Information AboutCounty-equivalent |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT COUNTY-EQUIVALENT | |
| demographics of the united states | |
Examples of the first class can be found in a handful of states:
The second class of county-equivalents is unique to Alaska. Most of the land area of that state has no organized county-level government. The Alaska state government calls the entire portion of the state that is not part of a borough or municipality the Unorganized Borough . In 1970 , the Census Bureau, in cooperation with the state, divided the Unorganized Borough into Census Area s for statistical purposes. Each census area is considered a county-equivalent. As of the 2000 Census there were a total of 3,141 county-equivalents in the United States. |
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