Mortimer Ward Profile

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Mortimer Ward Profile Choose your ward: Mortimer West Berkshire Ward Profile - June 2013. Mortimer Available from www.westberks.gov.uk/research A broader district profile is available from www.westberks.gov.uk/districtprofile Census material for West Berkshire is available from www.westberks.gov.uk/research How to use this document: Choose your ward on the page below and the following data will be shown: To return to the menu, choose the BACK button on the top right of the page Population changes 2001-2011 Economic activity English indices of multiple deprivation 2010 Hours worked Age structure Employment by occupation Ethnicity Distance travelled to work Living arrangements Method of travelling to work Household composition Number of vehicles in a household Tenure Perception of health Type of accommodation People who provide unpaid care Council tax banding Qualifications achieved JSA claimants Ward profiles provide some key statistical data for each of the 30 wards which makes up the district of West Berkshire. Rather than be exhaustive, the aim is to describe the essential characteristics of each neighbourhood – demography, or in terms of housing, employment etc. – and to view the ward in the context of the rest of West Berkshire, regionally and nationally. The profiles highlight key issues of substance for information and to prompt further interrogation. Data is also presented through the use of the Office of National Statistics' (ONS) small geographical area called a Lower Super Output Area (LSOA). Each contains around 1,000 people. Relevant, salient census material for West Berkshire is also re-provided on the Council’s research and information pages: www.westberks.gov.uk/research. The raw data sheets are provided in the live excel version of this document to be found on our research pages: www.westberks.gov.uk/research Key data; headline analysis; comparative data analysis ; population estimates and projections can be found on our Census 2011 page @ All census material is published on the ONS’ webpages: www.ons.gov.uk/ons/guide-method/census/2011/index.html). Key resources for further information: The main index page for all research information and data - links to the District Profile, Consultation Finder , key census data, the Indices of Multiple westberks.gov.uk/research Deprivation, education performance tables, road safety statistics. westberks.gov.uk/parishplans Index page for all advice and guidance on undertaking a Parish Plan, plus all completed plans across West Berkshire. statistics.gov.uk The Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) main website. neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk A subset of the ONS website which collates and presents socio-demographic data available at different geographical levels. nomisweb.co.uk A subset of the ONS website which collates and presents labour market statistics. data.gov.uk Single, searchable website of all public data collated and used by public agencies. 1 www.westberks.gov.uk/research Quickfact Summary From 2001-2011 Mortimer ward saw a higher increase in the number of residents aged 0-19 (21%) and 34% of residents own their properties outright and 36% have a mortgage; compared to 31% and 38% across the 65+ (28%) than regional and district comparators. The total population has increased by 13% since district. Houses are primarily detached (39%) or semi-detached (34%); compared to 34% and 33% across West 2001. Berkshire. 1 Mortimer ward has a disparity between affluent and more deprived areas, for example, it appears in the 63rd and 97th percentiles for ‘education’; and between 36-46% for ‘crime’. A similar disparity is The proportion of residents who claim Jobseeker’s Allowance is lower than the rest of the district and the region. reflected in the rankings for both Income Deprivation Affecting Children Index (IDACI) and Income. (A lower number, for e.g. 10%, means a more deprived area). 2 The population is predominantly white British (90%) however it has slightly more ethnic diversity than The qualifications and occupation profiles are consistent with the rest of the district; however comparatively more across the district as a whole. adults (37%) hold a degree and managerial positions (17%). 3 The majority of the population live as a married couple or in a civil partnership (58%). 5% are lone Ownership of 2 vehicles is higher (40%) than the overall district, with 70% of working residents using their car to travel parents with dependent children. More older people live alone (13%) compared to the district to work. average. 4 2001-2011 population changes Back Choose your ward below: West Berkshire population by Ward (Census 2011) Calcot Mortimer Birch Copse Thatcham S. & Crookham Clay Hill Bucklebury Purley on Thames Mortimer Thatcham West Falkland 5,800 Thatcham Central 5,732 Burghfield Thatcham North St Johns 5,600 Hungerford Mortimer Greenham 5,400 Speen Lambourn Valley Northcroft Kintbury 5,200 Victoria 5,091 Cold Ash Compton 5,000 Downlands Basildon Pangbourne Sulhamstead 4,800 Chieveley Aldermaston Theale 4,600 Westwood Census 2001 Census 2011 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 5,000 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 10,000 Census 2001 Census 2011 % difference Mortimer 5,091 5,732 13% 2 www.westberks.gov.uk/research 2001-2011 population changes Back Mortimer West Berkshire Berkshire South East England ## Change in pop’n Change in pop’n Change in pop’n Change in pop’n Change in pop’n Change in pop’n Pop’n 2001 Pop’n 2011 (nos) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) ## ## 0-4 281 397 116 41% 14% 22% 13% 13% ## 5-9 334 377 43 13% -5% 1% -4% -5% ## 0-9 615 774 159 26% 4% 11% 4% 4% ## 10-14 323 380 57 18% 1% -1% -1% -5% ## 15-19 307 348 41 13% 5% 6% 12% 10% ## 0-19 1,245 1,502 257 21% 4% 7% 5% 3% ## 20-24 198 221 23 12% 4% 2% 16% 22% ## 25-29 228 229 1 0% -9% -1% 6% 12% ## 30-34 359 272 -87 -24% -20% -2% -9% -7% ## 20-34 785 722 -63 -8% -10% -10% 3% 7% ## 35-39 402 403 1 0% -10% -4% -9% -9% ## 40-44 393 505 112 28% 11% 12% 12% 12% ## 45-49 350 443 93 27% 23% 24% 26% 25% ## 50-54 421 380 -41 -10% 0% 2% 0% 1% ## 55-59 375 348 -27 -7% 9% 9% 6% 8% ## 60-64 308 379 71 23% 48% 33% 39% 33% ## 35-64 2,249 2,458 209 9% 11% 11% 10% 10% ## 65-69 257 332 75 29% 32% 17% 21% 16% ## 70-74 171 254 83 49% 17% 7% 7% 5% ## 75-79 185 194 9 5% 13% 9% 4% 1% ## 80-84 104 137 33 32% 23% 20% 14% 14% ## 85-89 57 101 44 77% 36% 26% 21% 22% ## 90+ 38 32 -6 -16% 31% 37% 29% 28% ## 65+ 717 917 200 28% 22% 13% 12% 9% ## 85+ 95 133 38 40% 34% 29% 24% 24% ## All 5,091 5,732 641 13% 6% 8% 8% 8% ## ## 50% ## ## 40% ## ## 30% ## 20% ## 0-9 0-19 20-34 35-64 65+ 85+ South East ## South East 4% 5% 3% 10% 12% 24% 10% ## West Berkshire 4% 4% -10% 11% 22% 34% West Berkshire Ward 26% 21% -8% 9% 28% 40% 0% 0-9 0-19 20-34 35-64 65+ 85+ Ward -10% -20% 3 www.westberks.gov.uk/research ## English Indices of Multiple Deprivation 2010 Back ## Background: Information about IMD's can be found at: www.gov.uk The Department of Communities and Local Government (CLG) has calculated local measures of deprivation in England since the 1970s. The English Indices of Deprivation 2010 (ID2010) contains the latest version of these statistics, and updates the English Indices of Deprivation 2007 (ID2007). They are calculated for small areas and use geographies known as Lower Super Output Areas (LSOAs). Each LSOA contains on average 1,500 residents - which allows information about different, individual wards to be broken up more precisely. The indices produces a ‘score’ which allows an area to be ‘ranked’ in relation to all other areas either within West Berkshire, or England more generally. ## As always, the indices measure deprivation rather than affluence; in other words the presence of deprivation does not necessarily imply the absence of wealth. Similarly, the indices do not describe every resident; more deprived LSOAs will contain residents that are not deprived and vice versa. Finally, the indices measure relative deprivation, so there is no established point at which deprivation is considered to occur. The table below shows how individual areas within wards compare – either in relation to the IMD overall, or each of its sub-domains. Displayed is the percentile into which each area falls. If an area shows 25% in relation to (for example) education, this means that it falls within the bottom quartile, or is one of the 25% most deprived areas in England in relation to education. If an area falls within the 10th percentile, then it is one of the 10% most deprived areas in England, and so on. ## Deprivation here describes unmet needs caused by a lack of resources, and is measured using 38 indicators grouped into seven domains: • Income Deprivation (5) • Employment Deprivation (7) • Health Deprivation and Disability (4) • Education Skills and Training Deprivation (7) • Barriers to Housing and Services (7) • Living Environment Deprivation (4) ## • Crime (4). MORTIMER LSOA code Income percentile Employment Health & disability Education Barriers to housing Crime percentile Living environment percentile percentile percentile & services percentile percentile ## Stephens Firs E01016307 53% 70% 67% 63% 94% 36% 82% ## Stratfield Mortimer, Beech Hill E01016308 90% 95% 97% 84% 46% 46% 63% ## Padworth, Ufton Nervet, Aldermaston Wharf, Wokefield E01016309 74% 79% 97% 90% 17% 38% 53% ## Park ## ## ## ## A supplementary index – Income Deprivation Affecting Children Index (IDACI) – was produced alongside the IMD 2010.
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