TUESDAY'S TOOL: Where to Get Reliable Numbers Online
Robert Niles, Editor - Online Journalism Review, November 14, 2006
Basic Stuff
Agriculture
Crime
Economics
Education
Energy
Finding People
Health
Investing
Language
Law and Politics
Mail
Military
Basic Stuff
- If you go to just one site for U.S. government data, let it be FedStats.
- Find the current time for anyplace on Earth, thanks to the U.S. Naval Observatory.
- Worry no more about how many square feet are in an acre, or how many meters are in a mile. Convert most anything to anything else at onlineconversion.com.
- Need a scientific, currency or other financial calculator? Try calculator.com.
- How far is City A from City B? Your answer awaits here.
- Get political, satellite, historical and street maps for anywhere on Earth from National Geographic.
Agriculture
- The U.S. Department of Agriculture's State Fact Sheets are available online. They include aggregate population, farm and agribusiness stats for each state.
- More than 300 USDA reports and databases, including everything from crop statistics to trade reports, are available through Cornell University. The reports and databases are keyword searchable, too.
- Check out some of the popular reports requested through the Freedom of Information Act from the Agriculture Department's Food Safety and Inspection Service.
- The Foreign Agriculture Office of the USDA has made much of its trade data and analysis of world agriculture available.
- International reporters will want to search the agriculture information database from the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization.
Crime
- Find incident-based crime statistics from the FBI.
- Find survey-based crime statistics from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
- Browse an excellent list of links to international and selected individual U.S. state, local and campus crime statistics.
Economics
- International economic, social, agricultural and health data from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
- You can use this handy calculator to compare the costs of living in U.S. and selected Canadian cities.
- Find demographic information from government statistics bureaus in Australia or Canada.
- The definitive one-stop source for information about Latin American nations can be found by visiting LANIC at the University of Texas.
- Download population, housing or economic data for any community in the U.S. from the Census Bureau.
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics has made a variety of useful national economic data available through its site. The "Economy at a Glance" section offers monthly employment, inflation and growth numbers for the past 14 months. The "Data" section offers access to more-detailed BLS timeseries employment data.
- Examine information about the nation's taxpayers from the Internal Revenue Service.
- The Social Security Administration has put data profiling SSI recipients online, as well as information on the earnings and employment of Social Security-eligible U.S. workers.
- The Population Reference Bureau provides population resources and world population data.
Education
Energy
Finding People
- Find people or businesses in the United States by searching the online white pages. Look for international phone directories and calling codes here.
- Find where to write or call for vital records in the U.S. by checking this guide from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
Health
Investing
- Check out the background of many of the nation's publicly-traded corporations through the SEC's EDGAR site.
Language
Law and Politics
- The basic skinny on every nation on Earth is in the CIA World Factbook.
- Or find out what the laws are here in the U.S. by checking out the United States Code.
- Track all pending U.S. Congressional legislation through Thomas.
- Check this page for links to the web sites of all 50 U.S. state legislatures.
The most important aspect of government and political coverage in the United States is tracking campaign contributions. Here are some links to help you "follow the money."
- FECinfo. This site will show who how much money the U.S. presidential and Congressional candidates have raised, and who's given it to them. It also tracks contributions to political parties and candidates' personal political action committees. Be sure to take a look at the tools which track contributors by their occupation, and who's giving money to out-of-state candidates.
- OpenSecrets.org. This site offers some nice graphical analysis of contribution data, as well as detailed local views.
- Federal Election Commission. The government agency in charge of collecting campaign contribution data. Here's the "official source" for who's giving what to whom. Upside: Data from previous campaigns. Downside: You'll have do the data analysis yourself. No fancy tools here. Just data, and lots of it.
Mail
- Find U.S. postal zip codes for any address, or cities for any zip code.
- Or, do the same for Canada.
Military
- Need background on some type of military equipment? All the available stats are here at the Defense Department's Factfile.
- Search for government documents pertaining to POW/MIAs.