Monday, March 19, 2012

Anne Arundel Community College/CSLI Spring 2012 Semi Annual Survey Results

The Center for the Study of Local Issues recently (March 5-8) conducted a survey focusing on Anne Arundel County residents’ views concerning the following issues:
 
  • Economic conditions and experiences;
  • Consumer confidence;
  • Gambling - the addition of a new site and permitting table games at all sites;
  • Satisfaction with some county agencies;
  • Issues including same sex marriage, proposed increases in the “flush tax,” shifting contributions to the teachers’ pension funds from the state to local governments, maintaining consistent funding for schools;
  • Possible problems affecting the quality of life in Anne Arundel County – pollution of the Chesapeake Bay, over-dependency on government employment, budget constraints on local government, changes to the quality of public schools, and sea-level rise.
  • Presidential job approval and trust in political parties.
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Recipient: The Center for the Study of Local Issues at Anne Arundel Community College conducts surveys of Anne Arundel County residents each March and October, offering students a valuable learning experience while providing the county community with public opinion findings. A summary of our findings for this March is provided below. The actual (much longer and detailed) press release is attached as a pdf document. You may also find a copy of the press release as well as all other press releases for CSLI surveys since 1995 at our website:www2.aacc.edu/csli.
 
 
Summary of Findings:
 
Most important problem facing county residents: 30 percent cited the economy, an 18-point drop since October 2011.
 
Perceptions of the economy: 51 percent viewed the county’s economy as excellent or good – a 3 percentage point rise from October; 38 percent said the same for Maryland’s economy (up 5 points) and 13 percent favorably rated the national economy, up 4 points.
 
Right direction/wrong direction: There was a drop since the October 2011 survey in the percentage of those saying that the county was moving in the right direction (from 47 to 43 percent) along with a marked increase in those saying “wrong” direction (from 32 to 41 percent).
 
Economic conditions experienced by individuals: Various measures have been tracked since March 2008 – the major changes for spring 2012 were a decrease among those saying that they had “significant losses in your stock or retirement accounts” (-16 percentage points) and an increase in the percentage saying that they had received an increase in income recently, rising 9 points from 26 to 35 percent. Fewer were delaying major purchases or facing the possibility of unemployment. Indicators tracking inflation were either flat or showed some rise.
 
Consumer confidence: Three of the four indicators showed improvement, with larger percentages than last fall saying that economic growth, unemployment and personal financial situation would improve over the next 12 months. Only inflationary expectations worsened slightly.
 
Expansion of gambling through the addition of another site and table games: The public was closely divided about whether adding a new site has more costs than benefits – 42 percent agreed, 43 percent disagreed – but found fewer costs regarding the addition of table games: – 34 percent agreed that there were more costs than benefits while 48 percent disagreed.
 
County agencies and units level of satisfaction: The percentage saying “very satisfied” with the unit was as follows: Fire Department, 87 percent; Police Department, 67 percent; public libraries, 68 percent; public schools, 41 percent; permit application center 18/32 percent (with/without missing answers); Department of Aging, 30/59 percent; Health Department, 36/59 percent.[1]
 
Various state and local issues: The percentage supporting various policies were as follows: same-sex marriage, 46 percent; “flush tax” doubling, 32 percent; increasing state funding for affordable rental housing, 37 percent; shifting pension fund contributions for teachers from the state to the counties, 22 percent; strictly enforcing the requirement that local schools be funded at no less than last year’s levels, 65 percent.
 
Possible problems affecting quality of life in Anne Arundel County: Respondents gave these “very serious” scores: Pollution of the Chesapeake Bay (66 percent); budget constraints on local government (43 percent); over-dependency on government employment (43 percent); air pollution (39 percent); changes in the quality of county schools (39 percent); sea-level rise (31 percent).
 
Obama’s job approval: President Obama’s job approval went up 5 points to 42 percent. In a matchup with a hypothetical “Republican candidate” he was down by 3 points (38 to 41 percent).
 
Which party do you trust to do a better job? The percentage favoring Democrats was up 6 points from last spring (from 31 to 37 percent). The Republicans also went up from 30 to 34 percent. The percentage saying “neither” decreased to 21 percent from 32 percent last October.
 
 
Methodology: The survey polled a random sample of 440 county residents who were at least 18 years old. It was conducted March 5-8, 2012 during evening hours. Phone numbers were derived from a database of listed landline numbers as well as computer chosen, randomly assigned numbers. There was about a 4.6 percent statistical margin of error for the overall sample; the error rate was higher for subgroups such as “Democrats.” The dataset was weighted by gender and political party to better represent the general population. College students were trained and used as telephone interviewers.
 
 
Contact Dan Nataf, Ph.D., center director, for additional comments or questions at 410-777-2733 and ddnataf@aacc.edu. Check the CSLI website for results from this and previous surveys: www2.aacc.edu/csli.
 
 

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