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City of WhitehorseCommunity profile

In 2021, Vermont had 4.8% of couple families with children in step families and 1.3% in blended families.

Information on blended and intact families can be an indicator of the level of family breakup and repartnering within the area, and a potential indicator of socio-economic disadvantage. Family blending only applies to couple families with children. For information more broadly about household and family types, including single-parent families, please see Household Type, Households with Children, and Households without Children.

Q:

Derived from the Census question:

'What is the person's relationship (to each other person in the household)?'

Family blending
Vermont - Total couples with children (Enumerated)20212016Change
Family blending by typeNumber%City of Whitehorse %Number%City of Whitehorse %2016 to 2021
Intact Family 1,50393.994.41,37992.694.0+123
Step family 774.84.1694.64.1+8
Blended family 201.31.3402.71.7-20
Other couple family 0--0.20--0.20
Total couples with children1,600100.0100.01,488100.0100.0+111
Source: Australian Bureau of Statistics, Census of Population and Housing 2016 and 2021. Compiled and presented by .id (informed decisions).
Please refer to specific data notes for more information

Dominant groups

Analysis of the family blending in Vermont in 2021 compared to the City of Whitehorse shows that there was a higher proportion of step families as well as a higher proportion of blended families. Overall, 4.8% of total couple families with children were step families, and 1.3% were blended families, compared with 4.1% and 1.3% respectively for the City of Whitehorse.

There were a similar proportion of other families and a similar proportion of couples without children. Overall, the proportion of other families was 0.0% compared to 0.2% in the City of Whitehorse while the proportion of intact families was 93.9% compared to 94.4% in the City of Whitehorse.

Emerging groups

The number of couple families with children in Vermont increased by 112 between 2016 and 2021.

The largest change in family blending in Vermont between 2016 and 2021 was:

  • Intact Family (+123 couples with children)

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