Livonia Township

Land area
(square miles)
  32
Population   3,917
  Percent change since 1990 71%
 
Age Under age 5 8%
  Age 5 to 19 29%
  Age 20 to 34 17%
  Age 35 to 54 36%
  Age 55 to 74 9%
  Age 75 and older 1%
  Median age 33
 
Race White 98%
  Black 0%
  American Indian 0%
  Asian and Pacific Islander 0%
  Other race 0%
  Two or more races 1%
 
Hispanic origin Hispanic (can be of any race) 1%
 
Foreign-born population   1%
Households 1,222  
Household types Family households 86%
  Single-person households 10%
  Other (2 or more people) 4%
  Average household size 3.2
 
Marital status Never married 22%
  Currently married (not separated) 69%
  Separated 0%
  Divorced 6%
  Widowed 2%
  Same-sex partner households 0%
 
Educational attainment
(Age 25 and up)
High school diploma 90%
  Bachelor's degree 18%
  Graduate / professional degree 6%
Employment In labor force 75%
Occupation Management, professional and related occupations 24%
  Service occupations 12%
  Sales and office occupations 23%
  Farming, fishing and forestry 2%
  Construction and maintenance 18%
  Production, transportation and material moving 22%
 
Household income Under $15,000 2%
  $15,000 to $34,999 15%
  $35,000 to $74,999 43%
  $75,000 to $149,999 34%
  Above $150,000 6%
  Median household income $63,400
 
Poverty Families in poverty 2%
 
Commuting Mean commute time 38 minutes
 
Vehicles in household No vehicles 0%
  1 vehicle 10%
  2 vehicles 49%
  3 or more vehicles 40%
Housing units 1,241  
  Percent change since 1990 66%
 
Housing unit type Owner-occupied housing units 96%
  Renter-occupied housing units 3%
  Vacant housing units 2%
 
Residence in 1995 Same house 63%
  Same county, different house 13%
  Same state, different county 18%
  Different state 5%
  Abroad 0%
 
Rooms Median rooms per housing unit 7
 
Year structure built 1939 or earlier 5%
  1940 - 1959 2%
  1960 - 1979 31%
  1980 - 1989 20%
  1990 - March 2000 42%
 
Most data is from the 2000 Census long form, which was sent to roughly 1 in 6 people in the metro area. Because the numbers are from a survey, they are subject to sampling error. The amount of potential error varies by topic and community. In general, it is larger for smaller communities and for topics measuring small populations, such as people with graduate degrees or people born abroad.