4

20

17
30
10
27
20

5
5
2
11
2

Chariton 
Christian 
Clark 
Clay
Clinton 

8,438
54,285
7,416
184,006
18,979

41
34
19
52
24

1
1
1
1
1

23
7
6
20
6

8
7
6
20
6

15

13
19
8
25
14

4
7
4
6
3

Cole 
Cooper 
Crawford 
Dade 
Dallas 

71,397
16,670
22,804
7,923
15,661

25
24
14
39
7

1
1
1
1
1

8
7
6
22
3

8
7
6
6
3

16

12
10
4
12
2

4
6
3
4
1

Daviess 
De Kalb 
Dent 
Douglas 
Dunklin 

8,016
11,597
14,927
13,084
33,155

45
30
14
8
48

1
1
1
1
1

23
16
1
1
18

8
7
1
1
10

15
9

16
9
7
3
22

5
4
5
3
7

Franklin 
Gasconade 
Gentry 
Greene 
Grundy 

93,807
15,342
6,861
240,391
10,432

57
14
26
38
36

1
1
1
1
1

12
6
14
9
20

12
6
6
9
7

13

34
5
8
19
9

10
2
3
9
6

Harrison 
Henry 
Hickory 
Holt 
Howard 

8,850
21,997
8,940
5,351
10,212

48
56
13
35
27

1
1
1
1
1

28
28
5
9
5

8
9
5
9
5

20
19

14
20
3
22
18

5
7
4
3
3

Howell
Iron 
Jackson 
Jasper
Jefferson 

37,238
10,697
654,880
104,686
198,099

25
16
57
53
68

1
1
1
1
1

4
6
18
22
13

4
6
18
22
13

12
5
25
23
42

8
4
13
7
12

Johnson 
Knox 
Laclede
Lafayette 
Lawrence 

48,258
4,361
32,513
32,960
35,204

26
13
20
47
35

1
1
1
1
1

8
6
4
14
10

8
6
4
14
10

10
5
11
26
18

7
1
4
6
6

Lewis 
Lincoln 
Linn 
Livingston
Macon

10,494
38,944
13,754
14,558
15,762

25
34
45
32
26

1
1
1
1
1

6
13
22
19
9

6
13
8
6
9

14
13

16
16
17
9
10

2
4
5
3
6

Madison 
Maries
Marion 
McDonald
Mercer 

11,800
8,903
28,289
21,681
3,757

9
11
16
17
20

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
2
6
12

4
2
2
6
3

2
6
10
9
5

2
2
3
1
2

Miller 
Mississippi 
Moniteau 
Monroe 
Montgomery 

23,564
13,427
14,827
9,311
12,136

30
21
17
25
23

1
1
1
1
1

9
7
5
6
9

9
7
5
6
9

15
11
5
13
11

5
2
6
5
2

Morgan 
New Madrid 
Newton 
Nodaway 
Oregon 

19,309
19,760
52,636
21,912
10,344

17
37
43
57
15

1
1
1
1
1

6
14
20
31
3

6
14
20
16
3

15

8
18
16
18
7

2
4
6
7
4

See footnotes at end of table.

40

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

6
4
11
5
6

6
4
11
5
6

13
3
12
2
5

3
5
8
2
7

1
1
1
1
1

5
8
17
8
5

5
8
17
8
5

9
8
29
12
13

4
4
4
6
6

27
10
24
44
13

1
1
1
1
1

16
4
8
13
3

5
4
8
13
3

11

9
4
9
25
5

1
1
6
5
4

13,509
23,756
4,170
4,983
40,422

31
48
13
14
42

1
1
1
1
1

2
12
5
5
13

2
12
5
5
13

24
27
6
6
21

4
8
1
2
7

Shannon
Shelby 
St Charles 
St Clair 
St Francois 

8,324
6,799
283,883
9,652
55,641

9
19
46
27
23

1
1
1
1
1

3
6
17
7
8

3
6
17
7
8

3
10
22
15
8

2
2
6
4
6

St Louis 
St Louis City4 
Ste Genevieve 
Stoddard 
Stone 

1,016,315
348,189
17,842
29,705
28,658

164
9
10
61
23

1
1
1

90
1
3
16
10

90
1
3
9
10

49
6
5
37
7

24
2
1
7
5

Sullivan
Taney 
Texas 
Vernon 
Warren 

7,219
39,703
23,003
20,454
24,525

33
25
54
46
16

1
1
1
1
1

20
9
22
32
5

8
9
5
12
5

12

17
20

9
8
24
9
8

3
7
7
4
2

Washington 
Wayne 
Webster 
Worth 
Wright 

23,344
13,259
31,045
2,382
17,955

17
11
16
11
17

1
1
1
1
1

4
4
6
6
4

4
4
6
6
4

8
4
5
3
7

4
2
4
1
5

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Osage 
Ozark 
Pemiscot 
Perry 
Pettis

13,062
9,542
20,047
18,132
39,403

23
13
32
10
19

1
1
1
1
1

Phelps 
Pike 
Platte 
Polk 
Pulaski 

39,825
18,351
73,781
26,992
41,165

19
21
51
27
25

Putnam 
Ralls 
Randolph 
Ray 
Reynolds 

5,223
9,626
24,663
23,354
6,689

Ripley 
Saline 
Schuyler 
Scotland 
Scott 

MissouriCon.



902,195

1,127

54

129

129

592

352

Beaverhead 
Big Horn 
Blaine 
Broadwater 
Carbon 

Montana

9,202
12,671
7,009
4,385
9,552

24
18
24
11
34

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
2
1
5

2
2
2
1
5

12
9
12
8
18

9
6
9
1
10

Carter 
Cascade 
Chouteau 
Custer 
Daniels 

1,360
80,357
5,970
11,696
2,017

11
35
27
18
14

1
1
1
1
1

1
4
3
2
2

1
4
3
2
2

1
22
14
4
8

8
8
9
11
3

Dawson 
Deer Lodge4 
Fallon 
Fergus 
Flathead 

9,059
9,417
2,837
11,893
74,471

14
3
11
26
67

1
1
1

2
1
2
5
3

2
1
2
5
3

5
1
6
10
43

6
1
2
10
20

Gallatin 
Garfield
Glacier 
Golden Valley 
Granite 

67,831
1,279
13,247
1,042
2,830

49
15
14
9
13

1
1
1
1
1

5
1
2
2
2

5
1
2
2
2

27
3
7
4
7

16
10
4
2
3

Hill 
Jefferson 
Judith Basin 
Lake 
Lewis and Clark 

16,673
10,049
2,329
26,507
55,716

29
21
11
24
32

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
2
3
2

2
2
2
3
2

18
12
4
12
21

8
6
4
8
8

Liberty
Lincoln 
Madison 
McCone 
Meagher 

2,158
18,837
6,851
1,977
1,932

10
31
27
7
7

1
1
1
1
1

1
4
4
1
1

1
4
4
1
1

4
18
17
2
2

4
8
5
3
3

Mineral 
Missoula 
Musselshell 
Park 
Petroleum 

3,884
95,802
4,497
15,694
493

18
40
9
25
5

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
2
2
1

2
1
2
2
1

12
24
3
15
2

3
14
3
7
1

Phillips 
Pondera 
Powder River
Powell 
Prairie 

4,601
6,424
1,858
7,180
1,199

19
16
9
19
12

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
1
1
1

3
2
1
1
1

10
7
3
9
9

5
6
4
8
1

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

41

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

4
2
6
2
3

4
2
6
2
3

25
8
6
6
23

7
6
7
8
8

1
1
1

4
2
1
1
3

4
2
1
1
3

12
4
12
1
8

4
4
8
5
8

13
8
23
11
5
52

1
1
1
1
1
1

3
1
4
2
1
3

3
1
4
2
1
3

6
5
12
4
2
33

3
1
6
4
1
15

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Ravalli
Richland 
Roosevelt 
Rosebud
Sanders 

36,070
9,667
10,620
9,383
10,227

37
17
20
17
35

1
1
1
1
1

Sheridan
Silver Bow4 
Stillwater 
Sweet Grass 
Teton 

4,105
34,606
8,195
3,609
6,445

21
10
22
8
20

Toole
Treasure
Valley 
Wheatland 
Wibaux 
Yellowstone 

5,267
861
7,675
2,259
1,068
129,352

MontanaCon.

Nebraska

1,711,263

2,791

93

977

531

446

1,146

575

Adams 
Antelope 
Arthur 
Banner 
Blaine 

31,151
7,452
444
819
583

48
49
8
5
7

1
1
1
1
1

23
31
1

7
7
1

16
24

10
9
3
3
3

14
8
3
1
1

Boone 
Box Butte 
Boyd 
Brown 
Buffalo 

6,259
12,158
2,438
3,525
42,259

21
14
31
18
63

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
17
3
35

5
2
8
3
9

26

8
5
8
5
13

7
6
5
9
14

Burt 
Butler 
Cass 
Cedar 
Chase 

7,791
8,767
24,334
9,615
4,068

37
51
45
28
17

1
1
1
1
1

15
29
15
10
3

5
12
15
10
3

10
17

17
14
22
12
8

4
7
7
5
5

Cherry
Cheyenne 
Clay
Colfax 
Cuming 

6,148
9,830
7,039
10,441
10,203

40
23
44
25
33

1
1
1
1
1

7
5
26
6
20

7
5
10
6
4

16

16

8
10
12
8
7

24
7
5
10
5

Custer 
Dakota 
Dawes 
Dawson 
Deuel 

11,793
20,253
9,060
24,365
2,098

77
16
22
51
10

1
1
1
1
1

42
5
3
7
2

11
5
3
7
2

31

20
7
6
27
5

14
3
12
16
2

Dixon 
Dodge 
Douglas 
Dundy 
Fillmore 

6,339
36,160
463,585
2,292
6,634

36
51
184
11
38

1
1
1
1
1

23
24
7
2
23

10
10
7
2
8

13
14

15

7
19
165
7
8

5
7
11
1
6

Franklin 
Frontier 
Furnas 
Gage 
Garden 

3,574
3,099
5,324
22,993
2,292

31
15
26
57
23

1
1
1
1
1

18
5
8
36
2

7
5
8
12
2

11

24

9
6
14
15
15

3
3
3
5
5

Garfield
Gosper 
Grant 
Greeley
Hall 

1,902
2,143
747
2,714
53,534

11
8
9
15
36

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
1
4
15

1
2
1
4
5

10

3
3
2
6
10

6
2
5
4
10

Hamilton 
Harlan 
Hayes 
Hitchcock 
Holt 

9,403
3,786
1,068
3,111
11,551

19
33
6
20
85

1
1
1
1
1

7
22
2
4
45

7
6
2
4
8

16

37

8
9
2
10
12

3
1
1
5
27

Hooker 
Howard 
Jefferson 
Johnson 
Kearney 

783
6,567
8,333
4,488
6,882

6
24
21
18
27

1
1
1
1
1

1
7
9
5
17

1
7
9
5
5

12

3
11
8
8
6

1
5
3
4
3

Keith 
Keya Paha 
Kimball 
Knox 
Lancaster 

8,875
983
4,089
9,374
250,291

18
10
10
64
51

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
3
41
13

3
2
3
11
13

30

8
1
5
15
24

6
6
1
7
13

Lincoln 
Logan 
Loup 
Madison 
McPherson 

34,632
774
712
35,226
533

48
5
4
39
7

1
1
1
1
1

7
2
1
6

7
2
1
6

28
1
1
17
1

12
1
1
15
5

Merrick 
Morrill 
Nance 
Nemaha 
Nuckolls 

8,204
5,440
4,038
7,576
5,057

27
26
25
28
19

1
1
1
1
1

16
3
15
7
7

5
3
3
7
7

11

12

7
17
5
15
8

3
5
4
5
3

See footnotes at end of table.

42

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

10
6
4
19
6

10
6
4
5
6

14

14
8
9
7
4

8
3
3
8
4

1
1
1
1
1

27
4
5
10
2

9
4
5
10
2

18

14
8
11
12
5

5
4
5
6
7

23
110
77
61
24

1
1
1
1
1

8
5
39
10
10

8
5
15
10
10

24

7
100
21
37
8

7
4
16
13
5

6,198
3,318
1,475
6,455
6,055

38
16
13
9
36

1
1
1
1
1

4
5
1
2
11

4
5
1
2
11

13
7
2
4
16

20
3
9
2
8

Thomas 
Thurston 
Valley 
Washington 
Wayne 

729
7,171
4,647
18,780
9,851

10
29
26
30
16

1
1
1
1
1

3
16
8
11
5

3
5
4
6
5

11
4
5

4
8
11
15
7

2
4
6
3
3

Webster 
Wheeler 
York 
Nevada 
Carson City4 
Churchill 
Clark 
Douglas 
Elko 

4,061
886
14,598
1,998,257

17
5
29
210

1
1
1
16

5
2
9
19

5
2
9
19

8
1
16
158

3
1
3
17

52,457
23,982
1,375,765
41,259
45,291

3
8
25
27
21

1
1
1
1

1
1
5

1
1
5

1
5
18
25
15

1
1
1
1
1

Esmeralda 
Eureka 
Humboldt 
Lander 
Lincoln 

971
1,651
16,106
5,794
4,165

5
4
21
5
12

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
18
3
9

1
1
1
1
1

Lyon 
Mineral 
Nye 
Pershing 
Storey 
Washoe 
White Pine 
New Hampshire
Belknap 
Carroll 
Cheshire
Coos 
Grafton 

34,501
5,071
32,485
6,693
3,399
339,486
9,181
1,235,786
56,325
43,666
73,825
33,111
81,743

18
5
13
8
5
22
8
559
32
56
49
47
87

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
10
1
1
1
1
1

1
1

2
1
234
11
18
23
20
39

1
1

2
1
13
1

1
1
1

221
10
18
22
19
38

15
3
10
5
3
18
5
148
12
25
12
10
17

1
1
1
1
1
1
1
167
8
12
13
16
30

10
1

Hillsborough 
Merrimack 
Rockingham 
Strafford 
Sullivan

380,841
136,225
277,359
112,233
40,458

65
61
91
32
39

1
1
1
1
1

31
27
37
13
15

2
2
1
3
1

29
25
36
10
14

12
17
19
11
13

21
16
34
7
10

2
1
1
3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Otoe 
Pawnee 
Perkins 
Phelps 
Pierce 

15,396
3,087
3,200
9,747
7,857

33
18
17
35
15

1
1
1
1
1

Platte 
Polk 
Red Willow
Richardson 
Rock 

31,662
5,639
11,448
9,531
1,756

47
17
22
29
15

Saline 
Sarpy 
Saunders 
Scotts Bluff 
Seward 

13,843
122,595
19,830
36,951
16,496

Sheridan
Sherman 
Sioux
Stanton 
Thayer 

NebraskaCon.

New Jersey

8,414,350

1,412

21

566

324

242

276

549

72

Atlantic 
Bergen 
Burlington
Camden 
Cape May 

252,552
884,118
423,394
508,932
102,326

51
149
103
101
55

1
1
1
1
1

23
70
40
37
16

17
61
9
29
12

6
9
31
8
4

10
4
23
23
22

17
74
39
40
16

10
5
4
2
3

Cumberland 
Essex 
Gloucester 
Hudson 
Hunterdon 

146,438
793,633
254,673
608,975
121,989

44
43
67
22
61

1
1
1
1
1

14
22
24
12
26

4
7
11
10
12

10
15
13
2
14

14
4
15
2
5

15
16
27
7
29

2
6
3
6
1

Mercer 
Middlesex
Monmouth 
Morris 
Ocean 

350,761
750,162
615,301
470,212
510,916

40
78
145
101
79

1
1
1
1
1

13
25
53
39
33

5
15
38
19
19

8
10
15
20
14

18
30
37
22
16

8
22
54
39
29

4
4
2
2
2

Passaic
Salem 
Somerset 
Sussex 
Union 
Warren 

489,049
64,285
297,490
144,166
522,541
102,437

38
35
54
52
45
49

1
1
1
1
1
1

16
15
21
24
21
22

13
4
12
9
13
5

3
11
9
15
8
17

3
6
13
2
4
3

18
13
19
25
19
23

2
3
2
2
4
3

New Mexico 

1,819,046

858

33

101

101

628

96

Bernalillo 
Catron
Chaves 
Cibola 
Colfax 

556,678
3,543
61,382
25,595
14,189

16
20
15
17
15

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
4
2
6

3
1
4
2
6

10
16
6
13
4

2
2
4
1
4

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

43

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

4
1
4
4
4

4
1
4
4
4

1
2
23
7
19

5
1
3
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
2
5
5

2
2
2
5
5

10
2
3
3
28

2
2
2
6
5

3
6
12
72
17

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
1
3

2
1
1
3

1
2
8
68
10

1
1
2
2
3

10,155
41,190
18,018
113,801
30,126

12
139
12
41
54

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
5
3
2

4
2
5
3
2

2
132
2
32
47

5
4
4
5
4

Sandoval 
Santa Fe 
Sierra 
Socorro
Taos 

89,908
129,292
13,270
18,078
29,979

33
61
16
9
82

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
3
2
4

6
2
3
2
4

22
55
11
4
73

4
3
1
2
4

Torrance
Union 
Valencia 

16,911
4,174
66,152

17
9
8

1
1
1

5
4
3

5
4
3

8
2
2

3
2
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Curry 
De Baca 
Dona Ana 
Eddy 
Grant 

45,044
2,240
174,682
51,658
31,002

11
5
31
15
26

1
1
1
1
1

Guadalupe 
Harding
Hidalgo 
Lea 
Lincoln 

4,680
810
5,932
55,511
19,411

15
7
8
15
39

Los Alamos 


Luna 
McKinley 
Mora 
Otero 

18,343
25,016
74,798
5,180
62,298

Quay 
Rio Arriba 
Roosevelt 
San Juan 
San Miguel

New MexicoCon.



18,976,457

3,420

57

1,545

616

929

1,135

683

32

Albany 
Allegany 
Broome
Cattaraugus 
Cayuga 

New York

294,565
49,927
200,536
83,955
81,963

59
65
49
86
54

1
1
1
1
1

19
39
24
47
33

9
10
8
15
10

10
29
16
32
23

26
13
11
26
13

13
12
13
12
7

Chautauqua 
Chemung 
Chenango 
Clinton 
Columbia 

139,750
91,070
51,401
79,894
63,094

82
31
63
44
48

1
1
1
1
1

44
17
29
19
23

17
6
8
5
5

27
11
21
14
18

19
10
25
16
18

18
3
8
8
6

1
1

Cortland 
Delaware 
Dutchess 
Erie 
Essex 

48,599
48,055
280,150
950,265
38,851

35
71
74
106
52

1
1
1
1
1

19
29
30
43
20

4
10
10
18
2

15
19
20
25
18

10
29
30
35
20

5
12
13
27
11

1
1

Franklin 
Fulton 
Genesee 
Greene 
Hamilton 

51,134
55,073
60,370
48,195
5,379

37
28
35
43
24

1
1
1
1
1

25
15
20
19
10

6
5
7
5
1

19
10
13
14
9

4
5
6
17
6

7
7
8
6
7

Herkimer 
Jefferson 
Lewis 
Livingston
Madison 

64,427
111,738
26,944
64,328
69,441

53
82
35
43
49

1
1
1
1
1

30
43
26
26
26

11
21
9
9
11

19
22
17
17
15

11
27
3
8
12

11
11
5
8
10

1
1

Monroe 
Montgomery 
Nassau 
New York City4 6 
Niagara

735,343
49,708
1,334,544
8,008,278
219,846

75
35
202
3
35

1
1
1

30
21
69
1
20

11
11
66
1
8

19
10
3

12

27
8
76
2
4

17
5
56

10

2
1
1
2
1

Oneida 
Onondaga 
Ontario 
Orange 
Orleans

235,469
458,336
100,224
341,367
44,171

103
78
44
101
24

1
1
1
1
1

48
35
25
40
14

22
16
9
20
4

26
19
16
20
10

39
25
9
43
4

15
17
9
17
5

2
1
1

Oswego 
Otsego 
Putnam 
Rensselaer 
Rockland 

122,377
61,676
95,745
152,538
286,753

49
69
21
68
58

1
1
1
1
1

34
34
9
22
24

12
10
3
8
19

22
24
6
14
5

5
22
5
33
25

9
12
6
12
8

1
1

Saratoga 
Schenectady 
Schoharie
Schuyler 
Seneca 

200,635
146,555
31,582
19,224
33,342

73
34
38
19
23

1
1
1
1
1

30
8
22
12
15

11
3
6
4
5

19
5
16
8
10

30
19
9
4
3

12
6
6
2
4

St Lawrence 
Steuben 
Suffolk 
Sullivan
Tioga

111,931
98,726
1,419,369
73,966
51,784

86
80
237
66
31

1
1
1
1
1

46
47
41
21
15

14
15
31
6
6

32
32
10
15
9

22
18
125
36
9

17
14
70
8
6

1
1
1

Tompkins 
Ulster 
Warren 
Washington 
Wayne 

96,501
177,749
63,303
61,042
93,765

30
87
32
42
54

1
1
1
1
1

16
24
13
26
24

7
4
2
9
9

9
20
11
17
15

7
53
9
4
18

6
9
9
11
11

1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

44

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

46
25
13

29
9
4

17
16
9

34
4
4

39
5
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Westchester 
Wyoming 
Yates 

923,459
43,424
24,621

120
35
20

1
1
1

New YorkCon.

North Carolina 

8,049,313

960

100

541

541

319

175

Alamance 
Alexander
Alleghany 
Anson 
Ashe 

130,800
33,603
10,677
25,275
24,384

15
3
3
10
6

1
1
1
1
1

8
1
1
7
3

8
1
1
7
3

6
1
1
2
2

2
1
1
2
1

Avery 
Beaufort 
Bertie 
Bladen 
Brunswick 

17,167
44,958
19,773
32,278
73,143

8
18
10
16
25

1
1
1
1
1

6
7
8
7
19

6
7
8
7
19

1
10
1
8
5

1
2
1
2
2

Buncombe 
Burke 
Cabarrus 
Caldwell 
Camden 

206,330
89,148
131,063
77,415
6,885

12
12
8
11
3

1
1
1
1
1

6
7
5
8

6
7
5
8

5
4
2
2
2

3
2
2
2
1

Carteret 
Caswell
Catawba 
Chatham 
Cherokee 

59,383
23,501
141,685
49,329
24,298

16
4
10
7
5

1
1
1
1
1

11
2
8
3
2

11
2
8
3
2

4
1
1
3
2

2
1
4
1
2

Chowan 
Clay
Cleveland 
Columbus
Craven 

14,526
8,775
96,287
54,749
91,436

6
3
19
15
15

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
15
10
8

1
1
15
10
8

4
1
3
4
6

1
1
4
3
2

Cumberland 
Currituck
Dare 
Davidson 
Davie 

302,963
18,190
29,967
147,246
34,835

13
2
7
8
6

1
1
1
1
1

5
3
3

5
3
3

4
1
1
4
2

2
1
1
4
1

Duplin 
Durham 
Edgecombe 
Forsyth 
Franklin 

49,063
223,314
55,606
306,067
47,260

13
4
13
11
7

1
1
1
1
1

10
1
7
8
5

10
1
7
8
5

2
2
5
2
1

2
2
2
2
1

Gaston 
Gates 
Graham 
Granville 
Greene 

190,365
10,516
7,993
48,498
18,974

18
6
4
6
6

1
1
1
1
1

13
1
2
4
3

13
1
2
4
3

4
4
1
1
2

2
1
1
1
1

Guilford
Halifax 
Harnett 
Haywood 
Henderson 

421,048
57,370
91,025
54,033
89,173

17
12
9
9
7

1
1
1
1
1

10
7
5
4
4

10
7
5
4
4

6
4
3
4
2

2
4
1
2
2

Hertford 
Hoke 
Hyde 
Iredell 
Jackson 

22,601
33,646
5,826
122,660
33,121

12
3
8
9
8

1
1
1
1
1

6
1

5
4

6
1

5
4

5
1
7
3
3

2
1
1
3
2

Johnston 
Jones 
Lee 
Lenoir 
Lincoln 

121,965
10,381
49,040
59,648
63,780

18
6
6
8
5

1
1
1
1
1

10
3
2
3
1

10
3
2
3
1

7
2
3
4
3

2
1
2
2
1

Macon
Madison 
Martin 
McDowell 
Mecklenburg 

29,811
19,635
25,593
42,151
695,454

4
9
17
5
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
9
2
7

2
3
9
2
7

1
5
7
2
4

1
1
2
2
2

Mitchell 
Montgomery 
Moore 
Nash 
New Hanover 

15,687
26,822
74,769
87,420
160,307

5
10
14
13
8

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
11
11
4

2
5
11
11
4

2
4
2
1
3

2
2
2
2
2

Northampton 
Onslow 
Orange 
Pamlico 
Pasquotank 

22,086
150,355
118,227
12,934
34,897

13
8
6
12
6

1
1
1
1
1

9
5
3
9
1

9
5
3
9
1

3
2
2
2
4

1
2
2
2
2

Pender 
Perquimans 
Person 
Pitt 
Polk 

41,082
11,368
35,623
133,798
18,324

8
7
4
24
5

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
1
10
3

6
2
1
10
3

1
4
2
13
1

1
1
2
2
1

Randolph 
Richmond
Robeson
Rockingham 
Rowan 

130,454
46,564
123,339
91,928
130,340

14
10
25
10
14

1
1
1
1
1

9
6
15
6
9

9
6
15
6
9

4
3
9
3
4

3
2
2
2
2

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

45

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

North CarolinaCon.
Rutherford 
Sampson 
Scotland 
Stanly 
Stokes 

62,899
60,161
35,998
58,100
44,711

13
10
8
10
5

1
1
1
1
1

8
8
4
8
3

8
8
4
8
3

4
1
3
1
1

2
3
1
2
1

Surry 
Swain 
Transylvania 
Tyrrell 
Union 

71,219
12,968
29,334
4,149
123,677

7
4
5
5
16

1
1
1
1
1

4
1
2
1
13

4
1
2
1
13

2
2
2
3
2

4
1
1
1
1

Vance 
Wake 
Warren 
Washington 
Watauga

42,954
627,846
19,972
13,723
42,695

8
22
5
7
7

1
1
1
1
1

3
12
3
3
4

3
12
3
3
4

4
9
1
3
2

2
2
1
1
1

Wayne 
Wilkes 
Wilson
Yadkin 
Yancey 
North Dakota 
Adams 
Barnes 
Benson 
Billings 
Bottineau 

113,329
65,632
73,814
36,348
17,774
642,200
2,593
11,775
6,964
888
7,149

19
5
11
6
3
2,735
30
86
72
6
86

1
1
1
1
1
53
1
1
1
1
1

7
3
7
4
1
1,692
22
55
46
1
56

7
3
7
4
1
360
4
13
9
1
12

1,332
18
42
37

44

11
1
3
1
1
764
6
25
19
3
24

226
1
5
6
1
5

2
2
2
1
1

Bowman 
Burke 
Burleigh 
Cass 
Cavalier 

3,242
2,242
69,416
123,138
4,831

40
54
63
124
73

1
1
1
1
1

28
36
44
76
53

4
7
4
26
13

24
29
40
50
40

8
14
8
39
16

3
3
10
8
3

Dickey
Divide 
Dunn 
Eddy 
Emmons 

5,757
2,283
3,600
2,757
4,331

57
50
17
31
30

1
1
1
1
1

38
36
4
20
9

6
4
4
2
5

32
32

18
4

16
12
8
8
15

2
1
4
2
5

Foster 
Golden Valley 
Grand Forks 
Grant 
Griggs 

3,759
1,924
66,109
2,841
2,754

32
28
79
30
37

1
1
1
1
1

22
14
50
15
23

4
3
9
4
3

18
11
41
11
20

8
11
20
12
11

1
2
8
2
2

Hettinger 
Kidder 
La Moure 
Logan 
McHenry

2,715
2,753
4,701
2,308
5,987

46
61
62
22
83

1
1
1
1
1

35
42
40
12
58

3
6
8
3
13

32
36
32
9
45

8
13
16
7
18

2
5
5
2
6

McIntosh 
McKenzie 
McLean 
Mercer 
Morton 

3,390
5,737
9,311
8,644
25,303

21
45
75
26
33

1
1
1
1
1

6
20
41
6
7

5
3
12
6
6

1
17
29

11
17
25
15
17

3
7
8
4
8

Mountrail 
Nelson 
Oliver 
Pembina 
Pierce 

6,631
3,715
2,065
8,585
4,675

79
58
7
63
28

1
1
1
1
1

56
34
1
35
18

7
7
1
11
3

49
27

24
15

18
21
4
20
7

4
2
1
7
2

Ramsey 
Ransom 
Renville 
Richland 
Rolette 

12,066
5,890
2,610
17,998
13,674

58
43
45
89
31

1
1
1
1
1

43
29
30
50
9

8
5
6
14
5

35
24
24
36
4

11
8
11
31
16

3
5
3
7
5

Sargent
Sheridan
Sioux
Slope 
Stark 

4,366
1,710
4,044
767
22,636

50
33
14
32
31

1
1
1
1
1

31
20
4
24
6

7
3
3
2
6

24
17
1
22

15
10
6
4
19

3
2
3
3
5

Steele 
Stutsman 
Towner 
Traill 
Walsh 

2,258
21,908
2,876
8,477
12,389

32
97
50
53
86

1
1
1
1
1

24
73
35
33
49

4
11
7
8
13

20
62
28
25
36

5
17
11
15
28

2
6
3
4
8

Ward 
Wells 
Williams 
Ohio 

58,795
5,102
19,761
11,353,140

104
62
91
3,636

1
1
1
88

68
43
62
2,250

12
7
8
942

56
36
54
1,308

23
13
21
631

12
5
7
667

Adams 
Allen 
Ashland 
Ashtabula 
Athens 

27,330
108,473
52,523
102,728
62,223

29
43
35
61
40

1
1
1
1
1

22
22
24
37
24

7
10
9
10
10

15
12
15
27
14

5
10
5
15
9

1
10
5
8
6

Auglaize 
Belmont 
Brown 
Butler 
Carroll 

46,611
70,226
42,285
332,807
28,836

33
56
38
45
29

1
1
1
1
1

23
29
26
24
19

9
13
10
11
5

14
16
16
13
14

3
18
5
9
7

6
8
6
11
2

See footnotes at end of table.

46

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

19
20
26
21
31

7
10
12
8
13

12
10
14
13
18

6
7
5
9
6

5
8
10
4
12

1
1
1
1
1

28
23
59
38
16

6
7
57
19
4

22
16
2
19
12

6
3
9
6
5

4
6
34
7
5

39
33
42
22
69

1
1
1
1
1

25
17
27
15
42

7
8
14
5
25

18
9
13
10
17

8
7
6
4
9

5
8
8
2
17

42,084
31,069
90,895
147,886
40,792

31
32
39
39
39

1
1
1
1
1

19
21
21
22
30

7
6
5
10
11

12
15
16
12
19

4
6
10
8
5

7
4
7
8
3

Hamilton 
Hancock 
Hardin 
Harrison 
Henry 

845,303
71,295
31,945
15,856
29,210

88
43
44
32
32

1
1
1
1
1

48
28
24
24
22

36
11
9
9
9

12
17
15
15
13

16
6
13
5
4

23
8
6
2
5

Highland 
Hocking 
Holmes 
Huron 
Jackson 

40,875
28,241
38,943
59,487
32,641

36
20
30
47
24

1
1
1
1
1

24
14
19
27
16

7
3
5
8
4

17
11
14
19
12

6
4
8
12
4

5
1
2
7
3

Jefferson 
Knox 
Lake 
Lawrence 
Licking 

73,894
54,500
227,511
62,319
145,491

48
49
43
35
60

1
1
1
1
1

33
29
23
21
39

19
7
18
7
14

14
22
5
14
25

8
13
8
5
9

6
6
11
8
11

Logan 
Lorain 
Lucas 
Madison 
Mahoning 

46,005
284,664
455,054
40,213
257,555

42
58
40
35
48

1
1
1
1
1

29
33
21
20
24

12
15
10
6
10

17
18
11
14
14

7
8
10
9
8

5
16
8
5
15

Marion 
Medina 
Meigs 
Mercer 
Miami 

66,217
151,095
23,072
40,924
98,868

39
41
29
38
42

1
1
1
1
1

23
26
17
23
24

8
9
5
9
12

15
17
12
14
12

9
6
8
8
7

6
8
3
6
10

Monroe 
Montgomery 
Morgan 
Morrow 
Muskingum 

15,180
559,062
14,897
31,628
84,585

39
57
24
35
52

1
1
1
1
1

28
28
18
23
35

10
19
4
7
10

18
9
14
16
25

9
10
4
7
9

1
18
1
4
7

Noble 
Ottawa 
Paulding 
Perry 
Pickaway 

14,058
40,985
20,293
34,078
52,727

27
35
27
34
35

1
1
1
1
1

21
20
22
25
24

6
8
10
11
9

15
12
12
14
15

3
7
1
4
6

2
7
3
4
4

Pike 
Portage
Preble 
Putnam 
Richland 

27,695
152,061
42,337
34,726
128,852

28
52
37
43
43

1
1
1
1
1

17
28
23
30
27

3
10
11
15
9

14
18
12
15
18

5
11
7
3
5

5
12
6
9
10

Ross 
Sandusky 
Scioto 
Seneca 
Shelby 

73,345
61,792
79,195
58,683
47,910

38
33
42
38
38

1
1
1
1
1

23
19
21
23
23

7
7
5
8
9

16
12
16
15
14

6
7
9
7
6

8
6
11
7
8

Stark 
Summit 
Trumbull 
Tuscarawas 
Union 

378,098
542,899
225,116
90,914
40,909

66
66
67
61
25

1
1
1
1
1

36
32
35
41
19

19
22
11
19
5

17
10
24
22
14

11
15
10
10
2

18
18
21
9
3

Van Wert 


Vinton 
Warren 
Washington 
Wayne 

29,659
12,806
158,383
63,251
111,564

30
21
40
41
51

1
1
1
1
1

21
16
24
29
31

9
4
13
7
15

12
12
11
22
16

4
3
6
4
8

4
1
9
7
11

Williams 
Wood 
Wyandot 

39,188
121,065
22,908

34
64
28

1
1
1

22
44
21

10
25
8

12
19
13

4
9
3

7
10
3

Oklahoma 

3,450,654

1,798

77

590

590

560

571

Adair 
Alfalfa 
Atoka 
Beaver 
Beckham 

21,038
6,105
13,879
5,857
19,799

24
17
18
13
17

1
1
1
1
1

3
10
4
4
5

3
10
4
4
5

8
3
6
4
5

12
3
7
4
6

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Champaign 
Clark 
Clermont 
Clinton 
Columbiana 

38,890
144,742
177,977
40,543
112,075

31
36
42
35
50

1
1
1
1
1

Coshocton 
Crawford 
Cuyahoga 
Darke 
Defiance 

36,655
46,966
1,393,978
53,309
39,500

39
33
103
52
27

Delaware 
Erie 
Fairfield 
Fayette 
Franklin 

109,989
79,551
122,759
28,433
1,068,978

Fulton 
Gallia 
Geauga 
Greene 
Guernsey 

OhioCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

47

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

7
13
13
6
9

7
13
13
6
9

6
9
11
4
6

4
8
12
11
10

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
2
7
5

2
5
2
7
5

6
6
2
6
7

12
7
4
7
4

31
13
15
40
19

1
1
1
1
1

10
4
5
12
6

10
4
5
12
6

9
5
4
11
6

11
3
5
16
6

37,077
4,743
4,075
57,813
27,210

27
20
11
31
23

1
1
1
1
1

7
7
4
14
7

7
7
4
14
7

10
8
2
6
7

9
4
4
10
8

Grady 
Grant 
Greer 
Harmon 
Harper 

45,516
5,144
6,061
3,283
3,562

35
17
10
7
15

1
1
1
1
1

12
9
3
2
4

12
9
3
2
4

10
3
4
3
8

12
4
2
1
2

Haskell 
Hughes 
Jackson 
Jefferson 
Johnston 

11,792
14,154
28,439
6,818
10,513

18
28
22
20
21

1
1
1
1
1

6
11
8
8
7

6
11
8
8
7

6
9
6
7
6

5
7
7
4
7

Kay 
Kingfisher 
Kiowa 
Latimer 
Le Flore 

48,080
13,926
10,227
10,692
48,109

28
17
23
15
45

1
1
1
1
1

7
6
8
2
17

7
6
8
2
17

11
3
10
7
10

9
7
4
5
17

Lincoln 
Logan 
Love 
Major
Marshall 

32,080
33,924
8,831
7,545
13,184

31
22
11
12
11

1
1
1
1
1

13
10
3
5
3

13
10
3
5
3

8
7
3
3
5

9
4
4
3
2

Mayes 
McClain 
McCurtain 
McIntosh 
Murray 

38,369
27,740
34,402
19,456
12,623

33
24
32
23
11

1
1
1
1
1

13
10
7
6
4

13
10
7
6
4

11
5
9
10
4

8
8
15
6
2

Muskogee 
Noble 
Nowata 
Okfuskee 
Oklahoma 

69,451
11,411
10,569
11,814
660,448

42
15
19
22
44

1
1
1
1
1

13
5
6
7
20

13
5
6
7
20

16
5
9
7
5

12
4
3
7
18

Okmulgee 
Osage 
Ottawa 
Pawnee 
Payne 

39,685
44,437
33,194
16,612
68,190

36
40
32
20
22

1
1
1
1
1

9
13
10
11
6

9
13
10
11
6

15
13
12
5
7

11
13
9
3
8

Pittsburg 
Pontotoc 
Pottawatomie 
Pushmataha 
Roger Mills

43,953
35,143
65,521
11,667
3,436

45
29
35
19
11

1
1
1
1
1

13
7
14
4
4

13
7
14
4
4

17
11
5
7
4

14
10
15
7
2

Rogers 
Seminole 
Sequoyah
Stephens 
Texas 

70,641
24,894
38,972
43,182
20,107

37
29
30
24
22

1
1
1
1
1

9
7
9
8
7

9
7
9
8
7

18
10
8
6
5

9
11
12
9
9

Tillman 
Tulsa 
Wagoner 
Washington 
Washita 
Woods 
Woodward 

9,287
563,299
57,491
48,996
11,508
9,089
18,486

17
42
25
18
19
17
16

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

7
12
7
6
10
6
5

7
12
7
6
10
6
5

5
13
13
6
2
6
5

4
16
4
5
6
4
5

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Blaine 
Bryan 
Caddo 
Canadian 
Carter 

11,976
36,534
30,150
87,697
45,621

18
31
37
22
26

1
1
1
1
1

Cherokee 
Choctaw 
Cimarron 
Cleveland 
Coal 

42,521
15,342
3,148
208,016
6,031

21
19
9
21
17

Comanche 
Cotton 
Craig 
Creek 
Custer 

114,996
6,614
14,950
67,367
26,142

Delaware 
Dewey 
Ellis 
Garfield
Garvin 

OklahomaCon.



3,421,399

1,439

36

240

240

927

236

Baker 
Benton 
Clackamas 
Clatsop 
Columbia 

Oregon

16,741
78,153
338,391
35,630
43,560

31
33
67
40
32

1
1
1
1
1

8
4
14
5
7

8
4
14
5
7

18
23
40
29
18

4
5
12
5
6

Coos 
Crook 
Curry 
Deschutes 
Douglas 

62,779
19,182
21,137
115,367
100,399

69
16
45
42
87

1
1
1
1
1

7
1
3
3
12

7
1
3
3
12

53
13
38
32
58

8
1
3
6
16

See footnotes at end of table.

48

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

3
9
2
2
11

3
9
2
2
11

10
14
4
19
24

3
6
11
1
10

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
5
2
12

3
2
5
2
12

10
12
67
16
53

5
3
3
6
18

64
43
47
65
25

1
1
1
1
1

7
13
5
19
5

7
13
5
19
5

54
20
30
33
18

2
9
11
12
1

660,486
62,380
1,934
24,262
70,548

42
23
12
58
65

1
1
1
1
1

6
4
4
7
12

6
4
4
7
12

24
14
6
46
40

11
4
1
4
12

Union 
Wallowa 
Wasco 
Washington 
Wheeler 
Yamhill 

24,530
7,226
23,791
445,342
1,547
84,992

37
21
33
43
9
34

1
1
1
1
1
1

8
4
6
12
3
10

8
4
6
12
3
10

21
11
20
22
2
15

7
5
6
8
3
8

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Gilliam 
Grant 
Harney 
Hood River
Jackson 

1,915
7,935
7,609
20,411
181,269

17
30
18
23
46

1
1
1
1
1

Jefferson 
Josephine 
Klamath 
Lake 
Lane 

19,009
75,726
63,775
7,422
322,959

19
18
76
25
84

Lincoln 
Linn 
Malheur 
Marion 
Morrow 

44,479
103,069
31,615
284,834
10,995

Multnomah 
Polk 
Sherman 
Tillamook 
Umatilla 

OregonCon.

Pennsylvania 

12,281,054

5,031

66

2,564

1,018

1,546

1,885

516

Adams 
Allegheny 
Armstrong 
Beaver 
Bedford

91,292
1,281,666
72,392
181,412
49,984

66
273
75
120
71

1
1
1
1
1

34
128
45
53
38

13
86
17
31
13

21
42
28
22
25

25
100
25
50
27

6
44
4
16
5

Berks 
Blair
Bradford 
Bucks 
Butler 

373,638
129,144
62,761
597,635
174,083

156
59
79
120
92

1
1
1
1
1

74
24
51
53
57

30
9
14
22
24

44
15
37
31
33

62
27
20
52
26

19
7
7
14
8

Cambria 
Cameron 
Carbon 
Centre
Chester

152,598
5,974
58,802
135,758
433,501

134
11
51
77
128

1
1
1
1
1

63
7
23
36
73

33
2
12
11
16

30
5
11
25
57

57
2
22
36
42

13
1
5
4
12

Clarion 
Clearfield 
Clinton 
Columbia 
Crawford 

41,765
83,382
37,914
64,151
90,366

62
100
52
56
85

1
1
1
1
1

34
50
29
33
51

12
20
8
9
16

22
30
21
24
35

20
41
21
16
30

7
8
1
6
3

Cumberland 
Dauphin 
Delaware 
Elk 
Erie 

213,674
251,798
550,864
35,112
280,843

71
95
102
38
100

1
1
1
1
1

33
40
49
12
38

11
17
28
3
16

22
23
21
9
22

28
43
36
22
47

9
11
16
3
14

Fayette 
Forest 
Franklin 
Fulton 
Greene 

148,644
4,946
129,313
14,261
40,672

87
14
52
22
48

1
1
1
1
1

42
9
21
13
26

18
1
6
2
6

24
8
15
11
20

38
3
25
5
16

6
1
5
3
5

Huntingdon 
Indiana 
Jefferson 
Juniata 
Lackawanna 

45,586
89,605
45,932
22,821
213,295

78
68
60
26
88

1
1
1
1
1

48
38
34
17
40

18
14
11
4
19

30
24
23
13
21

25
22
22
7
37

4
7
3
1
10

Lancaster 
Lawrence 
Lebanon 
Lehigh
Luzerne 

470,658
94,643
120,327
312,090
319,250

139
54
61
63
138

1
1
1
1
1

60
27
25
24
76

19
11
8
9
40

41
16
17
15
36

62
18
29
28
49

16
8
6
10
12

Lycoming 
McKean 
Mercer 
Mifflin 
Monroe 

120,044
45,936
120,293
46,486
138,687

83
50
84
35
43

1
1
1
1
1

52
22
48
16
20

10
7
17
6
4

42
15
31
10
16

22
22
23
17
18

8
5
12
1
4

Montgomery 
Montour 
Northampton 
Northumberland 
Perry 

750,097
18,236
267,066
94,556
43,602

152
22
85
66
48

1
1
1
1
1

62
11
38
36
30

24
2
21
13
9

38
9
17
23
21

66
9
37
23
13

23
1
9
6
4

Philadelphia City4 


Pike 
Potter 
Schuylkill 
Snyder 

1,517,550
46,302
18,080
150,336
37,546

17
20
46
125
46

1
1
1
1

1
13
30
67
21

1
2
6
31
6

11
24
36
15

14
5
10
45
22

2
1
5
12
2

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

49

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

50
13
40
39
14

25
4
13
10
4

25
9
27
29
10

34
5
9
23
19

11
1
6
3
2

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

31
27
67
28
65
23
72

11
6
35
6
44
5
37

20
21
32
22
21
18
35

14
16
41
10
53
7
45

5
1
14
3
18
2
15

118

39

31

75

31

7
21
13
51
26

3
5
6
16
9

1
1
6

3
4
5
10
9

3
16
7
34
15

1
2

1
4
6
15
5

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Somerset 
Sullivan
Susquehanna 
Tioga
Union 

80,023
6,556
42,238
41,373
41,624

96
20
56
66
36

1
1
1
1
1

Venango
Warren 
Washington 
Wayne 
Westmoreland 
Wyoming 
York 

57,565
43,863
202,897
47,722
369,993
28,080
381,751

51
45
123
42
137
33
133

Rhode Island 

1,048,319

Bristol4 
Kent4 
Newport4 
Providence4 
Washington4 

50,648
167,090
85,433
621,602
123,546

PennsylvaniaCon.



4,012,012

701

46

269

269

301

85

Abbeville 
Aiken
Allendale 
Anderson 
Bamberg 

South Carolina

26,167
142,552
11,211
165,740
16,658

15
24
8
23
9

1
1
1
1
1

5
10
4
9
5

5
10
4
9
5

8
12
2
8
1

1
1
1
5
2

Barnwell 
Beaufort 
Berkeley 
Calhoun 
Charleston 

23,478
120,937
142,651
15,185
309,969

13
19
10
6
35

1
1
1
1
1

7
4
6
2
16

7
4
6
2
16

2
13
2
2
17

3
1
1
1
1

Cherokee 
Chester
Chesterfield 
Clarendon 
Colleton 

52,537
34,068
42,768
32,502
38,264

10
12
12
10
11

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
8
4
6

2
5
8
4
6

6
5
2
2
3

1
1
1
3
1

Darlington 
Dillon
Dorchester 
Edgefield 
Fairfield 

67,394
30,722
96,413
24,595
23,454

13
8
14
6
6

1
1
1
1
1

4
3
5
3
2

4
3
5
3
2

7
1
6
1
2

1
3
2
1
1

Florence 
Georgetown 
Greenville
Greenwood 
Hampton 

125,761
55,797
379,616
66,271
21,386

26
11
43
12
13

1
1
1
1
1

9
3
6
5
9

9
3
6
5
9

11
6
35
3
1

5
1
1
3
2

Horry 
Jasper
Kershaw 
Lancaster 
Laurens 

196,629
20,678
52,647
61,351
69,567

16
5
9
9
13

1
1
1
1
1

8
2
3
3
5

8
2
3
3
5

6
1
4
4
5

1
1
1
1
2

Lee 
Lexington 
Marion 
Marlboro 
McCormick

20,119
216,014
35,466
28,818
9,958

5
29
12
11
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
14
4
5
3

2
14
4
5
3

1
9
4
4
2

1
5
3
1
1

Newberry 
Oconee
Orangeburg 
Pickens
Richland 

36,108
66,215
91,582
110,757
320,677

13
10
30
15
16

1
1
1
1
1

7
5
17
7
5

7
5
17
7
5

4
3
9
6
8

1
1
3
1
2

Saluda 
Spartanburg
Sumter 
Union 
Williamsburg 
York 

19,181
253,791
104,646
29,881
37,217
164,614

7
64
11
21
9
20

1
1
1
1
1
1

3
13
3
4
5
9

3
13
3
4
5
9

2
43
5
15
2
6

1
7
2
1
1
4

South Dakota 

754,844

1,866

66

1,248

308

940

376

176

Aurora
Beadle 
Bennett 
Bon Homme 
Brookings 

3,058
17,023
3,574
7,260
28,220

28
53
5
18
46

1
1
1
1
1

23
43
1
5
31

3
8
1
5
8

20
35

23

1
5
2
9
9

3
4
1
3
5

Brown 
Brule 
Buffalo 
Butte 
Campbell 

35,460
5,364
2,032
9,094
1,782

71
32
4
13
11

1
1
1
1
1

54
25
1
6
4

10
3

4
4

44
22
1
2

11
4
2
4
4

5
2

2
2

Charles Mix 


Clark 
Clay
Codington 
Corson 

9,350
4,143
13,537
25,897
4,181

50
39
19
33
19

1
1
1
1
1

31
34
14
23
14

7
7
2
6
3

24
27
12
17
11

14
2
2
4
1

4
2
2
5
3

See footnotes at end of table.

50

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

5
15
37
23
3

5
3
9
7
3

12
28
16

11
8
4
2
1

2
3
4
1
3

1
1
1
1
1

17
36
6
30
25

3
4
3
7
8

14
32
3
23
17

5
5
14
2
3

2
3
3
2
3

26
9
31
45
20

1
1
1
1
1

19
2
19
38
16

6
2
6
3
4

13

13
35
12

3
4
8
4
1

3
2
3
2
2

1,353
16,481
8,075
1,671
2,930

5
14
43
6
13

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
29
3
10

2
3
6
1
4

2
23
2
6

1
6
9
1
1

1
2
4
1
1

Jerauld 
Jones 
Kingsbury 
Lake 
Lawrence 

2,295
1,193
5,815
11,276
21,802

23
23
29
37
30

1
1
1
1
1

18
16
22
20
6

3
2
9
4
5

15
14
13
16
1

2
5
2
12
21

2
1
4
4
2

Lincoln 
Lyman
Marshall 
McCook 
McPherson 

24,131
3,895
4,576
5,832
2,904

41
24
40
29
17

1
1
1
1
1

23
18
30
21
10

7
4
5
5
5

16
14
25
16
5

14
4
6
3
4

3
1
3
4
2

Meade 
Mellette
Miner
Minnehaha 
Moody

24,253
2,083
2,884
148,281
6,595

29
23
27
51
25

1
1
1
1
1

8
19
21
34
21

2
2
5
11
5

6
17
16
23
16

18
1
3
9
1

2
2
2
7
2

Pennington 
Perkins 
Potter 
Roberts
Sanborn 

88,565
3,363
2,693
10,016
2,675

91
62
8
51
25

1
1
1
1
1

28
52
4
40
19

8
2
4
10
3

20
50

30
16

57
6
1
6
3

5
3
2
4
2

Shannon
Spink
Stanley 
Sully 
Todd 

12,466
7,454
2,772
1,556
9,050

4
56
4
6
5

1
1
1
1
1

1
47
1
2
2

1
10
1
2
2

37

1
3
1
1
1

1
5
1
2
1

Tripp 
Turner 
Union 
Walworth 
Yankton 
Ziebach 

6,430
8,849
12,584
5,974
21,652
2,519

55
39
33
12
22
4

1
1
1
1
1
1

49
28
17
6
15
1

3
10
5
6
6
1

46
18
12

3
5
9
3
3
1

2
5
6
2
3
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Custer 
Davison 
Day 
Deuel 
Dewey 

7,275
18,741
6,267
4,498
5,972

19
27
46
27
8

1
1
1
1
1

Douglas 
Edmunds 
Fall River 
Faulk 
Grant 

3,458
4,367
7,453
2,640
7,847

25
45
24
35
32

Gregory 
Haakon 
Hamlin 
Hand 
Hanson 

4,792
2,196
5,540
3,741
3,139

Harding
Hughes 
Hutchinson
Hyde 
Jackson 

South DakotaCon.



5,689,283

930

92

349

349

475

14

124

Anderson 
Bedford
Benton 
Bledsoe 
Blount 

Tennessee

71,330
37,586
16,537
12,367
105,823

12
12
5
6
13

1
1
1
1
1

4
4
2
1
6

4
4
2
1
6

7
7
2
4
6

3
1
1
1
3

Bradley 
Campbell 
Cannon
Carroll 
Carter 

87,965
39,854
12,826
29,475
56,742

6
9
5
18
11

1
1
1
1
1

2
4
2
8
2

2
4
2
8
2

3
4
2
4
8

2
1
1
1
2

Cheatham 
Chester
Claiborne 
Clay
Cocke 

35,912
15,540
29,862
7,976
33,565

11
4
9
5
5

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
4
1
2

4
2
4
1
2

6
1
4
3
2

1
1
1
1
2

Coffee 
Crockett 
Cumberland 
Davidson4 
De Kalb 

48,014
14,532
46,802
569,891
17,423

9
10
10
14
10

1
1
1

2
5
3
7
4

2
5
3
7
4

6
4
6
7
5

3
3
1
1
1

Decatur
Dickson 
Dyer 
Fayette 
Fentress 

11,731
43,156
37,279
28,806
16,625

10
12
10
14
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
6
3
10
2

3
6
3
10
2

6
5
6
3
3

1
1
2
1
1

Franklin 
Gibson 
Giles 
Grainger 
Greene 

39,270
48,152
29,447
20,659
62,909

12
23
12
7
13

1
1
1
1
1

5
10
5
3
4

5
10
5
3
4

6
8
6
3
8

1
1
1
1
2

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

51

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

6
1
10
1
9

6
1
10
1
9

4
5
13
2
7

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

4
5
2
3
4

4
5
2
3
4

4
15
2
3
6

1
2
1
2
1

4
6
8
8
12

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
3
1
5

1
2
3
1
5

2
3
4
6
6

1
1
1
1
1

17,499
382,032
7,954
27,101
39,926

6
13
6
8
15

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
2
4
5

1
2
2
4
5

4
10
3
3
9

1
1
1
1
1

Lewis 
Lincoln 
Loudon 
Macon
Madison 

11,367
31,340
39,086
20,386
91,837

4
8
11
5
9

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
4
2
3

1
2
4
2
3

2
5
6
2
5

1
2
2
1
1

Marion 
Marshall 
Maury 
McMinn
McNairy 

27,776
26,767
69,498
49,015
24,653

14
7
10
12
15

1
1
1
1
1

8
3
3
5
9

8
3
3
5
9

4
3
6
6
5

1
1
1
3
1

Meigs 
Monroe 
Montgomery 
Moore4 
Morgan 

11,086
38,961
134,768
5,740
19,757

3
8
10
2
7

1
1
1

1
4
1
1
3

1
4
1
1
3

1
3
8
1
3

1
2
1
1
1

Obion 
Overton 
Perry 
Pickett
Polk 

32,450
20,118
7,631
4,945
16,050

17
8
6
3
10

1
1
1
1
1

8
1
2
1
3

8
1
2
1
3

8
6
3
1
6

2
1
1
1
1

Putnam 
Rhea 
Roane 
Robertson 
Rutherford 

62,315
28,400
51,910
54,433
182,023

10
8
15
14
10

1
1
1
1
1

4
3
5
8
4

4
3
5
8
4

5
4
9
5
5

1
2
2
1
2

Scott 
Sequatchie
Sevier 
Shelby 
Smith 

21,127
11,370
71,170
897,472
17,712

11
5
11
14
10

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
4
7
3

3
1
4
7
3

6
3
6
6
6

1
1
1
2
1

Stewart 
Sullivan
Sumner
Tipton 
Trousdale4 

12,370
153,048
130,449
51,271
7,259

6
17
18
13
3

1
1
1
1

2
3
7
8
1

2
3
7
8
1

3
13
10
4
2

1
3
1
2
1

Unicoi 
Union 
Van Buren 
Warren 
Washington 

17,667
17,808
5,508
38,276
107,198

7
8
4
10
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
1
4
2

2
3
1
4
2

4
4
2
5
4

1
1
1
1
2

Wayne 
Weakley 
White 
Williamson 
Wilson

16,842
34,895
23,102
126,638
88,809

8
10
9
14
13

1
1
1
1
1

3
5
2
5
3

3
5
2
5
3

4
4
6
7
8

1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Grundy 
Hamblen
Hamilton 
Hancock 
Hardeman 

14,332
58,128
307,896
6,786
28,105

11
7
24
4
17

1
1
1
1
1

Hardin 
Hawkins 
Haywood 
Henderson 
Henry 

25,578
53,563
19,797
25,522
31,115

9
21
5
7
12

Hickman 
Houston 
Humphreys 
Jackson 
Jefferson 

22,295
8,088
17,929
10,984
44,294

Johnson 
Knox 
Lake 
Lauderdale
Lawrence 

TennesseeCon.

Texas 

20,851,820

4,784

254

1,196

1,196

2,245

1,089

Anderson 
Andrews 
Angelina 
Aransas 
Archer 

55,109
13,004
80,130
22,497
8,854

16
6
24
7
14

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
6
2
6

3
1
6
2
6

5
3
10
3
3

7
1
7
1
4

Armstrong 
Atascosa 
Austin 
Bailey 
Bandera 

2,148
38,628
23,590
6,594
17,645

4
17
17
6
9

1
1
1
1
1

1
6
6
1
1

1
6
6
1
1

1
5
7
3
5

1
5
3
1
2

Bastrop 
Baylor 
Bee 
Bell 
Bexar 

57,733
4,093
32,359
237,974
1,392,931

19
6
17
41
51

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
1
10
22

3
1
1
10
22

11
3
10
19
12

4
1
5
11
16

See footnotes at end of table.

52

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

7
10
23

7
10
23

5
11
37

2
1
8
14
10

1
1
1
1
1

5
1
2
1
4

5
1
2
1
4

11
4
2
2
6

2
4
1
1
7

11
18
11
18
12

1
1
1
1
1

3
7
3
3
4

3
7
3
3
4

4
8
4
13
3

3
2
3
1
4

335,227
11,549
6,516
30,438
8,285

69
6
10
27
9

1
1
1
1
1

18
2
4
9
3

18
2
4
9
3

39
2
2
9
2

11
1
3
8
3

Chambers 
Cherokee 
Childress 
Clay
Cochran 

26,031
46,659
7,688
11,006
3,730

14
19
5
17
7

1
1
1
1
1

5
8
1
6
2

5
8
1
6
2

5
5
2
5
2

3
5
1
5
2

Coke 
Coleman
Collin
Collingsworth
Colorado 

3,864
9,235
491,675
3,206
20,390

13
13
51
9
14

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
24
2
3

2
3
24
2
3

8
5
11
4
7

2
4
15
2
3

Comal 
Comanche 
Concho 
Cooke 
Coryell 

78,021
14,026
3,966
36,363
74,978

17
12
9
22
17

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
2
6
5

3
3
2
6
5

11
4
4
6
6

2
4
2
9
5

Cottle 
Crane 
Crockett 
Crosby 
Culberson 

1,904
3,996
4,099
7,072
2,975

5
4
6
12
7

1
1
1
1
1

1
1

3
1

1
1

3
1

2
1
4
5
4

1
1
1
3
1

Dallam 
Dallas 
Dawson 
De Witt 
Deaf Smith 

6,222
2,218,899
14,985
20,013
18,561

7
63
11
15
8

1
1
1
1
1

2
25
3
3
1

2
25
3
3
1

2
21
3
5
4

2
16
4
6
2

Delta 
Denton 
Dickens 
Dimmit 
Donley 

5,327
432,976
2,762
10,248
3,828

10
69
8
10
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
33
2
3
3

2
33
2
3
3

5
24
3
5
5

2
11
2
1
3

Duval 
Eastland 
Ector 
Edwards 
El Paso 

13,120
18,297
121,123
2,162
679,622

14
21
10
5
36

1
1
1
1
1

3
6
2
1
6

3
6
2
1
6

6
7
5
1
19

4
7
2
2
10

Ellis 
Erath 
Falls 
Fannin 
Fayette 

111,360
33,001
18,576
31,242
21,804

38
16
13
41
17

1
1
1
1
1

15
2
4
11
6

15
2
4
11
6

12
6
4
21
5

10
7
4
8
5

Fisher 
Floyd 
Foard 
Fort Bend 
Franklin 

4,344
7,771
1,622
354,452
9,458

13
9
7
138
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
1
16
1

2
2
1
16
1

8
4
4
116
4

2
2
1
5
1

Freestone
Frio 
Gaines 
Galveston
Garza 

17,867
16,252
14,467
250,158
4,872

14
11
9
61
8

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
2
13
1

5
2
2
13
1

4
6
3
36
4

4
2
3
11
2

Gillespie 
Glasscock 
Goliad 
Gonzales 
Gray 

20,814
1,406
6,928
18,628
22,744

9
4
5
16
10

1
1
1
1
1

1
4
3

1
4
3

4
2
2
8
2

3
1
1
3
4

Grayson 
Gregg 
Grimes 
Guadalupe 
Hale 

110,595
111,379
23,552
89,023
36,602

49
22
11
19
16

1
1
1
1
1

16
8
3
6
5

16
8
3
6
5

18
5
3
8
5

14
8
4
4
5

Hall 
Hamilton 
Hansford 
Hardeman 
Hardin 

3,782
8,229
5,369
4,724
48,073

11
10
10
9
19

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
2
2
5

4
2
2
2
5

4
5
4
4
8

2
2
3
2
5

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Blanco 
Borden 
Bosque 
Bowie 
Brazoria 

8,418
729
17,204
89,306
241,767

10
2
21
36
71

1
1
1
1
1

Brazos 
Brewster 
Briscoe 
Brooks 
Brown 

152,415
8,866
1,790
7,976
37,674

19
10
6
5
18

Burleson 
Burnet 
Caldwell 
Calhoun 
Callahan 

16,470
34,147
32,194
20,647
12,905

Cameron 
Camp 
Carson 
Cass 
Castro 

TexasCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

53

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

28
6
1
5
11

28
6
1
5
11

434
6
1
5
9

24
6
2
4
4

1
1
1
1
1

1
19
22
14
6

1
19
22
14
6

3
10
38
10
3

1
9
16
13
7

11
18
20
13
9

1
1
1
1
1

4
4
5
3
1

4
4
5
3
1

3
6
9
5
4

3
7
5
4
3

76,596
23,857
1,771
8,763
14,391

35
13
5
11
18

1
1
1
1
1

11
4
1
2
3

11
4
1
2
3

13
3
2
5
11

10
5
1
3
3

Jasper
Jeff Davis 
Jefferson 
Jim Hogg 
Jim Wells 

35,604
2,207
252,051
5,281
39,326

22
5
34
6
14

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
8

3
1
8

13
1
19
4
4

5
2
6
1
5

Johnson 
Jones 
Karnes 
Kaufman
Kendall 

126,811
20,785
15,446
71,313
23,743

27
17
19
40
9

1
1
1
1
1

11
5
4
14
2

11
5
4
14
2

6
6
10
18
4

9
5
4
7
2

Kenedy 
Kent 
Kerr 
Kimble 
King

414
859
43,653
4,468
356

2
5
13
7
3

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
1

1
2
1

2
5
4
1

1
1
5
1
1

Kinney 
Kleberg 
Knox 
La Salle 
Lamar 

3,379
31,549
4,253
5,866
48,499

7
10
16
6
23

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
4
2
7

2
1
4
2
7

3
4
7
2
9

1
4
4
1
6

Lamb
Lampasas 
Lavaca 
Lee 
Leon 

14,709
17,762
19,210
15,657
15,335

15
9
18
8
14

1
1
1
1
1

6
3
4
2
7

6
3
4
2
7

2
3
7
2
1

6
2
6
3
5

Liberty
Limestone 
Lipscomb 
Live Oak 
Llano 

70,154
22,051
3,057
12,309
17,044

31
16
14
9
11

1
1
1
1
1

11
6
4
2
2

11
6
4
2
2

12
6
5
4
7

7
3
4
2
1

Loving 
Lubbock 
Lynn 
Madison 
Marion 

67
242,628
6,550
12,940
10,941

2
24
12
8
7

1
1
1
1
1

8
4
2
1

8
4
2
1

1
7
3
3
4

8
4
2
1

Martin 
Mason
Matagorda 
Maverick
McCulloch 

4,746
3,738
37,957
47,297
8,205

9
6
26
8
11

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
2
1
2

1
1
2
1
2

5
3
18
5
5

2
1
5
1
3

McLennan 
McMullen 
Medina 
Menard 
Midland

213,517
851
39,304
2,360
116,009

51
5
18
6
10

1
1
1
1
1

19

5
1
1

19

5
1
1

12
3
7
3
5

19
1
5
1
3

Milam 
Mills
Mitchell 
Montague 
Montgomery 

24,238
5,151
9,698
19,117
293,768

19
10
11
18
113

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
3
4
14

5
2
3
4
14

7
3
4
6
92

6
4
3
7
6

Moore 
Morris 
Motley 
Nacogdoches 
Navarro 

20,121
13,048
1,426
59,203
45,124

9
10
6
24
35

1
1
1
1
1

3
4
2
5
18

3
4
2
5
18

3
3
2
9
8

2
2
1
9
8

Newton 
Nolan 
Nueces 
Ochiltree
Oldham

15,072
15,802
313,645
9,006
2,185

10
13
36
5
9

1
1
1
1
1

1
3
7
1
2

1
3
7
1
2

5
5
15
2
2

3
4
13
1
4

Orange 
Palo Pinto 
Panola 
Parker 
Parmer 

84,966
27,026
22,756
88,495
10,016

26
19
12
25
11

1
1
1
1
1

7
5
3
12
3

7
5
3
12
3

13
7
4
3
3

5
6
4
9
4

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Harris 
Harrison 
Hartley 
Haskell 
Hays 

3,400,578
62,110
5,537
6,093
97,589

487
19
5
15
25

1
1
1
1
1

Hemphill 
Henderson 
Hidalgo 
Hill 
Hockley 

3,351
73,277
569,463
32,321
22,716

6
39
77
38
17

Hood 
Hopkins 
Houston 
Howard 
Hudspeth 

41,100
31,960
23,185
33,627
3,344

Hunt 
Hutchinson
Irion 
Jack 
Jackson 

TexasCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

54

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

2
5
2
2
3

2
5
2
2
3

5
6
4
5
2

3
6
5
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

4
1
2
5
3

4
1
2
5
3

5
4
3
7
8

1
1
1
4
2

14
4
14
11
15

1
1
1
1
1

4
1
4
6
3

4
1
4
6
3

6
1
4
2
7

3
1
5
2
4

47,372
10,469
8,946
22,246
67,138

22
10
7
8
34

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
2
3
12

5
2
2
3
12

8
5
2
2
14

8
2
2
2
7

San Saba 


Schleicher 
Scurry 
Shackelford 
Shelby 

6,186
2,935
16,361
3,302
25,224

8
7
7
6
17

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
1
2
5

2
1
1
2
5

2
4
1
1
5

3
1
4
2
6

Sherman 
Smith 
Somervell 
Starr 
Stephens 

3,186
174,706
6,809
53,597
9,674

7
26
5
13
5

1
1
1
1
1

2
9
1
3
1

2
9
1
3
1

2
7
2
6
2

2
9
1
3
1

Sterling 
Stonewall 
Sutton 
Swisher 
Tarrant 

1,393
1,693
4,077
8,378
1,446,219

5
9
6
11
67

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
3
34

1
1
1
3
34

2
6
3
4
14

1
1
1
3
18

Taylor 
Terrell 
Terry 
Throckmorton 
Titus 

126,555
1,081
12,761
1,850
28,118

21
4
12
7
14

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
4

3
2
4

7
2
5
2
4

5
1
3
2
5

Tom Green 


Travis 
Trinity 
Tyler 
Upshur 

104,010
812,280
13,779
20,871
35,291

19
79
11
17
16

1
1
1
1
1

1
15
2
3
5

1
15
2
3
5

11
55
4
8
3

6
8
4
5
7

Upton 
Uvalde 
Val Verde 
Van Zandt 
Victoria 

3,404
25,926
44,856
48,140
84,088

9
12
8
20
15

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
1
7
1

2
2
1
7
1

4
4
4
5
9

2
5
2
7
4

Walker 
Waller 
Ward 
Washington 
Webb 

61,758
32,663
10,909
30,373
193,117

13
13
14
9
13

1
1
1
1
1

3
6
6
2
3

3
6
6
2
3

7
3
5
3
4

2
3
2
3
5

Wharton 
Wheeler 
Wichita 
Wilbarger 
Willacy 

41,188
5,284
131,664
14,676
20,082

19
13
21
9
19

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
6
1
3

2
3
6
1
3

10
4
9
3
11

6
5
5
4
4

Williamson 
Wilson
Winkler 
Wise 
Wood 

249,967
32,408
7,173
48,793
36,752

53
14
7
25
19

1
1
1
1
1

12
4
2
12
6

12
4
2
12
6

29
5
2
5
6

11
4
2
7
6

Yoakum 
Young 
Zapata 
Zavala

7,322
17,943
12,182
11,600

7
12
7
9

1
1
1
1

2
3

2
3

2
5
5
5

2
3
1
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Pecos 
Polk 
Potter 
Presidio 
Rains 

16,809
41,133
113,546
7,304
9,139

11
18
12
10
7

1
1
1
1
1

Randall 
Reagan
Real 
Red River 
Reeves 

104,312
3,326
3,047
14,314
13,137

11
7
7
17
14

Refugio 
Roberts
Robertson 
Rockwall
Runnels 

7,828
887
16,000
43,080
11,495

Rusk 
Sabine 
San Augustine
San Jacinto 
San Patricio 

TexasCon.

Utah 

2,233,169

605

29

236

236

300

40

Beaver 
Box Elder 
Cache 
Carbon 
Daggett

6,005
42,745
91,391
20,422
921

9
41
39
12
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
16
19
6
1

3
16
19
6
1

4
23
17
4
3

1
1
2
1
1

Davis
Duchesne
Emery 
Garfield
Grand 

238,994
14,371
10,860
4,735
8,485

30
16
17
22
15

1
1
1
1
1

15
5
9
8
2

15
5
9
8
2

13
9
6
12
11

1
1
1
1
1

Iron 
Juab 
Kane 
Millard 
Morgan 

33,779
8,238
6,046
12,405
7,129

11
10
13
24
6

1
1
1
1
1

6
5
5
10
1

6
5
5
10
1

3
2
6
12
3

1
2
1
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

55

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

4
4
15
2
13

4
4
15
2
13

1
9
41
6
4

1
1
4
1
2

1
1
1
1
1

11
6
7
3
23

11
6
7
3
23

4
16
11
12
25

1
3
1
1
3

12
21
10
46
733
57
47
52
63
31

1
1
1
1
14
1
1
1
1
1

4
14
5
14
284
23
19
19
19
13

4
14
5
14
47
1
3
2
5

237
22
16
17
14
13

6
5
3
29
152
6
9
17
21
4

1
1
1
2
283
27
18
15
22
13

45,417
6,901
23,233
28,226
26,277

44
20
36
48
57

1
1
1
1
1

17
6
15
20
25

3
1
5
3
7

14
5
10
17
18

10
8
9
7
6

16
5
11
20
25

Rutland 
Washington 
Windham 
Windsor 
Virginia 

63,400
58,039
44,216
57,418
7,078,515

87
62
63
66
521

1
1
1
1
95

29
24
28
27
229

2
6
6
3
229

27
18
22
24

21
14
8
12
196

36
23
26
26
1

132

Accomack 
Albemarle
Alleghany 
Amelia 
Amherst 

38,305
79,236
12,926
11,400
31,894

16
7
4
1
4

1
1
1
1
1

14
1
2

14
1
2

1
5
1

1
1
1
1
1

Appomattox 
Arlington 
Augusta 
Bath 
Bedford

13,705
189,453
65,615
5,048
60,371

3
3
5
2
3

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
1
2

1
1
1
1
1

Bland 
Botetourt 
Brunswick 
Buchanan
Buckingham

6,871
30,496
18,419
26,978
15,623

2
5
7
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
1
1

3
3
1
1

1
1
3
1
2

1
1
1
1
1

Campbell 
Caroline 
Carroll 
Charles City 
Charlotte 

51,078
22,121
29,245
6,926
12,472

4
3
3
1
7

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
1

2
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Chesterfield 
Clarke 
Craig 
Culpeper 
Cumberland 

259,903
12,652
5,091
34,262
9,017

2
3
4
3
1

1
1
1
1
1

2
1
1

2
1
1

2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Dickenson 
Dinwiddie 
Essex 
Fairfax 
Fauquier 

16,395
24,533
9,989
969,749
55,139

8
3
5
9
6

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
1
3
3

3
1
1
3
3

4
1
3
5
2

1
1
1
1
1

Floyd 
Fluvanna 
Franklin 
Frederick 
Giles 

13,874
20,047
47,286
59,209
16,657

5
3
4
4
7

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
2
2
5

1
1
2
2
5

3
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Gloucester 
Goochland 
Grayson 
Greene 
Greensville

34,780
16,863
17,917
15,244
11,560

2
2
6
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
1

3
1
1

1
1
2
1
2

1
1
1
1
1

Halifax 
Hanover 
Henrico 
Henry 
Highland 

37,355
86,320
262,300
57,930
2,536

7
5
3
2
2

1
1
1
1
1

4
1

1
1

4
1

1
1

2
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

Isle of Wight 


James City 
King George 
King William
King and Queen 

29,728
48,102
16,803
13,146
6,630

5
2
1
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

2
1

1
1

1
2
1

Lancaster 
Lee 
Loudoun 
Louisa 
Lunenburg 

11,567
23,589
169,599
25,627
13,146

4
5
11
5
3

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
7
2
2

3
3
7
2
2

1
3
2

1
1
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Piute 
Rich
Salt Lake 
San Juan 
Sanpete 

1,435
1,961
898,387
14,413
22,763

7
15
61
10
20

1
1
1
1
1

Sevier 
Summit 
Tooele 
Uintah 
Utah 

18,842
29,736
40,735
25,224
368,536

17
26
20
17
52

Wasatch 
Washington 
Wayne 
Weber 
Vermont 
Addison 
Bennington 
Caledonia
Chittenden 
Essex 

15,215
90,354
2,509
196,533
608,827
35,974
36,994
29,702
146,571
6,459

Franklin 
Grand Isle 
Lamoille 
Orange 
Orleans

UtahCon.

See footnotes at end of table.

56

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

VirginiaCon.
Madison 
Mathews
Mecklenburg 
Middlesex
Montgomery 

12,520
9,207
32,380
9,932
83,629

2
1
10
2
9

1
1
1
1
1

5
1
2

5
1
2

1
1
1
1
1

Nelson 
New Kent 
Northampton 
Northumberland 
Nottoway 

14,445
13,462
13,093
12,259
15,725

1
3
10
1
4

1
1
1
1
1

2
4

1
1
1
1
1

Orange 
Page 
Patrick 
Pittsylvania 
Powhatan 

25,881
23,177
19,407
61,745
22,377

3
4
4
5
1

1
1
1
1
1

2
3
1
3

2
3
1
3

2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Prince Edward
Prince George 
Prince William 
Pulaski 
Rappahannock 

19,720
33,047
280,813
35,127
6,983

4
4
11
8
2

1
1
1
1
1

4
2
1

4
2
1

2
3
6
5

1
1
1
1
1

Richmond
Roanoke
Rockbridge 
Rockingham 
Russell 

8,809
85,778
20,808
67,725
30,308

4
3
4
11
5

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
2
7
3

1
1
2
7
3

2
1
1
3
1

1
1
1
1
1

Scott 
Shenandoah 
Smyth 
Southampton 
Spotsylvania 

23,403
35,075
33,081
17,482
90,395

8
8
8
9
2

1
1
1
1
1

6
6
3
6

6
6
3
6

1
1
4
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Stafford 
Surry 
Sussex 
Tazewell 
Warren 

92,446
6,829
12,504
44,598
31,584

4
4
4
7
3

1
1
1
1
1

3
3
5
1

3
3
5
1

1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Washington 
Westmoreland 
Wise 
Wythe 
York 

51,103
16,718
40,123
27,599
56,297

6
3
12
5
1

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
6
2

3
2
6
2

5
2

1
2
1
1
1

Alexandria City4 


Bedford City4 
Bristol City4 
Buena Vista City4 
Charlottsville City4 

128,283
6,299
17,367
6,349
45,049

1
2
2
1
3

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1

1
1
1

Chesapeake City4 


Colonial Heights City4 
Covington City4 
Danville City4 
Emporia City4 

199,184
16,897
6,303
48,411
5,665

3
1
2
2
2

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1

1
1
1
1

Fairfax City4 


Falls Church City4 
Franklin City4 
Fredericksburg City4 
Galax City4 

21,498
10,377
8,346
19,279
6,837

1
1
2
4
3

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
3
2

1
1
1
1

Hampton City4 


Harrisonburg City4 
Hopewell City4
Lexington City4 
Lynchburg City4 

146,437
40,468
22,354
6,867
65,269

2
2
2
4
2

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
3
1

1
1
1
1
1

Manassas City4 


Manassas Park City4 
Martinsville City4 
Newport News City4 
Norfolk City4 

35,135
10,290
15,416
180,150
234,403

2
1
4
3
5

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
3

1
1
1
1
1

Norton City4 


Petersburg City4 
Poquoson City4 
Portsmouth City4 
Radford City4 

3,904
33,740
11,566
100,565
15,859

1
4
1
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

Richmond City4 


Roanoke City4 
Salem City4 
Staunton City4 
Suffolk City4 

197,790
94,911
24,747
23,853
63,677

7
3
2
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

6
2
1

1
1
1
1
1

Virginia Beach City4 


Waynesboro City4 
Williamsburg City4 
Winchester City4 

425,257
19,520
11,998
23,585

2
1
3
4

1
1
1
1

1
1
1
1

2
3

1
1
1
1

Washington 

5,894,121

1,787

39

279

279

1,173

296

Adams 
Asotin 
Benton 
Chelan 
Clallam 

16,428
20,551
142,475
66,616
64,525

30
10
47
56
32

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
5
5
3

5
2
5
5
3

19
5
35
43
23

5
2
6
7
5

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

57

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

7
2
5
5
1

7
2
5
5
1

25
6
24
22
9

9
2
6
6
5

1
1
1
1
1

4
1
14
9
3

4
1
14
9
3

14
3
50
26
39

4
1
10
13
3

26
140
48
33
38

1
1
1
1
1

1
38
4
5
3

1
38
4
5
3

19
82
38
21
24

5
19
5
6
10

68,600
10,184
49,405
39,564
20,984

68
36
40
54
32

1
1
1
1
1

9
8
1
13
4

9
8
1
13
4

44
19
31
32
21

14
8
7
8
6

Pend Oreille
Pierce 
San Juan 
Skagit 
Skamania 

11,732
700,820
14,077
102,979
9,872

30
91
25
76
19

1
1
1
1
1

5
21
1
8
2

5
21
1
8
2

21
54
19
60
12

3
15
4
7
4

Snohomish
Spokane 
Stevens 
Thurston 
Wahkiakum 

606,024
417,939
40,066
207,355
3,824

95
70
36
46
18

1
1
1
1
1

19
11
6
7
1

19
11
6
7
1

61
44
17
30
15

14
14
12
8
1

Walla Walla 


Whatcom 
Whitman 
Yakima 

55,180
166,814
40,740
222,581

54
66
63
70

1
1
1
1

4
7
16
14

4
7
16
14

42
51
33
40

7
7
13
15

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Clark 
Columbia 
Cowlitz 
Douglas 
Ferry 

345,238
4,064
92,948
32,603
7,260

42
11
36
34
16

1
1
1
1
1

Franklin 
Garfield
Grant 
Grays Harbor 
Island 

49,347
2,397
74,698
67,194
71,558

23
6
75
49
46

Jefferson 
King
Kitsap 
Kittitas
Klickitat 

25,953
1,737,034
231,969
33,362
19,161

Lewis 
Lincoln 
Mason
Okanogan 
Pacific 

WashingtonCon.

West Virginia 

1,808,344

686

55

234

234

342

55

Barbour 
Berkeley 
Boone 
Braxton 
Brooke 

15,557
75,905
25,535
14,702
25,447

10
13
9
9
11

1
1
1
1
1

3
2
4
4
5

3
2
4
4
5

5
9
3
3
4

1
1
1
1
1

Cabell 
Calhoun 
Clay
Doddridge 
Fayette 

96,784
7,582
10,330
7,403
47,579

14
6
7
4
25

1
1
1
1
1

3
1
1
1
10

3
1
1
1
10

9
3
4
1
13

1
1
1
1
1

Gilmer 
Grant 
Greenbrier 
Hampshire 
Hancock 

7,160
11,299
34,453
20,203
32,667

5
9
17
8
11

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
8
2
3

2
2
8
2
3

1
5
7
4
6

1
1
1
1
1

Hardy 
Harrison 
Jackson 
Jefferson 
Kanawha 

12,669
68,652
28,000
42,190
200,073

5
32
10
10
38

1
1
1
1
1

2
10
2
5
15

2
10
2
5
15

1
20
6
3
21

1
1
1
1
1

Lewis 
Lincoln 
Logan 
Marion 
Marshall 

16,919
22,108
37,710
56,598
35,519

8
11
10
31
18

1
1
1
1
1

2
2
5
11
5

2
2
5
11
5

4
7
3
18
11

1
1
1
1
1

Mason
McDowell 
Mercer 
Mineral 
Mingo 

25,957
27,329
62,980
27,078
28,253

13
16
16
15
16

1
1
1
1
1

6
10
6
5
5

6
10
6
5
5

5
4
8
8
9

1
1
1
1
1

Monongalia 
Monroe 
Morgan 
Nicholas 
Ohio 

81,866
14,583
14,943
26,562
47,427

21
7
6
12
13

1
1
1
1
1

5
2
2
2
6

5
2
2
2
6

14
3
2
8
5

1
1
1
1
1

Pendleton
Pleasants 
Pocahontas 
Preston 
Putnam 

8,196
7,514
9,131
29,334
51,589

4
5
8
17
12

1
1
1
1
1

1
2
3
10
6

1
2
3
10
6

1
1
3
5
4

1
1
1
1
1

Raleigh 
Randolph 
Ritchie 
Roane 
Summers 

79,220
28,262
10,343
15,446
12,999

17
17
11
9
8

1
1
1
1
1

5
7
6
2
1

5
7
6
2
1

10
8
3
5
5

1
1
1
1
1

Taylor 
Tucker 
Tyler 
Upshur 
Wayne 

16,089
7,321
9,592
23,404
42,903

10
9
8
11
12

1
1
1
1
1

2
5
3
1
4

2
5
3
1
4

6
2
3
8
6

1
1
1
1
1

See footnotes at end of table.

58

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

3
6
1
4
3

3
6
1
4
3

5
4
1
11
14

1
1
1
1
1

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Webster 
Wetzel 
Wirt 
Wood 
Wyoming 

9,719
17,693
5,873
87,986
25,708

10
12
4
17
19

1
1
1
1
1

West VirginiaCon.

Wisconsin

5,363,675

3,048

72

1,850

585

1,265

684

442

Adams 
Ashland 
Barron
Bayfield 
Brown 

18,643
16,866
44,963
15,013
226,778

27
26
54
44
54

1
1
1
1
1

19
16
35
28
24

2
3
10
3
8

17
13
25
25
16

6
5
11
11
20

1
4
7
4
9

Buffalo 
Burnett 
Calumet 
Chippewa 
Clark 

13,804
15,674
40,631
55,195
33,557

32
32
29
46
60

1
1
1
1
1

23
24
16
30
44

6
3
7
7
11

17
21
9
23
33

4
4
7
8
7

4
3
5
7
8

Columbia 
Crawford 
Dane 
Dodge 
Door 

52,468
17,243
426,526
85,897
27,961

68
31
102
67
31

1
1
1
1
1

34
21
59
41
19

13
10
25
17
5

21
11
34
24
14

23
5
25
16
6

10
4
17
9
5

Douglas 
Dunn 
Eau Claire 
Florence 
Fond Du Lac 

43,287
39,858
93,142
5,088
97,296

35
43
33
12
57

1
1
1
1
1

22
30
18
8
32

6
8
5

11

16
22
13
8
21

8
8
9
2
16

4
4
5
1
8

Forest 
Grant 
Green 
Green Lake 
Iowa 

10,024
49,597
33,647
19,105
22,780

23
76
35
24
36

1
1
1
1
1

15
52
23
16
25

1
19
7
6
11

14
33
16
10
14

4
12
5
3
5

3
11
6
4
5

Iron 
Jackson 
Jefferson 
Juneau 
Kenosha 

6,861
19,100
74,021
24,316
149,577

19
34
45
39
36

1
1
1
1
1

12
27
24
28
12

2
6
8
9
5

10
21
16
19
7

4
3
13
5
9

2
3
7
5
14

Kewaunee 
La Crosse 
Lafayette 
Langlade 
Lincoln 

20,187
107,120
16,137
20,740
29,641

20
33
36
32
28

1
1
1
1
1

14
18
26
19
18

4
6
8
2
2

10
12
18
17
16

2
8
2
9
7

3
6
7
3
2

Manitowoc 
Marathon 
Marinette 
Marquette 
Menominee 

82,887
125,834
43,384
15,832
4,562

55
78
42
33
4

1
1
1
1
1

30
57
25
19
1

12
15
7
5

18
42
18
14
1

18
11
8
11
1

6
9
8
2
1

Milwaukee 
Monroe 
Oconto 
Oneida 
Outagamie 

940,164
40,899
35,634
36,776
160,971

48
45
47
37
54

1
1
1
1
1

19
34
28
21
31

19
10
5
1
11

24
23
20
20

9
6
13
9
13

19
4
5
6
9

Ozaukee
Pepin 
Pierce 
Polk 
Portage

82,317
7,213
36,804
41,319
67,182

22
15
34
69
38

1
1
1
1
1

14
11
25
35
27

8
3
8
11
10

6
8
17
24
17

2
1
2
25
6

5
2
6
8
4

Price 
Racine 
Richland 
Rock 
Rusk 

15,822
188,831
17,924
152,307
15,347

30
50
32
46
42

1
1
1
1
1

22
18
22
28
33

5
9
6
8
9

17
9
16
20
24

4
19
7
8
4

3
12
2
9
4

Sauk 
Sawyer 
Shawano 
Sheboygan 
St Croix 

55,225
16,196
40,664
112,646
63,155

55
25
58
62
50

1
1
1
1
1

37
21
36
28
33

15
5
11
13
12

22
16
25
15
21

12
1
16
23
10

5
2
5
10
6

Taylor 
Trempealeau 
Vernon 
Vilas 
Walworth 

19,680
27,010
28,056
21,033
93,759

37
44
43
27
66

1
1
1
1
1

27
26
32
15
27

5
11
11
1
11

22
15
21
14
16

6
10
4
7
23

3
7
6
4
15

Washburn 
Washington 
Waukesha 
Waupaca 
Waushara 
Winnebago 
Wood 

16,036
117,493
360,767
51,731
23,154
156,763
75,555

38
47
78
51
48
51
48

1
1
1
1
1
1
1

25
20
37
34
25
21
34

4
7
25
12
7
5
12

21
13
12
22
18
16
22

8
17
20
9
19
24
6

4
9
20
7
3
5
7

Wyoming

493,782

722

23

98

98

546

55

Albany 
Big Horn 
Campbell 
Carbon 
Converse 

32,014
11,461
33,698
15,639
12,052

24
58
51
37
17

1
1
1
1
1

2
9
2
10
4

2
9
2
10
4

20
44
47
24
10

1
4
1
2
2

See footnotes at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

County Areas

59

Table 16.

Local Governments in Individual County Areas: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


General purpose governments

Special purpose governments

Townships

Special
districts

School
districts

Exhibit:
Dependent
public school
systems3

4
6
5
3
2

4
6
5
3
2

7
30
35
11
16

1
9
2
1
1

1
1
1
1
1

4
8
6
3
3

4
8
6
3
3

24
39
47
6
25

3
2
2
1
4

17
34
28
32
36

1
1
1
1
1

5
4
3
6
1

5
4
3
6
1

9
25
22
22
33

2
4
2
3
1

22
28
18

1
1
1

4
2
2

4
2
2

14
23
13

3
2
2

Subcounty
Geographic area
Population 20001

Total
governments2

County

Total

Cities

Crook 
Fremont 
Goshen
Hot Springs 
Johnson 

5,887
35,804
12,538
4,882
7,075

13
46
43
16
20

1
1
1
1
1

Laramie 
Lincoln 
Natrona 
Niobrara 
Park 

81,607
14,573
66,533
2,407
25,786

32
50
56
11
33

Platte 
Sheridan
Sublette 
Sweetwater 
Teton 

8,807
26,560
5,920
37,613
18,251

Uinta 
Washakie 
Weston 

19,742
8,289
6,644

WyomingCon.

Represents zero.
1Population as of April 1, 2000.
2Includes county governments and intercounty units whose headquarters are located in the county. See text, "Local Governments in County Areas."
3Systems operated as part of a county, municipal, or township government and not included in totals. Differs from Table 3 by 178 state dependent schools not included in this table.
4County type area without any county government; see Appendix B.
5Does not include the population of Kalawao County (87 inhabitants). Kalawao had no local governments as of January 2002.
6Includes population of all 5 county areas comprising the city of New YorkBronx County (1,332,650 inhabitants), Kings County (2,465,326 inhabitants), New York County

(1,537,195

inhabitants), Queens County (2,229,379 inhabitants), and Richmond County (443,728 inhabitants).

60

County Areas

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 17.

Local Government Participation in E Government Activities by Type of Government


and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


All governments

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

County governments

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

10

11

12

United States 

17,806

41,377

28,342

24,079

33,592

29,854

1,107

1,346

581

1,167

992

875

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

198
33
204
219
1,468

529
85
280
755
1,680

444
57
154
614
1,261

289
58
278
385
1,755

403
55
185
580
1,279

479
62
175
623
1,375

18
10
12
9
51

24
1
2
37
5

25
1
1
29
1

15
8
10
12
35

18
1
2
29
6

34
3
3
34
16

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

340
151
32
2
439

943
219
116

377

645
210
191

375

513
130
34
1
497

750
187
111

257

665
263
194
1
437

29

46

27

14

33

45

16

12

13

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

311
5
137
1,356
498

649
6
593
3,352
1,515

488
8
428
2,195
1,072

435
6
297
1,540
698

501
2
423
3,062
1,307

512
11
438
2,301
1,080

48
3
16
29
20

86

24
57
61

22

4
16
10

72
1
19
34
37

51

17
44
41

33
2
8
24
13

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

403
372
256
113
177

1,161
1,893
669
207
431

411
1,622
514
153
218

658
605
437
124
240

895
1,653
485
173
338

422
1,629
517
176
248

26
36
20
14
5

50
51
61
28
10

23
17
38
18
1

41
43
31
20
4

27
39
42
19
8

31
22
46
21
4

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

114
259
808
588
134

88
326
1,403
1,900
378

63
256
593
994
488

113
281
1,014
822
213

74
236
1,134
1,628
280

78
324
656
1,032
507

22
2
37
48
8

1
2
33
32
29

1
13
7
45

16
2
35
41
12

4
1
28
25
22

3
2
20
21
48

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

568
121
266
48
153

1,697
630
1,328
83
220

1,157
376
1,197
79
186

808
302
486
60
201

1,434
458
1,098
65
149

1,180
367
1,207
85
209

16
16
16
9
3

69
29
50
7
6

29
9
27

25
19
19
8
6

54
23
41
4
2

35
12
33
4
2

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

604
95
977
281
118

405
262
1,599
459
1,428

403
501
844
220
1,189

512
149
1,071
379
285

401
197
1,416
342
1,261

499
512
933
239
1,189

18
10
42
71
6

2
17
14
20
36

1
6
1
9
11

7
12
27
53
22

4
13
16
24
21

10
8
14
23
10

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

950
330
344
912
30

1,610
951
714
2,699
38

1,076
517
381
1,420
50

1,090
542
527
1,302
30

1,373
720
518
2,200
27

1,173
536
394
1,529
61

40
10
21
42

25
44
15
14

23
23

10

32
15
23
25

18
33
8
12

38
29
5
29

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

196
127
142
1,205
155

318
935
491
1,894
287

187
804
297
1,685
163

228
282
223
1,612
205

263
791
396
1,429
227

210
793
311
1,743
173

18
8
24
53
13

23
49
42
141
13

5
9
26
60
3

16
27
25
81
13

18
28
31
98
13

12
11
36
75
3

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

106
211
532
82
558
78

279
183
806
355
1,811
340

348
127
449
249
679
304

168
238
729
127
951
149

194
128
557
304
1,379
267

371
155
501
255
718
306

1
64
32
7
47
8

8
18
3
35
20
11

5
13
4
13
5
4

2
51
26
12
44
9

6
21
3
28
12
8

6
23
10
15
16
6

See footnote at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

E Government

61

Table 17.

Local Government Participation in E Government Activities by Type of Government


and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Municipal governments

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Town or township governments

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

United States 

4,697

10,419

4,313

5,811

8,518

5,100

1,391

9,006

6,107

2,147

7,986

6,371

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

77
23
64
43
381

234
76
18
291
61

140
50
5
165
33

92
43
52
101
285

206
53
20
230
73

153
53
15
168
117

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

86
16
16
1
209

134
10
29

134

50
4
12

61

109
8
14

207

95
12
27

98

66
10
16
1
99

100

39

10

56

41

52

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

125
1
30
300
85

313

116
674
344

93

54
317
138

139
1
65
307
127

282

76
621
299

110

59
363
141

58
26

832
554

541
428

109
59

783
521

539
428

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

110
104
51
43
17

695
390
238
154
3

143
133
135
105
2

256
163
110
48
10

548
323
171
134
5

144
141
143
120
7

88

522

257

776

122

18

115

514

213

767

139

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

75
36
198
228
32

53
4
254
476
152

29
5
81
150
112

75
14
207
276
57

41
4
211
395
117

41
27
115
183
122

128
139
20

113
815
1,105

65
288
668

95
263
103

100
686
1,036

111
293
654

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

152
14
59
14
13

525
94
350
4

269
21
122
1

194
38
108
12
8

464
69
290
4
1

288
22
133
3
4

69

142

184

107

170

262

45

79

140

181

81

171

260

61

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

124
28
179
167
20

103
51
330
291
234

97
22
107
83
106

94
38
190
223
49

102
31
278
230
204

128
32
148
88
107

130

210

61

507

619

51

212

712

90

275

14

60

403

607

92

251

711

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

284
61
95
180
6

433
335
112
616

225
194
33
222
2

293
105
132
244
3

370
283
63
514

279
202
45
260
5

80

220
16

739

983
8

489

343
7

137

395
9

665

762
7

506

389
15

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

65
22
74
286
83

139
222
189
627
112

65
64
86
283
41

66
72
89
386
98

128
169
165
485
83

75
67
95
325
55

396

543

401

534

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

12
94
124
28
147
15

23
96
123
128
362
67

12
39
32
78
76
16

8
104
158
39
261
33

22
69
71
107
229
46

17
56
50
88
95
19

35

69

128

895

74

301

71

248

78

707

88

310

See footnote at end of table.

62

E Government

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 17.

Local Government Participation in E Government Activities by Type of Government


and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


Special district governments

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

School district governments

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

35

36

United States 

3,612

16,725

14,715

7,013

13,265

14,774

6,999

3,881

2,626

7,941

2,831

2,734

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

42

24
37
485

230
8
184
299
1,336

253
6
97
368
1,009

111
7
77
113
794

157
1
129
230
1,027

257
6
99
361
1,009

61

104
130
551

41

76
128
278

26

51
52
218

71

139
159
641

22

34
91
173

35

58
60
233

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

141
26
4
1
105

715
170
84

222

558
188
172

299

274
58
6
1
174

584
133
83

137

556
193
171

315

84
9
9

79

67

31
8
7

97
8
12

71

55
1

10

30
8
7

14

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

45
1
34
393
217

199
6
412
1,547
489

337
8
352
1,205
419

114
4
130
526
330

132
2
312
1,369
377

335
9
356
1,250
418

93

57
576
150

51

41
242
67

36

18
116
77

110

83
564
145

36

18
245
69

34

15
125
80

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

29
35
68
19
27

317
832
336
12
130

196
666
316
14
65

108
160
167
18
53

242
703
251
8
100

192
670
302
19
69

238
196
117
37
40

99
98
34
13
31

49
30
25
16
28

253
221
129
38
58

78
74
21
12
12

55
29
26
16
29

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

17
38
123
89
29

34
198
147
188
136

34
167
96
126
293

22
119
173
182
69

29
119
92
95
96

34
165
101
126
293

55
311
203
65

9
154
99
61

18
115
43
38

51
336
220
75

12
117
77
45

19
127
48
44

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

98
22
55
14
5

787
308
460
68
70

629
262
631
76
73

241
85
117
29
18

650
251
399
53
56

623
256
630
76
74

302
69
136
11
63

174
199
284
4
37

60
84
155
2
67

347
160
237
11
90

126
115
187
4
9

63
77
151
2
68

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

43
9
147
43
22

155
159
601
148
429

78
460
387
128
313

43
24
193
103
81

141
143
566
88
371

92
461
376
128
312

289
48
399

69

84
35
147

110

176
13
137

47

278
75
386

119

94
10
153

58

177
11
144

49

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

169
31
102
149
7

263
306
518
999
29

199
223
307
737
39

231
110
213
337
17

194
228
412
817
20

206
222
302
731
38

377
228
126
321
1

150
266
69
87
1

140
77
41
108
2

397
312
159
301
1

126
176
35
95

144
83
42
120
3

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

53
16
36
178
30

148
203
255
866
156

100
157
184
1,201
114

88
71
98
385
61

110
154
197
660
129

103
151
180
1,200
110

60
80
8
688
29

8
65
5
260
6

17
31
1
141
5

58
107
11
760
33

7
39
3
186
2

20
30

143
5

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

15
52
205
23
33
26

51
69
593
176
428
249

86
75
375
143
223
271

27
82
323
53
121
72

38
38
446
153
338
205

87
76
404
136
225
269

43
1
171
24
262
29

69

87
16
106
13

171

38
15
74
13

60
1
222
23
277
35

50

37
16
93
8

173

37
16
72
12

Represents zero.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

E Government

63

Table 18.

County, Municipal, and Township Government Participation in E Government


Activities by Population Size Group and State: 2002

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


500,000 or more1

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

250,000 to 499,9991

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

10

11

12

United States 

113

77

37

136

13

87

15

49

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

17

13

2
1
2
1
14

1
2

1
4

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

1
1
7

12

10

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

4
1

1
1

3
1

2
1

1
3

2
3

1
5
1

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

1
3
2
4
1

1
1
1
2
1

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

4
1
5
1

3
1
3
2

1
2
1

3
4
1

3
2

2
1

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

3
2
1

3
2

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

7
1
6
3

3
1
3
3

7
1
8
4

5
3

4
1
3
1

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

6
3
2
5

3
1
2
2

3
2

6
1
4
10

3
4

1
7

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

3
12
1

1
10
1

2
3

2
8
1

1
6
1

1
2

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

1
4

1
1

4
2

2
2

See footnote at end of table.

64

E Government

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Table 18.

County, Municipal, and Township Government Participation in E Government


Activities by Population Size Group and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


100,000 to 249,9991

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

50,000 to 99,9991

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

United States 

419

39

19

295

59

123

635

149

60

446

153

245

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

11
3
58

1
1

10
3
42

1
1
2

14

10
2
4
11
88

1
3
5

2
3

7
1
3
6
63

2
4
8

8
1

6
25

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

10
5
2

24

9
1
2

18

1
3

5
10
1

29

4
4

24

1
6
1

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

10
2
2
25
18

1
5
4

4
1

7
1
2
15
14

1
7
5

2
1

12
4

23
1
5
39
14

1
13
15

5
3

19

4
32
11

1
11
14

5
1
1
14
7

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

6
4
1
5

2
4

5
3
1
3
2

2
2

2
1

9
8
7
5
3

5
5
2

1
5

6
6
6
4

4
5
2

4
2
3
6
3

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

6
5
19
4
4

5
3
14
4
3

1
2
4

8
16
29
21
3

2
7

6
3
17
12
2

1
3
7
2

1
12
13
7
7

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

5
1
2
3
1

2
1
2
2
2

1
1

11
8

2
3

5
6

1
2

4
2

1
2

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

6
3
21
20
1

3
2
12
17
1

2
1

4
1
7
4

20
6
31
27
4

1
3
8
3
1

5
1
1
2

9
3
22
22
4

3
3
9
5
1

14
4
9
5

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

16

6
12
1

2
2

9
1
4
2
1

5
1
1
7

1
8

24
7
10
15
2

9
4
3
5

5
2

2
1

20
6
9
12
1

5
4
2
2

13
3
2
8
2

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

10
2
9
31
4

2
1

1
2

8
2
4
19
5

6
12

5
2
7
30
7

8
10
1

2
3

8
24
4

7
7
3

5
2
2
12
1

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

1
9
10
1
11

1
7
6

2
2
1
4

17
17
5
22
2

2
1

5
1

1
1

1
1
1

14
13
3
15
1

2
1

6
6
1

1
4
4
2
3
1

See footnote at end of table.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

E Government

65

Table 18.

County, Municipal, and Township Government Participation in E Government


Activities by Population Size Group and State: 2002Con.

[For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text]


25,000 to 49,9991

Geographic area

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Under 25,0001

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Central activity information is provided


on an Internet Web site that is
maintained or controlled by the
government

Public can communicate or transact


business with the government using
Internet, e mail, or other computer
based system

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

Yes

No

Did not
answer
question

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33

34

35

36

United States 

922

407

225

739

362

453

4,970

20,155

10,694

7,481

16,899

11,439

Alabama 
Alaska
Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 

6
2
11
5
92

10
1

10
8

5
1

6
2
7
7
63

8
1

8
19

11

4
5
19

67
28
45
32
163

244
76
18
314
52

150
51
6
187
30

87
47
38
97
130

214
53
19
246
48

160
55
12
190
67

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 
District of Columbia 
Florida 

9
19
1

41

1
5
1

6
7
1

28

1
6
1

6
11

14

82
82
14

142

160
42
28

138

53
14
12

65

115
52
13

166

110
44
26

98

70
42
15

81

Georgia 
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois 
Indiana 

16

9
61
23

13

2
41
48

19
15

18

7
53
30

10

2
38
36

2
30
20

119

29
255
76

382

136
1,501
888

108

58
846
557

164

70
343
166

319

89
1,391
804

126

64
868
551

Iowa 
Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 

12
18
11
6
4

6
4
15
6
3

7
1
9
7
1

12
18
8
6
4

3
4
14
4
3

10
1
13
9
1

108
108
49
37
102

737
959
279
169
261

158
925
163
110
124

274
195
126
53
123

571
872
194
142
219

158
925
171
121
145

Maryland 
Massachusetts 
Michigan
Minnesota 
Mississippi 

9
34
41
29
8

9
16
9
13

5
6
4
14

6
17
33
22
9

2
8
18
7
10

1
23
12
13
16

69
110
277
237
24

54
106
1,078
1,603
166

29
65
375
821
138

70
87
435
378
55

42
93
897
1,447
128

40
101
398
836
145

Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hampshire 

16
5
5
3
6

12

4
1
2

10
4
7
1
6

9
1
2
1

18

2
2
3

131
16
65
12
74

720
123
579
10
107

457
30
409
1
45

198
46
120
13
83

640
91
509
6
81

470
32
424
4
62

New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota 

39
6
53
28
2

5
4
14
6
1

16
3
3
1

24
4
37
20
2

8
4
20
10
1

28
5
13
5

193
21
312
156
20

158
61
827
300
887

126
24
316
89
829

150
40
413
211
78

151
37
663
238
830

176
29
379
96
828

Ohio 
Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 

53
10
10
36
8

20
14
1
8
1

24
7

8
1

39
12
8
26
2

15
8
1
8
2

43
11
2
18
6

299
50
84
364
11

1,165
359
123
1,597
7

706
208
33
562
7

389
100
129
618
8

1,028
302
67
1,271
5

753
215
44
634
12

South Carolina 


South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 

9
2
15
46
14

10
1
20
30
1

6
12

9
3
18
49
12

11
18
2

12
21
1

55
25
62
212
69

144
666
203
723
122

67
616
103
326
44

60
99
82
359
88

131
598
178
552
91

75
610
108
350
56

Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

1
24
30
6
23
5

6
2

9
6
2

1
4

7
2
1

1
22
26
8
17
2

4
4
1
6
6
3

3
4
3
8
8
3

46
103
93
23
203
16

151
111
126
149
1,270
76

89
47
36
83
378
18

79
110
134
40
511
39

100
84
71
123
936
50

107
67
50
92
404
21

Represents zero.
1Population

66

size groups and populations are based on population as of April 1, 2000.

E Government

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix A.
Definitions
TYPES OF GOVERNMENTS
The U.S. Census Bureau recognizes five basic types of
local governments. Of these five types, three are generalpurpose governmentscounty and subcounty general purpose (municipal and township) governments. The other
two types are special-purpose governmentsschool district governments and special district governments. These
types of governments are briefly described as follows:
1. County governmentsOrganized local governments
authorized in state constitutions and statutes and
established to provide general government; includes
those governments designated as boroughs in Alaska,
as parishes in Louisiana, and as counties in other
states.
2. Subcounty general-purpose governmentsThis category includes municipal and township governments.
Municipal and township governments are distinguished primarily by the historical circumstances surrounding their incorporation.
a. Municipal governmentsOrganized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes and established to provide general government for a defined area; includes those
governments designated as cities, boroughs
(except in Alaska), towns (except in the six New
England states, Minnesota, New York, and Wisconsin), and villages. This concept corresponds generally to the incorporated places that are recognized in Census Bureau reporting of population and
housing statistics, subject to an important
qualificationthe count of municipal governments
in this report excludes places that are currently
governmentally inactive.
b. Township governmentsOrganized local governments authorized in state constitutions and statutes and established to provide general government for a defined area; includes those
governments designated as towns in Connecticut,
Maine (including organized plantations), Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire (including organized locations), New York, Rhode Island, Vermont,
and Wisconsin, and townships in other states.
3. School district governmentsOrganized local entities
providing public elementary, secondary, and/or higher
education which, under state law, have sufficient
GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments. Excludes dependent public school
systems of county, municipal, township, or state governments.
4. Special district governmentsAll organized local entities other than the four categories listed above, authorized by State law to provide only one or a limited
number of designated functions, and with sufficient
administrative and fiscal autonomy to qualify as separate governments; known by a variety of titles, including districts, authorities, boards, commissions, etc., as
specified in the enabling state legislation.
SPECIAL DISTRICT FUNCTIONS
Major categories for census classification of special district governments by function, as applied in this report,
are defined below. Even within these functional categories,
however, there is some variation in responsibilities among
individual special district governments. For example,
some special districts finance construction of facilities,
whereas others actually operate facilities as well.
Air transportation. Construction, maintenance, operation, and support of airport facilities.
Cemeteries. Development, maintenance, operation, and
support of public cemeteries.
Education. Consisting almost entirely of school building
districtsexisting only in Indiana and Pennsylvaniathat
finance and construct educational facilities for leasing to
public school systems. This category also includes the
Chicago School Finance Authority which assists the Chicago Board of Education in financing school operations.
The actual operations of school systems are excluded here
and are included with school district governments or
dependent public school systems.
Electric power. Operation and maintenance of electric
power system including production or acquisition and distribution of electric power.
Fire protection. Fire fighting organizations and auxiliary
services; fire inspection and investigation; support of volunteer fire forces; and other fire prevention activities. Special district governments that provide ambulance services
exclusively are classified under Health.
Appendix A

A1

Gas supply. Operation and maintenance of gas supply


systems including acquisition and distribution of natural
gas.
Health. Outpatient health services, other than hospital
care, including: public health administration; research and
education; categorical health programs; treatment and
immunization clinics; nursing; environmental health activities such as air and water pollution control; ambulance
service if provided separately from fire protection services; and other general public health activities such as
mosquito abatement. Also includes financing, construction, and operation of nursing homes. Special districts
engaged in sewage treatment operations are classified
under Sewerage.
Highways. Construction, maintenance, and operation of
highways, streets, and related structures, including toll
highways, bridges, tunnels, ferries, street lighting, and
snow and ice removal.
Hospitals. Financing, construction, acquisition, maintenance, or operation of hospital facilities, provision of hospital care, and support of public or private hospitals.
Housing and community development. Construction
and operation of housing and redevelopment projects, and
other activities to promote or aid housing and community
development.
Industrial development. Includes industrial development authorities, business district authorities, downtown
business district authorities, and economic development
authorities.
Libraries. Establishment and operation of public libraries
and support of privately operated libraries.
Mortgage credit. Primarily housing finance authorities
established to finance publically assisted housing.
Natural resources. Conservation, promotion, and development of natural resources such as soil, water, forests,

A2 Appendix A

minerals, and wildlife. Includes irrigation, drainage, flood


control, forestry and forest fire protection, soil reclamation, soil and water conservation, and fish and game programs.
Parking facilities. Construction, purchase, maintenance, and operation of public-use parking lots, garages,
parking meters, and other distinctive parking facilities on
a commercial basis.
Parks and recreation. Provision and support of recreational and cultural-scientific facilities and activities
including: golf courses, playfields, playgrounds, public
beaches, swimming pools, tennis courts, parks, auditoriums, stadiums, auto camps, recreation piers, marinas,
botanical gardens, galleries, museums, and zoos. Also
includes building and operation of convention centers and
exhibition halls.
Sea and inland port facilities. Construction, maintenance, operation, and support of canals and other waterways, harbors, docks, wharves, and related marine terminal facilities.
Sewerage. Provisions of sanitary and storm sewers and
sewage disposal facilities and services.
Solid waste management. Street cleaning, solid waste
collection and disposal, and provision of sanitary landfills.
Transit. Construction, maintenance, operation and support of public mass transit systemsbus, commuter rail,
light rail, or subway systems. Excluded are systems established solely to transport elementary and secondary
school pupils. Ferry systems are classified under Highways.
Water supply. Operation and maintenance of water supply systems including acquisition and distribution of water
to the general public or to other local governments for
domestic or industrial use. Acquisition and distribution of
water for irrigation of agricultural lands are classified
under Natural Resources.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix B.
County-Type Areas Without County Governments
Areas with governments legally designated as city-counties
and operating primarily as cities (11):
Alaska .................................................................. City and borough of Anchorage, city and borough of Juneau, city and borough of Sitka, and
city and borough of Yakutat.
California ............................................................. City and county of San Francisco.
Colorado ............................................................... City and county of Broomfield and city and
county of Denver.
Hawaii .................................................................. City and county of Honolulu.
Kansas ................................................................. Unified Government of Wyandotte County and
city of Kansas City.
Montana ............................................................... Anaconda-Deer Lodge County and Butte-Silver
Bow County.
Areas designated as metropolitan governments and operating primarily as cities (3):
Tennessee ............................................................. Hartsville and Trousdale County, Lynchburg and
Moore County, and Nashville and Davidson
County.
Areas having certain types of county offices, but as part of
another government (city, township, special district, state)
(19):
Florida.................................................................. County of Duval (city of Jacksonville).
Georgia................................................................. County of Clarke (city of Athens), county of
Muscogee (city of Columbus), county of Richmond (city of Augusta).
Hawaii .................................................................. County of Kalawao (state of Hawaii).
Indiana ................................................................. County of Marion (city of Indianapolis).
Kentucky .............................................................. Lexington-Fayette Urban County.
Louisiana............................................................... Parish of East Baton Rouge (city of Baton Rouge),
parish of Lafayette (city of Lafayette), parish of
Orleans (city of New Orleans), and Terrebonne
Parish Consolidated Government.
Massachusetts ........................................................ County of Nantucket (town of Nantucket) and
county of Suffolk (city of Boston).
New York .............................................................. Counties of Bronx, Kings, New York, Queens,
and Richmond (all part of the city of New York).
Pennsylvania ......................................................... County of Philadelphia (city of Philadelphia).
Area classified as a separate county area and as a separate
state area in population statistics, but counted as a municipal government in census statistics on governments (1):
District of Columbia ................................................. Washington city.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix B

B1

Cities located outside of any county area and administering functions elsewhere commonly performed by counties
(42):
Maryland ...............................................................
Missouri................................................................
Nevada ................................................................
Virginia (39 cities) ....................................................

Baltimore city (distinct from Baltimore County).


St. Louis city (distinct from St. Louis County).
Carson City.
Alexandria, Bedford, Bristol, Buena Vista, Charlottesville, Chesapeake, Colonial Heights, Covington, Danville, Emporia, Fairfax, Falls Church,
Franklin, Fredericksburg, Galax, Hampton, Harrisonburg, Hopewell, Lexington, Lynchburg,
Manassas, Manassas Park, Martinsville, Newport
News, Norfolk, Norton, Petersburg, Poquoson,
Portsmouth, Radford, Richmond, Roanoke,
Salem, Staunton, Suffolk, Virginia Beach,
Waynesboro, Williamsburg, and Winchester.

Unorganized areas bearing county designations but having


no county government (20):
Connecticut ........................................................... Fairfield, Hartford, Litchfield, Middlesex, New
Haven, New London, Tolland, and Windham.
Massachusetts ........................................................ Berkshire, Essex, Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire, Middlesex, and Worcester.
Rhode Island .......................................................... Bristol, Kent, Newport, Providence, and Washington.
Other unorganized county-type areas (11):
Alaska census areas. ................................................. Aleutians West, Bethel, Dillingham, Nome, Prince
of Wales-Outer Ketchikan, Skagway-HoonahAngoon, Southeast Fairbanks, Valdez-Cordova,
Wade Hampton, Wrangall-Paterson, and YukonKayukuk.

B2

Appendix B

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C.
Local Government Directory Survey Forms

The Government Organization forms are shown on the following pages.

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C C1

OMB No. 0607-0888: Approval Expires 09/30/2004


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

G-26

FORM
(10-1-2001)

RETURN
TO

Economics and Statistics Administration

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

U.S. Census Bureau


1201 East 10th Street
Jeffersonville, IN 47132-0001

2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS


LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECTORY SURVEY
(COUNTY GOVERNMENTS)

In correspondence pertaining
to this report, please refer to
the Census File Number above
your address

INTERNET RESPONSE: If you prefer, you may respond to


this survey via the Internet at the following web address:
http://harvester.census.gov/cds/index.html. You will need
your User ID to access the Internet form.
Government name

User ID

(Only make corrections to errors in the above label)


Office

CORRECTIONS
TO
GOVERNMENT Official address Number and street or post office box
NAME AND
ADDRESS

1.

2.

State

ZIP Code

(All respondents provide the information below)


Title

Name

DATA
SUPPLIED
BY
Area code

City

Telephone
Number

E-MAIL

FAX
Extension Area code

Number

E-GOVERNMENT
a.

Is official information about the central activities


of your government presented on an Internet web
site where the content is maintained or controlled
by your government?

b.

Can the public communicate or transact


business with one or more departments of
your government using the Internet, e-mail, or
other computer-based systems?

FISCAL YEAR

Yes Enter the web address


(e.g. www.mylocalgov.state.us)

No

Yes
No

MM

DD

What is your governments fiscal year ending date?


002601

C2

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 2
3.

PUBLIC SERVICES
Which of the following public services does your government provide or contract for? Include
services provided by boards, agencies, or commissions fiscally controlled by your government. Mark (X)
ONE OR MORE boxes as appropriate for each service listed. (For example, one portion of service is provided
directly and another portion is contracted.)
(Mark (X) ONE OR MORE boxes as appropriate
for each service below)
Does not
provide or
contract for
this service

Service

(1)

Directly
provides this
service
(2)

Contracts
privately for
this service
(3)

Contracts
with another
government
for this service
(4)

01

a. Airports
32

b. Ambulances
03

c. Cemeteries
05

d. Corrections (jails)
92

e. Electric utility
24

f. Fire protection
93

g. Gas utility
32

h. Health (other than hospitals)


36

i. Hospitals
50

j. Housing and community development


62

k. Law enforcement (police)


52

l. Libraries
79

m. Nursing homes
n. Parks and recreation (include stadiums
and convention centers)

61

94

o. Public transit
80

p. Sewerage system

q. Solid waste management (include

81

landfills, dumps, resource recovery,


refuse collection)
44

r. Streets, roads, highways, bridges


91

s. Water utility
Notes

FORM G-26 (10-1-2001)


002602

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C3

Page 3
4.

BORROWING
Enter the amount of your countys outstanding
debt at the end of your last completed fiscal year.
If none, enter 0.

.00

.00

Report in whole dollars.


5.

EMPLOYMENT AND PAYROLL


For your most recent pay period report the number of
full-time and part-time staff employed by your
government.
Include persons paid for personal services performed,
including persons in paid leave status; any officials paid
on a salary basis; by fees or commissions; on a per
meeting basis; or a flat sum quarterly, semiannually, or
annually; temporary or seasonal employees.
Exclude employees on unpaid leave, unpaid officials,
pensioners, and contractors and their employees.
If actual number is not available, enter an estimate.
(a) NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work the number of hours
that represents regular full-time employment for
your government.
(b) NUMBER OF PART-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work daily or hourly for less
than the number of hours that represents full-time
employment.
For your most recently completed Fiscal Year report
annual gross payroll (before deductions).
Include salaries, wages, fees, or commissions,
overtime, premium, night differential pay,
bonuses and incentive payments.
Exclude lump sum payments, and the value of
living quarters and subsistence allowances
furnished to employees.
(c) GROSS ANNUAL PAYROLL AMOUNT:

Notes

FORM G-26 (10-1-2001)


002603

C4

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

OMB No. 0607-0888: Approval Expires 09/30/2004


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

G-28

FORM
(10-1-2001)

Economics and Statistics Administration

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

U.S. Census Bureau


1201 East 10th Street
Jeffersonville, IN 47132-0001

RETURN
TO

2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS


LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECTORY SURVEY
(MUNICIPAL AND TOWNSHIP GOVERNMENTS)

In correspondence pertaining
to this report, please refer to
the Census File Number above
your address

User ID

INTERNET RESPONSE: If you prefer, you may respond to


this survey via the Internet at the following web address:
http://harvester.census.gov/cds/index.html. You will need
your User ID to access the Internet form.
Government name

(Only make corrections to errors in the above label)


Office

CORRECTIONS
TO
GOVERNMENT Official address Number and street or post office box
NAME AND
ADDRESS

Telephone
Area code

IMPORTANT

1.

ZIP Code

(All respondents provide the information below)


Title

Name

DATA
SUPPLIED
BY

State

City

Number

E-MAIL

FAX
Extension Area code

Number

If this government has ceased to exist, please


mark (X) the box at the right, enter the
effective date, and return the form.

E-GOVERNMENT
a.

Is official information about the central


activities of your government presented on
an Internet web site where the content is
maintained or controlled by your
government?

b.

Can the public communicate or transact


business with one of more departments of
your government using the Internet, e-mail,
or other computer-based systems?

EFFECTIVE DATE
Month (MM)

Day (DD)

Yes Enter the web address


(e.g. www.mylocalgov.state.us)

No

Yes
No

Year (YYYY)


002801

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C5

Page 2
2.

FISCAL YEAR

MM

DD

What is your governments fiscal year ending date?

3.

PUBLIC SERVICES
Which of the following public services does your government provide or contract for? Include
services provided by boards, agencies, or commissions fiscally controlled by your government. Mark (X)
ONE OR MORE boxes as appropriate for each service listed. (For example, one portion of service is provided
directly and another portion is contracted.)
(Mark (X) ONE OR MORE boxes as appropriate
for each service below)
Does not
provide or
contract for
this service

Service

(1)

Directly
provides this
service
(2)

Contracts
privately for
this service
(3)

Contracts
with another
government
for this service
(4)

01

a. Airports
32

b. Ambulances
03

c. Cemeteries
05

d. Corrections (jails)
92

e. Electric utility
24

f. Fire protection
93

g. Gas utility
32

h. Health (other than hospitals)


36

i. Hospitals
50

j. Housing and community development


62

k. Law enforcement (police)


52

l. Libraries
79

m. Nursing homes
n. Parks and recreation (include stadiums
and convention centers)

61

94

o. Public transit
80

p. Sewerage system

q. Solid waste management (include

81

landfills, dumps, resource recovery,


refuse collection)
44

r. Streets, roads, highways, bridges


91

s. Water utility
FORM G-28 (10-1-2001)


002802

C6

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 3
4.

BORROWING
Enter the amount of your governments outstanding
debt at the end of your last completed fiscal year.
If none, enter 0.

.00

.00

Report in whole dollars.


5.

EMPLOYMENT AND PAYROLL


For your most recent pay period report the number of
full-time and part-time staff employed by your
government.
Include persons paid for personal services performed,
including persons in paid leave status; any officials paid
on a salary basis; by fees or commissions; on a per
meeting basis; or a flat sum quarterly, semiannually, or
annually; temporary or seasonal employees.
Exclude employees on unpaid leave, unpaid officials,
pensioners, and contractors and their employees.
If actual number is not available, enter an estimate.
(a) NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work the number of hours
that represents regular full-time employment for
your government.
(b) NUMBER OF PART-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work daily or hourly for less
than the number of hours that represents full-time
employment.
For your most recently completed Fiscal Year report
annual gross payroll (before deductions).
Include salaries, wages, fees, or commissions,
overtime, premium, night differential pay, bonuses and
incentive payments.
Exclude lump sum payments, and the value of living
quarters and subsistence allowances furnished to
employees.
(c) GROSS ANNUAL PAYROLL AMOUNT:

Notes

FORM G-28 (10-1-2001)


002803

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C7

OMB No. 0607-0888: Approval Expires 09/30/2004


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

G-29

FORM
(10-1-2001)

Economics and Statistics Administration

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

U.S. Census Bureau


1201 East 10th Street
Jeffersonville, IN 47132-0001

RETURN
TO

2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS


LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECTORY SURVEY
(SPECIAL DISTRICT GOVERNMENTS)

In correspondence pertaining
to this report, please refer to
the Census File Number above
your address

INTERNET RESPONSE: If you prefer, you may respond to


this survey via the Internet at the following web address:
http://harvester.census.gov/cds/index.html. You will need
your User ID to access the Internet form.
Special district name

User ID

(Only make corrections to errors in the above label)


Office

CORRECTIONS
TO SPECIAL
DISTRICT
Official address Number and street or post office box
GOVERNMENT
NAME AND
ADDRESS

Telephone
Area code

ZIP Code

(All respondents provide the information below)


Title

Name

DATA
SUPPLIED
BY

State

City

Number

FAX
Extension Area code

E-MAIL

Number

EFFECTIVE DATE
IMPORTANT
1.

If this agency has ceased to exist, please


mark (X) the box at the right, enter the
effective date, and return the form.

E-GOVERNMENT
a.

Is official information about your agencys


central activities presented on an Internet web
site where the content is maintained or
controlled by your agency?

b.

Can the public communicate or transact


business with your agency using the Internet,
e-mail, or other computer-based systems?

Month (MM)

Day (DD)

Yes Enter the web address


(e.g. www.mylocalgov.state.us)

No

Yes
No

Year (YYYY)


002901

C8

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 2
2.

FISCAL YEAR

MM

DD

What is your agencys fiscal year ending date?


3.

INCORPORATION DATE
1

Was your district formed after


June 30, 1997?
4.

Yes Enter 4-digit year


No

AUTHORIZING LEGISLATION
If known, enter the legal citation of the state authorizing
legislation under which your agency was formed.

5.

AREA SERVED

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as


one particular county Specify county

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as one


particular city, village, town, or township Specify unit

An area whose legal boundaries are contained wholly


within one county and are not exactly the same as the
county, a particular city, town, village, or township
Specify county and/or principal city, town, village, or
township

Mark (X) the ONE box that describes the area covered
by your agency.

County

Principal city, town, village, or township

An area whose legal boundaries encompass part or all


of two or more counties Specify state abbreviation
and county name
State

County

FORM G-29 (10-1-2001)


002902

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C9

Page 3
6.

Activities

FUNCTIONS
Enter the percent of total expenditure for each
activity performed by your agency. The total
should equal 100%.

Percentage (%)
01

Airports
02

Cemeteries

%
05

Corrections

%
51

Drainage of agricultural lands


92

Electric utility

%
24

Fire protection

%
63

Flood protection

%
93

Gas utility

%
32

Health (other than hospital)

%
40

Hospital

%
50

Housing/community development

%
41

Industrial development

%
64

Irrigation, water conservation

%
62

Law enforcement (police)

%
52

Library

%
42

Mortgage credit

%
79

Nursing home

%
61

Parks, recreation

%
60

Parking facility

%
94

Public transit

%
86

Reclamation

%
09

School buildings

%
87

Sea and inland port facilities

%
80

Sewerage

%
88

Soil, water conservation

%
81

Solid waste collection, disposal

%
44

Streets, roads, highways, bridges

%
91

Water utility

%
89

Other Specify

FORM G-29 (10-1-2001)


002903

C10

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 4
7.

OPERATIONS
For the function(s) marked on page 3, is your agency
Mark (X) ALL that apply.

1
2
3
4
5

8.

TAXING POWERS
a.
b.

9.

Does your agency have legal authority to impose


a property tax?
Does your agency have legal authority to impose sales,
payroll, or other nonproperty taxes?

1
2
1
2

Directly providing programs or services


using your own employees
Indirectly providing programs or services
by contractual arrangements
Constructing public facilities either by
contract or with your own employees
Financing public facilities or services by
issuing public debt
Leasing public buildings or facilities to
others

Yes
No
Yes
No

BORROWING
Enter the amount of your agencys outstanding
debt at the end of your last completed fiscal year.
If none, enter 0.

.00

Report in whole dollars.


10.

EMPLOYMENT AND PAYROLL


If your agency has no paid employees/officials
mark (X) here and check the appropriate box.
For your most recent pay period report the number of
full-time and part-time staff employed by your agency.

This agency MAY have paid


employees/officials in the future

This agency IS NOT LIKELY to have any


paid employees/officials in the future

Include persons paid for personal services performed, including


persons in paid leave status; any officials paid on a salary basis; by
fees or commissions; on a per meeting basis; or a flat sum quarterly,
semiannually, or annually; temporary or seasonal employees.
Exclude employees on unpaid leave, unpaid officials,
pensioners, and contractors and their employees.
If actual number is not available, enter an estimate.
(a) NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work the number of hours that
represents regular full-time employment for your agency.
(b) NUMBER OF PART-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work daily or hourly for less than the
number of hours that represents full-time employment.
For your most recently completed Fiscal Year report
annual gross payroll (before deductions).
Include salaries, wages, fees, or commissions, overtime,
premium, night differential pay, bonuses and incentive
payments.
Exclude lump sum payments, and the value of living quarters
and subsistence allowances furnished to employees.

(c) GROSS ANNUAL PAYROLL AMOUNT:

.00

FORM G-29 (10-1-2001)


002904

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C11

OMB No. 0607-0888: Approval Expires 09/30/2004


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

G-30

FORM
(10-1-2001)

Economics and Statistics Administration

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

U.S. Census Bureau


1201 East 10th Street
Jeffersonville, IN 47132-0001

RETURN
TO

2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS


LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECTORY SURVEY
(SPECIAL DISTRICT GOVERNMENTS)

In correspondence pertaining
to this report, please refer to
the Census File Number above
your address

INTERNET RESPONSE: If you prefer, you may respond to


this survey via the Internet at the following web address:
http://harvester.census.gov/cds/index.html. You will need
your User ID to access the Internet form.
Special district name

User ID

(Only make corrections to errors in the above label)


Office

CORRECTIONS
TO SPECIAL
DISTRICT
Official address Number and street or post office box
GOVERNMENT
NAME AND
ADDRESS

Telephone
Area code

ZIP Code

(All respondents provide the information below)


Title

Name

DATA
SUPPLIED
BY

State

City

Number

FAX
Extension Area code

E-MAIL

Number

EFFECTIVE DATE
IMPORTANT
1.

If this agency has ceased to exist, please


mark (X) the box at the right, enter the
effective date, and return the form.

E-GOVERNMENT
a.

b.

Day (DD)

Yes Enter the web address


(e.g. www.mylocalgov.state.us)

No

Yes
No

Is official information about your agencys


central activities presented on an Internet web
site where the content is maintained or
controlled by your agency?

Can the public communicate or transact


business with your agency using the Internet,
e-mail, or other computer-based systems?

Month (MM)

Year (YYYY)


003001

C12

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 2
2.

FISCAL YEAR

MM

DD

What is your agencys fiscal year ending date?


3.

INCORPORATION DATE
1

Was your district formed after


June 30, 1997?
4.

Yes Enter 4-digit year


No

AUTHORIZING LEGISLATION
If known, enter the legal citation of the state authorizing
legislation under which your agency was formed.

5.

AREA SERVED

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as


one particular county Specify county

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as one


particular city, village, town, or township Specify unit

An area whose legal boundaries are contained wholly


within one county and are not exactly the same as the
county, a particular city, town, village, or township
Specify county and/or principal city, town, village, or
township

Mark (X) the ONE box that describes the area covered
by your agency.

County

Principal city, town, village, or township

An area whose legal boundaries encompass part or all


of two or more counties Specify state abbreviation
and county name
State

County

FORM G-30 (10-1-2001)


003002

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C13

Page 3
6.

Activities

FUNCTIONS
Enter the percent of total expenditure for each
activity performed by your agency. The total
should equal 100%.

Percentage (%)
01

Airports
02

Cemeteries

%
05

Corrections

%
51

Drainage of agricultural lands


92

Electric utility

%
24

Fire protection

%
63

Flood protection

%
93

Gas utility

%
32

Health (other than hospital)

%
40

Hospital

%
50

Housing/community development

%
41

Industrial development

%
64

Irrigation, water conservation

%
62

Law enforcement (police)

%
52

Library

%
42

Mortgage credit

%
79

Nursing home

%
61

Parks, recreation

%
60

Parking facility

%
94

Public transit

%
86

Reclamation

%
09

School buildings

%
87

Sea and inland port facilities

%
80

Sewerage

%
88

Soil, water conservation

%
81

Solid waste collection, disposal

%
44

Streets, roads, highways, bridges

%
91

Water utility

%
89

Other Specify

FORM G-30 (10-1-2001)


003003

C-14

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 4
7.

OPERATIONS

For the function(s) marked on page 3, is your agency


2

Mark (X) ALL that apply.


3
4
5

8.

TAXING POWERS
a.
b.

9.

Does your agency have legal authority to impose sales,


payroll, or other nonproperty taxes?

1
2
1
2

Yes
No
Yes
No

FINANCES
a.

b.

c.

10.

Does your agency have legal authority to impose


a property tax?

Directly providing programs or services


using your own employees
Indirectly providing programs or services
by contractual arrangements
Constructing public facilities either by
contract or with your own employees
Financing public facilities or services by
issuing public debt
Leasing public buildings or facilities to
others

REVENUE Report in whole dollars.


Enter the amount of revenue raised by your agency in
the last completed fiscal year (include all taxes,
charges, state or Federal grants, etc., but exclude
borrowings). If none, enter 0.

.00

EXPENDITURE Report in whole dollars. Enter


the amount expended by your agency in the last
completed fiscal year. If none, enter 0.

.00

DEBT Report in whole dollars.


Enter the amount of your agencys outstanding debt at the
end of your last completed fiscal year. If none, enter 0.

.00

EMPLOYMENT AND PAYROLL

If your agency has no paid employees/officials


mark (X) here and check the appropriate box.

This agency MAY have paid


employees/officials in the future

This agency IS NOT LIKELY to have any


paid employees/officials in the future

For your most recent pay period report the number of


full-time and part-time staff employed by your agency.
Include persons paid for personal services performed, including
persons in paid leave status; any officials paid on a salary basis; by
fees or commissions; on a per meeting basis; or a flat sum quarterly,
semiannually, or annually; temporary or seasonal employees.
Exclude employees on unpaid leave, unpaid officials,
pensioners, and contractors and their employees.
If actual number is not available, enter an estimate.
(a) NUMBER OF FULL-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work the number of hours that represents
regular full-time employment for your agency.
(b) NUMBER OF PART-TIME EMPLOYEES:
Persons employed to work daily or hourly for less than the
number of hours that represents full-time employment.
For your most recently completed Fiscal Year report
annual gross payroll (before deductions).
Include salaries, wages, fees, or commissions, overtime, premium, night
differential pay, bonuses and incentive payments.
Exclude lump sum payments, and the value of living quarters and
subsistence allowances furnished to employees.

(c) GROSS ANNUAL PAYROLL AMOUNT:

.00

FORM G-30 (10-1-2001)


003004

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C15

OMB No. 0607-0888: Approval Expires 09/30/2004


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

G-32

FORM
(10-1-2001)

Economics and Statistics Administration

U.S. CENSUS BUREAU

U.S. Census Bureau


1201 East 10th Street
Jeffersonville, IN 47132-0001

RETURN
TO

2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS


LOCAL GOVERNMENT DIRECTORY SURVEY
(PUBLIC SCHOOL SYSTEMS)

In correspondence pertaining
to this report, please refer to
the Census File Number above
your address

INTERNET RESPONSE: If you prefer, you may respond to


this survey via the Internet at the following web address:
http://harvester.census.gov/cds/index.html. You will need
your User ID to access the Internet form.
School system name

User ID

(Only make corrections to errors in the above label)


Office

CORRECTIONS
TO SCHOOL
Official address Number and street or post office box
SYSTEM
NAME AND
ADDRESS

Telephone
Area code

ZIP Code

(All respondents provide the information below)


Title

Name

DATA
SUPPLIED
BY

State

City

Number

FAX
Extension Area code

E-MAIL

Number

EFFECTIVE DATE
IMPORTANT

If this government has ceased to exist,


please mark (X) the box at the right, enter
the effective date, and return the form.

1.

E-GOVERNMENT

a.

Is official information about the central


activities of your school system presented on an
Internet web site where the content is
maintained or controlled by your school system?

b.

Can the public communicate or transact


business with your school system using the
Internet, e-mail, or other computer-based
systems?

Month (MM)

Day (DD)

Yes Enter the web address


(e.g. www.mylocalgov.state.us)

No

Yes
No

Year (YYYY)


003201

C16

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Page 2
2.

FISCAL YEAR

MM

DD

What is your fiscal year end date?


3.

AREA SERVED

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as


one particular county Specify county

An area with exactly the same legal boundaries as one


particular city, village, town, or township Specify unit

An area whose legal boundaries are contained wholly


within one county and are not exactly the same as the
county, a particular city, town, village, or township
Specify county and/or principal city, town, village, or
township

Mark (X) the ONE box that describes the area covered
by your school system.

County

Principal city, town, village, or township

An area whose legal boundaries encompass part or all


of two or more counties Specify state abbreviation
and county name
State

4.

OPERATION OF SCHOOLS

a.

Does your school system operate schools?

b.

What level(s) of instruction does your school


system operate? Mark (X) ALL that apply.

1
2
3

County

Yes
No Go to 5
Secondary or below
Post-secondary/higher education
Adult or other

FORM G-32 (10-1-2001)


003202

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Appendix C

C17

Page 3
5.

BORROWING
Enter the amount of outstanding school system debt at
the end of your last completed fiscal year.
If none, enter 0.

.00

.00

Report in whole dollars.


6.

EMPLOYMENT AND PAYROLL


Employees Persons paid for personal services performed
during your most recent pay period.
Include persons in paid leave status, school board
members or school trustees paid on a per meeting
basis or a flat sum quarterly, semiannually, or annually.
Exclude employees on unpaid leave, school board
members or school trustees who serve without
compensation and any persons providing services on a
contract basis rather than as employees of the school
system.
If actual number is not available, enter an estimate.
(a) TOTAL NUMBER OF EMPLOYEES
(1) Instructional staff:
Include teacher aides, substitute teachers,
principals, supervisors of instruction, school
librarians, guidance and psychological personnel.

(2) All other staff:


Include administrative and clerical personnel;
plant operation, maintenance, and custodial
personnel; cafeteria, bus transportation, health,
recreation, student, and all other employees.
For your most recently completed Fiscal Year report
annual gross payroll (before deductions).
Include salaries, wages, fees, or commissions. Also
include overtime, premium, night differential pay,
bonuses and incentive payments.
Exclude lump sum payments and the value of living
quarters and subsistence allowances furnished to
employees.
(b) GROSS ANNUAL PAYROLL AMOUNT:
Notes

FORM G-32 (10-1-2001)


003203

C18

Appendix C

GovernmentsGovernment Organization
U.S. Census Bureau

Publication Program
2002 CENSUS OF GOVERNMENTS
The U.S. Census Bureau has conducted a Census of Governments every 5 years since 1957 covering four major
subject fields relating to State and local
governmentsorganization, employment, and finances.
The results of the 2002 Census of Governments are being
issued in both printed and electronic formats. The printed
material contains four volumes, which are described individually below. The electronic dissemination will encompass data files and electronic versions of the publication,
described in a separate section following the report
descriptions.
FINAL REPORTS
Volume 1. Government Organization
No. 1. Government Organization. Data for the nation and
by states on county, municipal, and township governments by population size; on public school systems by
size of enrollment; and on special district governments by
function. Also shown is the number of local governments,
by type, in each county area in the nation and information
about E-Government activities.
No. 2. State Descriptions. A description of local government structure in each state is presented in this report.
Volume 3. Public Employment
No. 1. Employment of Major Local Governments. Statistics
on March 2002 employment and payrolls for: all county
governments; subcounty general-purpose governments
(municipalities and townships) having 25,000 or more
population; school systems having 5,000 or more enrollment; and special district governments having 100 or
more full-time employees.
No. 2. Compendium of Public Employment. Employment
and payroll data for the month of March 2002 by government function for the nation, by states, and by type of
government. Report also displays data summarized by
county area for local government employment and payrolls.
Volume 4. Government Finances
No. 1. Public Education Finances. Statistics on revenue,
expenditure, debt, and financial assets of school systems,
presented for the nation, for states, and for large school
systems having 5,000 or more enrollment. Data describe
financial activity in fiscal year 2002.

U.S. Census Bureau

No. 2. Finances of Special Districts. Fiscal year 2002 statistics on finances of special district governments, by states,
and for selected large districts.
No. 3. Finances of County Governments. Statistics on revenue, expenditure, debt, and financial assets of county
governments in fiscal year 2002. Report provides national
summaries, population-size group information, state area
data, and displays of all individual county governments.
No. 4. Finances of Municipal and Township Governments. Fiscal year 2002 statistics on revenue, expenditure,
debt, and financial assets of municipalities and townships.
There are national summaries and aggregations by
population-size group and state. Report provides data for
all individual municipalities and townships with a population of 25,000 or more.
No. 5. Compendium of Government Finances. A summary
of census findings on fiscal year 2002 government
finances for state and local governments. Data are presented for the nation, for state areas by type of government, and for local governments in each individual county
area.
No. 6. Employee Retirement Systems of State and Local
Governments. Membership, receipts, expenditure, number
of beneficiaries, and financial assets of state and local
government employee retirement systems. Data are
shown for the nation, for states, and for large individual
retirement systems.
ELECTRONIC MEDIA
Data from the 2002 Census of Governments and related
annual and quarterly surveys are available via the internet
at the Census Bureau Web site: www.census.gov/govs
/www/index.html. For more information, see the Web site,
or write to U.S. Census Bureau, Governments Division,
Washington, DC 20233, or call Customer Services at 301763-INFO(4636).
HOW TO PURCHASE PRINTED REPORTS
When the printed reports described above become available, they will be sold by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
20401.
Telephone or fax orders may be used to reduce processing
time if your order is to be charged to VISA, MasterCard, or
prepaid Superintendent of Documents Deposit Account.
Customers will be able to call the Order Desk in Washington, DC, at 202-783-3238, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:00
p.m., eastern time, Monday through Friday, except holidays.

GC02(1)-1

2002

Government Organization

2002 Census of Governments

Volume 1, Number 1, Government Organization

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