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All the data you need. All in one place. All online. | August 2010

PolicyMap student pricing

It’s back-to-school time, and students can once again access all the data and all the tools at PolicyMap for just a fraction of the cost of a textbook. At $35 a semester, this is a great tool for majors in business, law, urban studies, geography, economics, sociology, political science, or any other field where geographic information mapping is used. PolicyMap is much easier to use than professional GIS software, plus all the data is already here. For more information, click here.

Also for students: PolicyMap offers site licenses for university libraries. This way, any student at a given school can access PolicyMap for free through their online library system. The University of Pennsylvania and the American University Law School are among the growing number of libraries that are adding PolicyMap to their online offerings. If you want PolicyMap at your school, contact your librarian and ask them to set up a trial with us. Visit our blog more information.

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Congratulations to Christopher Whiteman from the American University Library for winning the PolicyMap iPad drawing at the 2010 ALA Annual Conference in Washington DC.

We would like to thank everyone for stopping by our booth and learning more about PolicyMap. We hope to see everyone at the upcoming American Library Association Mid-Winter Conference in San Diego. PolicyMap is a great resource for students and faculty containing over 15,000 indications of data ranging from demographics, home sales, education, mortgage origination, and much more. Visit our main page www.policymap.com for more information or send us an email at pmap@policymap.com.

Universities or schools interested in our IP-based Library License, please contact at info@policymap.com for a price quote and even a full trial for the entire campus.


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All the data you need. All in one place. All online. | July 2010
You asked. We listened.

Better print resolution and aerial imagery for your maps are here. And you can find them both for FREE in PolicyMap. As a registered user or subscriber, just login and check them out.

PNG Printing.jpgHigher Resolution Maps: You‘ve had the ability to print maps as both JPEGs and PDFs and incorporate them in your own work. Now, make your work even more sophisticated by creating high resolution maps. Just select the PNG file option when you click “print”. Check them out, and let us know what you think!

Aerial Imagery from Google Maps: Using Google’s public API, we’re bringing you Google aerial imagery in PolicyMap. Map your area of interest, then click “aerial” in the bar below the map. You’ll get side-by-side maps. PolicyMap on the left; Google aerials on the right. Pan, zoom in or zoom out, and the maps stay in sync. Create custom regions in PolicyMap and see them on the aerial view. Cool stuff.

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PolicyMap is a CNET Webware Winner!  | May 2010


PolicyMap: More data, more tools… faster than ever.


If you haven’t started working with PolicyMap, now is the time.


You’ll find new, varied data like election results, small business lending and religious affiliations; more essential tools like the ability to create time-series maps, an easier geographic search function and a widget that allows you to brings maps, tables and downloading to your own website. The underlying PolicyMap platform is more streamlined and efficient than ever, bringing you faster loading maps,tables, reports and analytics.



MORE FREE DATA…….


Election Results and Turnout Rates for Presidential and Congressional Races in 2004 and 2008:
Check out election results and turnout information for the 2004 and 2008 races for President, Senate and U.S. House of Representatives. The “margin of victory” maps provide a handy guide to who won a given county, and by how much. This data comes from Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections.

Election Data - Margin if Victory


This data is available for free under the Demographics tab in the Add Data Layer Menu “Elections.”


Religious Affiliation:
Use this county level data to see where the highest rates of religious adherents live and which denominations are most prevalent in counties across the nation. This data, from the Glenmary Research Center, was collected by the Association of Statisticians of American Religious Bodies (ASARB) and includes statistics for 149 religious groups.

Concentration of Mormons


This data is available for free under the Demographics tab in the Add Date Layer Menu under “Religions.".


CRA Small Business Lending:
Use this data to see how many small business loans were made in counties across the nation, average amounts and the percent of loans made by the largest small business lenders. Multiple years are available so you can see how lending by some of these leading lenders has changed.


The Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) encourages depository institutions to help meet the credit needs of the communities in which they operate. TRF extracted data regarding small business lending activity from the Peer Small Business Data and constructed categories for viewing this data that it hopes are useful to policymakers and descriptive of neighborhoods and markets.


This data is available for free under the Lending Activity tab in the Add Data Layer menu. Look under the Small Business Loans and Small Farm Loans categories.

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PolicyMap.com Site Licenses Available for University Libraries

Policymap.com is an online data and mapping application currently used by students within your college or university. Students wanting to access all of the data and functionality available in PolicyMap have, to date, purchased individual subscriptions on their own through our website.

We are pleased to announce that we now offer site licenses for university libraries enabling students to access PolicyMap through their library system. We welcome the opportunity to set your library up with a trial so you can evaluate the product. Pricing is very competitive and is based on FTE within your university. PolicyMap is a fully hosted, cloud-based product so there is nothing to install, download or maintain on your end. Authorized visitors to your library will be able to access everything in PolicyMap simply by coming to your library.

The first libraries to subscribe include the University of Pennsylvania and American University Law School.

To set up a trial or obtain a price quote for your university library, just contact us. You can read more about all that we have to offer by visiting our website at http://www.policymap.com/customers-universities.html.

The PolicyMap Team

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PolicyMap is a CNET Webware Winner!  | April 2010

 

Visit our Blog

  • In The News
  • Support and Help
  • PolicyMap Updates
  • "Policy Map, a recent addition to the Penn Library website, is a great resource to go to for up to date demographic data." – Sharon Black of Annenberg School for Communication Library blog


    New for March on PolicyMap!

    Look for the following new and updated datasets on PolicyMap!

    NEW! Foreclosure Filings for Chicago Metro Area: As a part of our Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP) work with Mercy Portfolio Services and the City of Chicago, we license foreclosure filing and auction data on a monthly basis from Record Information Services (RIS). The data is cleaned and processed by the Woodstock Institute, then loaded into PolicyMap for viewing in interactive maps. The data gives Mercy and the City of Chicago an abundance of information about foreclosure filings and auctions taking place in Chicago and Kane County each month. While we are not allowed to make the data available to the public for free, we have been given permission by RIS to share this data with PolicyMap subscribers. If you’d like to consider becoming a subscriber, but want to take a look at this data first, just sign up for our 7-day free trial. If you already have an account and would like to try a 7-day trial, please send your request to info@policymap.com.

    Foreclosure Filings for Chicago Metro Area.jpg

    You’ll find this data under the Local Foreclosures tab in the Add Sites menu.

    This type of data is invaluable to NSP grantees nationwide as they consider where to acquire properties for their program or simply stay on top of an ever-changing housing market. If you are an NSP grantee and have foreclosure or other data you’d like us to similarly load for you, please contact us.


    FBI Crime Data for 2008: The latest data released by the FBI has been added to PolicyMap, so you can see crime rates for cities and counties across the nation for 2005 through 2008. Data includes counts and rates of aggravated assaults, burglary, motor vehicle thefts, murder, rape and robbery for cities and counties across the nation. Coverage gets better each year, so check it out. This data is available for free under the Neighborhood Conditions tab.

    New Demographic Indicators: PolicyMap subscribers can now access two additional indicators from Claritas, Inc: Population Density and Sex. These indicators can provide you with information about the density of an area’s population and its male/female composition.

    Population Density in Miami.jpg

    You can find these under the Demographics tab in the Add Data Layer menu.


    UPDATED! Home Sale Statistics: Home sale statistics from 2001 through Q3 2009 are now available for neighborhoods across the nation from PolicyMap. This data, supplied by Boxwood Means, Inc., is available to subscribers under the Real Estate Data tab. Create thematic maps, trend charts or generate reports analyzing home sale activity over time in the communities you care about.

    UPDATED! Building Permits: Annual and monthly building permit data is available dating back to 2000 and updated monthly. This data, from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Residential Construction Branch Data, includes both the number of buildings and units for which building permits were issued, their total dollar value and change over time. Data is available for counties and MSAs around the nation.

    Building Permits.jpg

    You’ll find this data for free in PolicyMap under the Real Estate Conditions tab in the Add Data Layer menu.


    Premium Subscriber Data: Remember to check out the datasets available under Premium Subscriber data. As organizations subscribe to PolicyMap and send us their data for upload, some choose to make their data available to the public. You can click on anything under Premium Subscriber Data in the Add Sites menu to see what is available. When you add a set of points, remember that you have the ability to click on a point to see underlying information and filter to see a subset of points. Have questions? Just call us at (866) 923-6277 or send us an email.


    UPDATED! Monthly Unemployment from the BLS: Check out the latest December 2009 and January 2010 employment, unemployment, and labor force data for states, counties, metropolitan areas, and many cities, by place of residence. This data is updated monthly on PolicyMap and is available back through the year 2000 under the Jobs and Economy tab. To add a fully interactive map of unemployment across the country, check out our free PolicyMap widget.


    NEWS

    More free widgets! You can now embed interactive maps of health data into your own website using our free widget. Descriptions of the data available and links to the code for you to embed can be found here. Remember, our widget – the iframe code that allows you to quickly and easily embed interactive maps on your own website – can be customized on your end. You can change the color of the map, change a boundary name and much more. Read our blog posting to learn how.

    The beautiful part about these widgets is that as soon as new data is available, PolicyMap updates it for www.policymap.com and the new data is automatically updated in your widget.

    Library Licenses: Know of a library that would be interested in a PolicyMap subscription for its students and professors? Just have them contact us.

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    PolicyMap is a CNET Webware Winner! | March 2010


    Important Message! This latest release to PolicyMap is significant. If you’ve been working in PolicyMap recently, we recommend you clear your browser’s cache before going back to PolicyMap. It’s simple. Learn how here.

    Visit our Blog

  • In The News
  • Support and Help
  • PolicyMap Updates
  • “This is yet another step forward in data transparency and availability … and we all benefit.” – Jim Duncan of Real Central VA


    New for March on PolicyMap!New tools and datasets are now available! Whether you are a city official managing a housing or foreclosure program, a student conducting research for course work, a community lender looking to better understand your portfolio in this market, or a foundation making decisions with limited resources, these new tools and data allow you to visualize and incorporate market information into your work in simpler, more efficient ways.

    New Ways to Create and Use Custom Regions: PolicyMap subscribers have always had the ability to draw custom areas on a map – on the fly – as a means of generating a picture of life in the area through maps, tables and reports. Quickly find out, for example, how many people live in an area, what types of jobs they have, the vacancy rate, or what the housing stock looks like.Now, you can create these regions in two new powerful ways:

    • Assemble a Region: You can select and save a specific set of geographies, like block groups, census tracts or counties to create a custom region. The geographies can be next to each other to create a specific neighborhood – or across town if your region is not contiguous.
    • Create a Radius Region: You can create a radius region by either typing in an address or clicking on the map to specify the center, select the size of the radius and save the radius for future work.

    Assembled Custom Region.jpg

    Also new is the ability to layer more than one custom region onto your map!

    Go to our custom region tutorial to learn more about how to use these new custom region features or contact our help desk at any time.


    Generate Lists of Properties that fall in Your Target Areas: The Analytics tool allows subscribers to find places on a map that meet up to 3 criteria. For some cities dealing with foreclosure issues, this means looking for areas where foreclosure risk is high, but neighborhoods are stable when it comes to schools, vacancy or other neighborhood conditions. Now, by overlaying point level properties on the map, users can generate a list of only those properties which fall into targeted areas. You could load in points like sheriff sales or foreclosure filings and then generate a list of only those that fall in your target areas. To learn more about how this works, sign up for one of our online demos or give us a call.

    NEW! Building Permits: Annual and monthly building permit data is now available dating back to 2000. This data, from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Residential Construction Branch Data, includes both the number of buildings and units for which building permits were issued, total dollar value and change over time. Data is available for counties and MSAs nationwide. PolicyMap updates this data every month.You can see this data for free under the Real Estate Conditions tab in the Add Data Layer menu.

    NEW! Cars and How People Get to Work: Data on how people get to work, how long it takes them to get there and how many cars the average household owns is now available. Data from 2000 comes from the Census and is available to the public. Current year estimates and 5-year projections are available to subscribers from Claritas, Inc. You can see this data at a national level, but more importantly you can drill down into the neighborhoods you care about to see information at a block group or census tract level.

    Travel Time Map.jpg

    Find this data in the Commute to Work section under the Neighborhood Conditions tab in the Add Data Layer menu.

    NEW! Obesity, Diabetes, and Food Related Assistance: You’ll find some of the health statistics recently made available by the USDA through its Food Environment Atlas, mapped and available in tables on PolicyMap. This data includes statistics on obesity, diabetes and the availability of assistance under the SNAP (formerly Food Stamps) or WIC programs.

    SNAP Map.jpg

    You can find this data for free under the Health tab in the Add Data Layer menu.

    UPDATED! Monthly Unemployment from the BLS: Check out the latest November and December 2009 employment, unemployment, and labor force data for states, counties, metropolitan areas, and many cities, by place of residence. This data is updated monthly on PolicyMap and is available as far back as 2000…

    Find this data for free under the Jobs & Economy tab in the Add Data Layer menu.


    NEWS The Widget: Did you know that our widget – the iframe code that allows you to quickly and easily embed interactive maps on your own website – can be customized on your end? You can change the color of the map; change a boundary name and much more. Read our blog posting to learn how.

    To see some widgets in action on other pages, check these out:
    Adecco Group
    Stats Indiana

    The beautiful part about these widgets is that as soon as new data is available, PolicyMap updates it for www.policymap.com and the new data is automatically updated in your widget. Learn more.

    Library Licenses: The University of Pennsylvania Library is now a subscriber to PolicyMap. This means that if you are an authorized user of the library system, you now have unlimited access to PolicyMap for your school and research work. If you know of a library that might be interested, have them contact us.

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    CommPilings

    Policy Map, a recent addition to the Penn Library website, is a great resource to go to for up to date demographic data. Just tap in a city or zip code and you have access to thousands of indicators related to demographics, crime, money and income, real estate, education, energy, and health. In addition to zip code and city, you can search by census tract, state, county, school districts, and legislative or Congressional districts. Policy Map generates its data in the form of maps, data tables and reports which can be easily exported as jpegs or pdfs. The number of indicators is noteworthy. You can get demographic breakdowns for ethnicity, religion, voting, etc. from a lot of sources but Policy Map offers many additional profile handles as illustrated by a search I did comparing obesity figures in Philadelphia in 2008 versus 2006.

    Click here to read this article by Sharon Black on the Annenberg Library blog on February 22, 2010.



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    If you are a current student, faculty member or staff of the University with the credentials to access the Library’s licensed electronic resources, you can now access PolicyMap through the Library’s system. Accessing the site through the library gives you automatic access to all of the data and functionality available through PolicyMap. Create maps and tables, generate reports and conduct analysis that you can pull directly into your University work. Your use of the site through the library is governed by Terms of Use that can be found on the main PolicyMap page within the library system or you can read them here.

    If you would like more information about licenses available to libraries, just give us a call or send an email at info@policymap.com or 866-923-MAPS.

    The PolicyMap Team

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    PolicyMap is a CNET Webware Winner! | December 2009

    Visit our Blog

    “PolicyMap aggregates all sorts of interesting data from various commercial and public datasets – home sales, crime, current year and five-year projected demographics, school performance, mortgage lending, employment and more -  and puts them at the disposal of researchers, policymakers, real estate developers, investors and just everyday users.” – Om Malik of Gigaom.com

    PolicyMap Update: December 2009

    It’s been a bustling month, with the launch of new ways to connect people with PolicyMap. We offered subscribers the ability to create web widgets for their own sites and released a library site license so that whole university communities can use the PolicyMap platform. You can find the code for a free national unemployment widget on our blog and visit TRF’s website to see some other widgets in action.

    As soon as new data is available, PolicyMap updates it for www.policymap.com and for any widgets subscribers have on their own sites. The most recent updats include:

    • 2008 HMDA mortgage origination calculations, initially created for the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia (under Mortgage Originations)
    • Fair Market Rents from HUD for 2010 (under Owners & Renters)
    • USPS Residential and Commercial Vacancy Data for the 3rd Quarter of 2009 (under Neighborhood Conditions)
    • Food Stamps, just publicly released, for 2007 (under Money & Income)
    • Qualified Census Tracts, Designated Development Areas, and GOZones for 2010 (under State & Local)
    • Unemployment rates for September and preliminary numbers for October 2009 (under Jobs & Economy). And yes, the free unemployment widget is updated automatically, too!


    USPS Vacancy.jpg


    In addition to data, TRF creates and makes available its data-based analyses. Two recently updated analyses are:

    • “Loan to Income Leverage Ratio 2008″: This ratio of originated loan amount to applicant stated income for all mortgage loans reported in HMDA for 2008 is designed to help you understand where new homebuyers may have taken on more mortgage debt than they can afford. You can find this under the Mortgage Originations tab.
    • Baltimore MVA 2008: TRF’s Policy Solutions cluster analysis of markets in the City of Baltimore has been updated and is now available in the State and Local tab.

    Baltimore MVA.jpg

    Read more about these datasets in the coming days on our blog! And follow our blog series on Top-10s. You can create your own with PolicyMap’s ranking feature and find the top-10 for anything you’ve wondered about.

    Much more new data and updates coming in January. Look for drive-time statistics, population density, election data and religious affiliation statistics.


    The Widget! PolicyMap can help you power interactive maps on your own websites.

    Library Licenses! University libraries can now take advantage of PolicyMap’s new library site license to offer students, staff and faculty unlimited access. Learn more.

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