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- Q1995480 subject Q6967151.
- Q1995480 subject Q6979406.
- Q1995480 subject Q7060922.
- Q1995480 abstract "A minor civil division (MCD) is a term used by the United States Census Bureau for primary governmental and/or administrative divisions of a county, such as a civil township, precinct, or magisterial district. As of 2010, MCDs exist in 29 states and the District of Columbia. In New York, they are towns.As of 1990, all or many of the MCDs in 20 states were general-purpose governmental units: Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wisconsin. Most of these MCDs are legally designated as towns or townships. The type of government may range from inoperative, to weak governmental authority, to incorporated municipalities. Since MCDs appear in a different category than incorporated places, this has caused some confusion in states where the MCDs have strong governments, such as in Michigan, the New England states, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania.In states that do not have MCDs, the Census Bureau designates Census County Divisions (CCDs). In states that use MCDs, when any portion of the state is not covered by an MCD, the Census Bureau creates additional entities as unorganized territories, that it treats as equivalent to MCDs for statistical purposes. For several decennial censuses prior to the 2010 census, 28 states used MCDs, but in 2008, Tennessee changed from CCDs to MCDs, bringing the total number of MCD states to 29.In states that use MCDs and border a coast, territorial sea, or the Great Lakes, the Census Bureau assigns a default FIPS county subdivision code of 00000 and an ANSI code of eight zeroes to areas of water that are not legally included in a county subdivision.".
- Q1995480 wikiPageExternalLink cousub2k_maps.html.
- Q1995480 wikiPageExternalLink Ch8GARM.pdf.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1053448.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1166.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1204.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1207.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1211.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384.
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- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1394476.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1397.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1400.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1408.
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- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1527.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1537.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1550680.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1553.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1558.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q1581.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q16551.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q180003.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q18389.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q19610511.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q3301455.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q3957.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q47168.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q523716.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q56061.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q61.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q637413.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q6967151.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q6979406.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q7060922.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q7188.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q724.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q7347.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q759.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q771.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q779.
- Q1995480 wikiPageWikiLink Q917824.
- Q1995480 comment "A minor civil division (MCD) is a term used by the United States Census Bureau for primary governmental and/or administrative divisions of a county, such as a civil township, precinct, or magisterial district. As of 2010, MCDs exist in 29 states and the District of Columbia.".
- Q1995480 label "Minor civil division".