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12,000 Donegal people live alone 01.12.11

New website crunches key county statistics

by Linda McGrory

SOME 28,000 people in Co Donegal have no formal or primary education while just 4% of people here can claim to be in the top socio-economic class, new statistics reveal.
The figures are contained in a new website called DecisionMap which is aimed at providing data to help government bodies, businesses and the public make better decisions when future planning.
The website is a collaboration between Ordnance Survey of Ireland and the company Twelve Horses. It is a handy one-stop-shop with statistics from bodies such as the Central Statistics Office and the All Island Research Observatory.
The total population of Donegal now stands at 147,264, according to DecisionMap.
We have almost the same amount of males and females - 73,970 and 73,294, respectively.
A breakdown of ages shows that in the 15-24 category we have 20,575 people; 24-44 years (41,457); 45-65 years (33,395) and 65+ (18,411).
There are a total of 11,816 one-person households; 5,758 one parent families; 19,100 households with a couple and one child and 8,748 one couple households.
When it comes to motoring, 9,049 Donegal households have no car; 21,269 households have one car; 15,514 households have two cars while 4,161 homes have access to three cars.
The website also shows that the majority of Donegal people (nearly one quarter) are in the social class 2 with nearly a fifth in the social class 4 bracket and 16.6% in social class 7.
There are 3,567 dwellings in ghost estates with 600 of those homes empty, the figures show. Contrastingly, while Co Donegal has a high percentage of people with no formal education it fares relatively well in the doctorate stakes. There are 200 people in the county educated to doctorate level which compares favourably and in many cases better than other counties. A total of 17,342 Donegal people have third level degrees; 4,075 have third level post-grads while some 45,000 people have a lower secondary or higher secondary education.
As a railway-deprived county it is hardly surprising that many people in Co Donegal rely on cars to get them to work and school.
A total of 51,482 people travel to work or school by car; 9,612 do so by foot or bicycle with 14,106 using the bus.
Hugh Mangan of Ordnance Survey Ireland told reporters at this week's launch: “It’s called decision map because that’s what we want you to use it for." He said everyone could benefit from a better understanding of data.
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