2015 State Report for County-Level Data: Employment

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to the following individuals who have contributed to the success of this effort: Deb Brucker, Erin Dame, Adam Lavoie, Rachel Coleman, Kate Filanoski, Karen Volle, and Anna Brennan-Curry.

Funding for this publication is made possible by:

The Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Disability Statistics and Demographics (StatsRRTC), funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Community Living National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), grant number 90RTGE0001-01-00; and the Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Employment Policy and Measurement (EPM-RRTC), also funded by NIDILRR, grant number 90RT5037-03-00. The information developed by the StatsRRTC and EPM-RRTC does not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Health and Human Services, and you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government (Edgar, 75.620 (b)).

The StatsRRTC and EPM-RRTC are part of the Institute on Disability at the University of New Hampshire. The Institute on Disability/UCED (IOD) was established in 1987 to provide a university-based focus for the improvement of knowledge, policies, and practices related to the lives of people with disabilities and their families and is New Hampshire’s University Center for Excellence in Disability (UCED). Located within the University of New Hampshire, the IOD is a federally designated center authorized by the Developmental Disabilities Act. Through innovative and interdisciplinary research, academic, service, and dissemination initiatives, the IOD builds local, state, and national capacities to respond to the needs of individuals with disabilities and their families.

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2015 Kentucky Report for County-Level Data: Employment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on

Disability Statistics and Demographics

A NIDILRR-Funded Center

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Introduction

The State Reports for County-Level Data on Employment are designed to provide the users of disability statistics with the employed count and employment rate for civilians with disabilities, ages 18 to 64 years and living in the community, for any given state and county in the United States (U.S.). This report is intended to be an online complement to Section 2: Employment of the Annual Disability Statistics Compendium and Annual Disability Statistics Supplement, providing greater detail within each state. The State Reports for County-Level Data on Employment can be used to compare county-level statistics between counties in any given state or states. The following report provides county-level statistics for Kentucky.

The proportion of the civilian non-institutionalized population with disabilities who are employed, sometimes called the employment rate or employment-to-population ratio, presented in the State Reports for County-Level Data is a useful tool for advocates, researchers, and policy-makers to plan and provide services and supports for the employment of people with disabilities. In this report, the employment of people with disabilities is presented as the number of employed civilians with disabilities, ages 18 to 64 years and living in the community, in a given state and county per total state and county populations, respectively. Counts and percentages (the employment rate) are provided in tables and maps.

The data for this report come from the American Community Survey 5-year data. The American Community Survey (ACS) is a national survey developed by the U.S. Census Bureau to provide information on a number of topics about social, economic, and demographic characteristics of the U.S. population. ACS 5-year data is collected over a longer period of time than 1-year data, providing larger sample sizes and increased reliability for less populated areas and small population subgroups. All of the statistics in this report use the ACS 5-year data which includes data from 2015, the year of the report, and data from the four previous years. In the ACS, people are identified as having a disability based on responses to a series of six questions asking about having difficulties with vision, hearing, ambulation, cognition, self-care, and independent living (see glossary for further details). 

 

 

 

In the ACS, people are also asked a series of questions designed to identify their employment status. Based on the answers, individuals were classified into one of five groups:

  • People who worked at any time during the reference week;
  • People on temporary layoff who were available for work;
  • People who did not work during the reference week but who had jobs or businesses from which they were temporarily absent (excluding layoff);
  • People who did not work during the reference week, but who were looking for work during the last four weeks and were available for work during the reference week; and
  • People not in the labor force. 

In the ACS, people are identified as being employed if they responded as having worked during the past week. 

Specific to Kentucky, the state chosen for this report, sentences providing interpretation and context for employment statistics are included on the following page. A short glossary of terms is also provided at the end of the report explaining the statistics that are illustrated in each sentence.

Additional Resources. The Annual Disability Statistics Compendium and its complement, the Annual Disability Statistics Supplement, are summaries of statistics about people with disabilities, available both in hard copy and online at https://www.disabilitycompendium.org

Help navigating any of the resources described here can be found in the Frequently Asked Questions section at https://www.disabilitycompendium.org/faq. Assistance interpreting and locating additional statistics is available via our toll-free number, 866.538.9521, or by email, disability.statistics@unh.edu. For more information about our research projects, please visit https://www.researchondisability.org.

Suggested Citation. Boege, S.L., Lauer, E.A., & Houtenville, A.J., 2019. 2015 State Report for Kentucky County-Level Data: Employment. Durham, NH: University of New Hampshire, Institute on Disability.

Interpretation

The following statements are designed to help understand the 2015 county-level employment statistics from Kentucky that are presented:

 

  • For people with disabilities:
    • The employment rate for people with disabilities in Kentucky was 26.9%.
    • The range, also known as the difference between largest and smallest values, of employment rates for people with disabilities across Kentucky counties was 38.5%.
      • The county with the greatest employment rate for people with disabilities was Boone (45.0%).
      • The county with the smallest employment rate for people with disabilities was Owsley (6.5%).
    • The median, also known as the middle-most, employment rate for people with disabilities across all counties in Kentucky was 23.3%.

 

  • For people without disabilities:
    • The employment rate for people without disabilities in Kentucky was 73.6%.
    • The range, also known as the difference between largest and smallest values, of employment rates for people without disabilities across Kentucky counties was 37.3%.
      • The county with the greatest employment rate for people without disabilities was Woodford (81.4%).
      • The county with the smallest employment rate for people without disabilities was Martin (44.1%).
    • The median, also known as the middle-most, employment rate for people without disabilities across all counties in Kentucky was 71.3%.
Employment of Civilians with and without Disabilities Ages 18 to 64 Years Living in the Community for Kentucky, by County: 2015
County Disability No Disability   County Disability No Disability
Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2] Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2]
  Kentucky   421,172 113,356 26.9 2,267,005 1,668,264 73.6     Clay       2,828     361 12.8     9,581     4,865 50.8
   Adair       1,688     339 20.1     9,963     6,923 69.5   Clinton        806     171 21.2     5,087     3,171 62.3
   Allen       2,106     673 32.0    10,105     7,366 72.9  Crittenden      920     205 22.3     4,295     3,173 73.9
  Anderson     1,859     629 33.8    11,521     9,349 81.1  Cumberland      541     109 20.1     3,419     2,173 63.6
  Ballard        550     166 30.2     4,251     3,033 71.3   Daviess      7,978   2,511 31.5    49,978    38,749 77.5
   Barren      4,682   1,509 32.2    20,697    15,888 76.8   Edmonson     1,791     493 27.5     5,639     3,955 70.1
    Bath       1,600     258 16.1     5,492     3,524 64.2   Elliott        735      89 12.1     3,221     1,865 57.9
    Bell       5,404     820 15.2    11,210     6,871 61.3    Estill      2,376     430 18.1     6,402     4,117 64.3
   Boone       6,915   3,111 45.0    69,403    55,669 80.2   Fayette     19,320   7,435 38.5   184,970   141,867 76.7
  Bourbon      1,519     315 20.7    10,371     7,828 75.5   Fleming      1,734     413 23.8     6,938     4,998 72.0
    Boyd       5,217     911 17.5    23,158    16,341 70.6    Floyd       6,847   1,131 16.5    17,087    10,113 59.2
   Boyle       2,612     671 25.7    14,668    10,711 73.0   Franklin     4,389   1,419 32.3    26,659    19,944 74.8
  Bracken        770     218 28.3     4,312     3,105 72.0    Fulton        694     220 31.7     2,814     1,845 65.6
 Breathitt     3,017     550 18.2     5,607     3,433 61.2   Gallatin       890     205 23.0     4,441     3,353 75.5
Breckinridge   2,179     533 24.5     9,594     6,648 69.3   Garrard      1,874     528 28.2     8,570     6,218 72.6
  Bullitt      6,050   1,876 31.0    42,390    33,200 78.3    Grant       2,028     582 28.7    12,459     9,074 72.8
   Butler      1,384     442 31.9     6,230     4,323 69.4    Graves      2,910     831 28.6    18,993    14,009 73.8
  Caldwell     1,202     232 19.3     6,321     4,840 76.6   Grayson      2,797     655 23.4    12,612     9,048 71.7
  Calloway     2,524     785 31.1    22,550    15,096 66.9    Green       1,551     422 27.2     4,943     3,635 73.5
  Campbell     5,671   2,048 36.1    52,235    41,407 79.3   Greenup      3,727     747 20.0    17,766    12,183 68.6
  Carlisle       320     109 34.1     2,591     1,887 72.8   Hancock        978     307 31.4     4,104     3,161 77.0
  Carroll        985     218 22.1     5,415     3,763 69.5    Hardin      9,361   3,423 36.6    52,868    39,964 75.6
   Carter      2,928     564 19.3    13,719     8,844 64.5    Harlan      5,626     976 17.3    11,571     6,692 57.8
   Casey       1,716     259 15.1     7,484     5,133 68.6   Harrison     1,967     585 29.7     9,221     6,428 69.7
 Christian     4,874   1,379 28.3    31,742    20,940 66.0     Hart       2,363     528 22.3     8,518     5,899 69.3
   Clark       3,313     989 29.9    18,301    13,771 75.2  Henderson     4,782   1,473 30.8    22,910    17,283 75.4
Employment of Civilians with and without Disabilities Ages 18 to 64 Years Living in the Community for Kentucky, by County: 2015
County Disability No Disability   County Disability No Disability
Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2] Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2]
   Henry       1,411     374 26.5     7,948     6,157 77.5    Mason       1,730     382 22.1     8,517     6,217 73.0
  Hickman        400      49 12.3     2,237     1,602 71.6  McCracken     5,376   1,498 27.9    33,466    25,756 77.0
  Hopkins      4,376   1,205 27.5    23,254    17,205 74.0   McCreary     3,158     300  9.5     6,877     3,956 57.5
  Jackson      2,687     633 23.6     5,538     3,271 59.1    McLean        836     161 19.3     4,671     3,436 73.6
 Jefferson    60,401  19,788 32.8   412,361   320,831 77.8    Meade       2,736     838 30.6    14,766     9,949 67.4
 Jessamine     4,638   1,507 32.5    26,362    19,831 75.2   Menifee        851     139 16.3     2,970     1,853 62.4
  Johnson      4,290     734 17.1     9,818     5,944 60.5    Mercer      2,316     726 31.3    10,480     7,805 74.5
   Kenton     13,486   4,631 34.3    88,704    70,704 79.7   Metcalfe     1,209     271 22.4     4,678     3,504 74.9
   Knott       3,095     420 13.6     7,095     4,067 57.3    Monroe      1,444     251 17.4     4,872     3,352 68.8
    Knox       3,128     346 11.1    15,850     8,640 54.5  Montgomery    3,543     837 23.6    13,051     9,574 73.4
   Larue       1,671     308 18.4     6,821     5,080 74.5    Morgan      1,821     271 14.9     5,500     3,327 60.5
   Laurel      6,045     869 14.4    30,495    20,134 66.0  Muhlenberg    3,433     762 22.2    14,901    10,045 67.4
  Lawrence     2,493     416 16.7     7,278     4,732 65.0    Nelson      3,934   1,201 30.5    23,547    17,810 75.6
    Lee        1,299     291 22.4     2,474     1,341 54.2   Nicholas       723     186 25.7     3,455     2,507 72.6
   Leslie      2,462     314 12.8     4,238     2,354 55.5     Ohio       3,051     580 19.0    11,044     7,865 71.2
  Letcher      4,564   1,058 23.2    10,045     5,760 57.3    Oldham      2,720   1,024 37.6    32,906    26,511 80.6
   Lewis       1,913     368 19.2     6,400     4,010 62.7     Owen       1,273     265 20.8     5,115     3,844 75.2
  Lincoln      2,836     524 18.5    11,698     8,004 68.4    Owsley        999      65  6.5     1,881     1,069 56.8
 Livingston    1,126     278 24.7     4,496     3,226 71.8  Pendleton     1,587     444 28.0     7,513     5,748 76.5
   Logan       2,447     485 19.8    13,277     9,241 69.6    Perry       4,779     891 18.6    12,731     8,030 63.1
    Lyon         686     149 21.7     3,402     2,384 70.1     Pike      11,608   2,295 19.8    28,116    17,394 61.9
  Madison      8,076   2,290 28.4    48,516    35,653 73.5    Powell      1,994     362 18.2     5,553     3,732 67.2
  Magoffin     2,250     320 14.2     5,831     3,205 55.0   Pulaski      7,898   1,754 22.2    29,949    22,305 74.5
   Marion      1,744     494 28.3     9,404     6,841 72.7  Robertson       209      18  8.6     1,051       748 71.2
  Marshall     2,444     530 21.7    15,692    11,719 74.7  Rockcastle    2,419     400 16.5     7,870     5,250 66.7
   Martin      2,298     269 11.7     4,721     2,083 44.1    Rowan       2,015     493 24.5    13,784     9,166 66.5
Employment of Civilians with and without Disabilities Ages 18 to 64 Years Living in the Community for Kentucky, by County: 2015
County Disability No Disability   County Disability No Disability
Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2] Total Employed % [1] Total Employed % [2]
  Russell      2,034     359 17.6     8,365     5,290 63.2                                                           
   Scott       3,495   1,404 40.2    28,338    22,390 79.0                                                           
   Shelby      2,873   1,157 40.3    23,640    18,407 77.9                                                           
  Simpson      1,344     454 33.8     9,122     6,580 72.1                                                           
  Spencer      1,501     516 34.4     9,683     7,702 79.5                                                           
   Taylor      2,485     582 23.4    12,440     9,193 73.9                                                           
    Todd         979     299 30.5     6,059     4,099 67.7                                                           
   Trigg       1,139     264 23.2     6,933     4,962 71.6                                                           
  Trimble        839     191 22.8     4,496     3,216 71.5                                                           
   Union       1,911     613 32.1     7,768     5,100 65.7                                                           
   Warren     10,473   3,438 32.8    66,988    50,678 75.7                                                           
 Washington    1,079     347 32.2     6,032     4,693 77.8                                                           
   Wayne       3,027     555 18.3     9,259     5,499 59.4                                                           
  Webster      1,615     377 23.3     6,386     4,532 71.0                                                           
  Whitley      4,497   1,094 24.3    17,127    10,592 61.8                                                           
   Wolfe       1,337     186 13.9     2,937     1,638 55.8                                                           
  Woodford     1,718     603 35.1    13,817    11,246 81.4                                                           
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                     
Count of Employed Civilians with Disabilities Ages 18 to 64 Years Living in the Community for Kentucky, by County: 2015

Employment Rate for Civilians with Disabilities Ages 18 to 64 Years Living in the Community for Kentucky, by County: 2015

Discussion

There are a number of concepts and factors which complicate the interpretation of the estimates presented in this report. These concerns affect all statistics from population-based surveys. The estimates included in this document should be interpreted the following limitations in mind and generalized with caution. In each point, a link to the U.S. Census Bureau website describing the limitation or concept in greater detail in the ACS has been provided.

Additional links to resources for the ACS:

Glossary

American Community Survey (ACS) — The American Community Survey is a large, continuous demographic survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau that will provide accurate and up-to-date profiles of America’s communities every year. Annual and multiyear estimates of population and housing data are generated for small areas, including tracts and population subgroups. This information is collected by mailing questionnaires to a sample of addresses. See the U.S. Census Bureau website for additional details.

The Six Disability Questions in the American Community Survey:

  1. Is this person deaf or does he/she have serious difficulty hearing? (yes or no)
  2. Is this person blind or does he/she have serious difficulty seeing even when wearing glasses? (yes or no)
  3. (If person 5 years old or over) Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does this person have serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions? (yes or no)
  4. (If person 5 years or old over) Does this person have serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs? (yes or no)
  5. (If person 5 years old or over) Does this person have difficulty dressing or bathing? (yes or no)
  6. (If person 15 years old or over) Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does this person have difficulty doing errands alone such as visiting a doctor’s office or shopping? (yes or no)

Average — The sum of all of the values in a sample divided by the number of values in the sample.

Civilian — A person not in active-duty military.

Employed – Individuals were asked a series of questions designed to identify their employment status. Based on the answers, individuals were classified into one of five groups: (1) people who worked at any time during the reference week; (2) people on temporary layoff who were available for work; (3) people who did not work during the reference week but who had jobs or businesses from which they were temporarily absent (excluding layoff); (4) people who did not work during the reference week, but who were looking for work during the last four weeks and were available for work during the reference week; and (5) people not in the labor force. People who responded as having worked during the past week were considered "employed".

Employment Rate — The number of individuals that are employed as a percent of the civilian non-institutional population.

Living in the Community – A person lives in the community, if the person is not living in an institution, such as jail, prison, nursing home, and hospital. A college dormitory is not considered an institution.

Median — The middle-most value of a sample that separates the upper half of the values from the lower half of the values. 

Non-Institutionalized Population — Describes individuals who are residing in the community and who are not living in institutions such as jails, prisons, nursing homes, hospitals, etc.

Population — The total number of inhabitants in a defined geographic area including all races, classes, and groups.

Range — The difference between the largest and smallest values in a sample. In a sample, when the smallest value is subtracted from the largest value the resulting value is called the range. 

Sampling Variability — The variation of a statistic when estimated from repeated samples.

United States Census Bureau — An agency within the United States Federal Statistical System tasked with producing data about the American people and economy. Their primary task is to conduct the United States Census every ten years.

About the Center

Rehabilitation Research and Training Center on Disability Statistics and Demographics (StatsRRTC)

Led by the University of New Hampshire, the StatsRRTC is a collaborative effort involving the following partners: American Association of People with Disabilities, Center for Essential Management Services, Council of State Administrators of Vocational Rehabilitation, Kessler Foundation, Mathematica Policy Research, and Public Health Institute.

The StatsRRTC is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Community Living, National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research under grant number 90RTGE00010100, from 2018–2023.

Employment Policy and Measurement Rehabilitation Research and Training Center (EPM-RRTC)

Led by the University of New Hampshire, the EPM-RRTC is a collaborative effort involving the following partners: Association of University Centers on Disability, Hunter College, Kessler Foundation, Mathematica Policy Research, and the University of Chicago.

The EPM-RRTC is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Community Living, National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research under grant number 90RT503701, from 2015–2020.

Contact Information
University of New Hampshire, Institute on Disability
10 West Edge Drive, Suite 101
Durham, NH 03824
Toll-Free Telephone/TTY: 866-538-9521
E-mail: Disability.Statistics@unh.edu
https://www.researchondisability.org