Introduction

The Social Science Research Center (SSRC) at 圖朸厙 (圖朸厙) recently completed data collection for the 14th annual Life in Hampton Roads (LIHR) survey. The purpose of this survey is to gain insight into residents perceptions of the quality of life in Hampton Roads as well as other topics of local interest such as perceptions of police, politics, the economy, education, and health. A total of 610 telephone surveys were completed between June 6 and Aug. 25, 2023.泭 Surveys this year were completed over the telephone as they were last year and prior to 2020.泭 In 2020, due to COVID-19, surveys were completed via on-line web panels. In 2021, a mixture of online web panels and telephone surveys were utilized. This year, a mixture of listed and random-digit dial (RDD) cell phone and landline telephone numbers were used.泭 From 2012 to 2019, RDD landline and cell phone samples were used.泭 This change limits, to some degree, the ability to compare this years results with those from previous years or to confidently generalize the results to the Hampton Roads population as a whole. However, as with previous years, this years survey data was weighted to match a citys population distribution on several variables including race, Hispanic ethnicity, age and gender, along with telephone type (cell only versus landline). Funding for the 2023 survey was provided by the Social Science Research Center. The SSRC would like to thank the College of Arts and Letters and the 圖朸厙 Office of Research for their continued support of the survey.

Survey Demographics

While most of the data reported here is weighted as described above, demographic data described below is unweighted to provide a description of the demographic coverage achieved by the survey. Of the 610 citizens interviewed, 62% were white, 23% were Black or African American, and 11.9% considered themselves to be another race/ethnicity. This includes 0.3% identifying as American Indian or Alaskan Native, 0.3% Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, 1.6% Asian and 6.7% multiracial. In a separate question, 4.6% of respondents indicated that they were of Hispanic/Latino origin.泭

More than 40% of respondents were male (43.8%) and 54.9% were female and the average age was 52. More than one in three (39.8%) of the respondents received a high school diploma or GED, completed trade or professional school, or attended some college. An additional 44.2% of respondents completed an undergraduate or graduate degree. About half of respondents were married (49.3%) and 19.9% were divorced, separated or widowed. Less than one-quarter of those surveyed were single and not living with a partner (23%) while a small portion of single people reported living with a partner (5.9%).

Race

Percentage

White

62.0%

Black/African American

23.0%

American Indian or Alaskan Native

0.3%

Asian

1.6%

Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander

0.3%

Multiracial

6.7%

Other

3.0%

Dont Know/Refused

3.2%

Hispanic/Latino Origin?

Percentage

Yes

4.6%

No

93.1%

Dont know/Refused

2.3%

Gender

Percentage

Male

43.8%

Female

54.9%

Prefer to self-identify

0.8%

Refused

0.5%

Highest level of school completed

Percentage

Some grade school

0.2%

Some high school

2.5%

High school diploma/GED

12.1%

Completed trade/professional school

4.6%

Some college

23.1%

Associate degree

10.0%

Bachelors degree

23.4%

Graduate degree

20.8%

Other

2.6%

Dont Know/Refused

0.7%

Age

Age in years

Average age (years)

52

Marital Status

Percentage

Single, not living with partner

泭泭泭泭泭 23.0%

Single, living with partner

5.9%

Married

49.3%

Divorced/separated

10.7%

Widowed

9.2%

Refused

2.0%

Only 8.5% of participants reported their annual household income as $30,000 or less, a quarter of respondents (24.9%) reported earning more than $30,000 to $75,000, while 45.4% earned more than $75,000. This is the most commonly refused demographic question in the survey, with 16.7% declining to answer and another 4.4% responding with dont know.

Contact

Social Science Research Center