U.S. federal government terminology for a non-county jurisdiction similar to a county From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A county-equivalent in the United States is a type of area that is not inside any county. The county-equivalents are defined by the federal government. They are used for administrative and statistical reasons.
As of 2012, there were 3,143 counties and county-equivalents in the United States and the District of Columbia.
There are three types of county-equivalents.
The first type of county-equivalent is an area of a state which is similar to a county.
Examples of this type are that Louisiana has parishes instead of counties, [1] while Alaska [2] has boroughs instead of counties: the city of Anchorage is considered a borough under state law.
In Connecticut, the state and federal government use councils of governments, instead of counties, starting in 2024.[3]
The second type of county-equivalent is a city that is not inside any county.
Examples of this type:
The third type of county-equivalent is an area that doesn't have any county-level government and the United States Census Bureau decides to treat it as a county-equivalent.
Example of this type:
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