Households Lacking Internet Access Dashboard — Detailed Summary & Demographic Insights
1. Overview
This dashboard analyzes the percentage of households lacking internet access across 24 counties in North Central Texas.
Using a combination of a geographic heatmap, county comparison bar chart, and a multi-year declining trend line, the dashboard highlights geographic disparities and long-term improvements in digital access.
The dashboard includes:
- Interactive County Map (primary filter)
- County Comparison Bar Chart
- Trend of Internet Access Gaps (2016–2023)
- Year Selection Panel
Selecting a county on the map dynamically filters the entire dashboard to show that county’s specific values and comparisons.
2. Dashboard Components & Their Function
A. Interactive Map — Primary Filter
The map represents each county’s 2023 “Households Lacking Internet Access (%)” using a color gradient.
Darker shades = higher gaps in internet access
Lighter shades = better access
Map Interactivity
- Selecting a county filters both the bar chart and trend line for that specific location.
- Allows users to explore individual county patterns over time.
Notable Map Insights:
Counties with highest percentages lacking internet access:
- Eastland – 32.24%
- Comanche – 31.27%
- Jack – 29.40%
- Hamilton – 28.83%
- Erath – 18.45%
- Navarro – 22.82%
Counties with lowest gaps:
- Collin – 6.67%
- Dallas – 6.69%
- Denton – 7.26%
- Rockwall – 11.36%
- Johnson – 13.73%
These patterns reflect socioeconomic divides between rural and urban counties.
B. Bar Chart — County Comparison
The bar chart displays each county’s percent of households lacking internet for the selected year.
Key Observations:
- Rural counties (e.g., Eastland, Comanche, Jack, Hamilton) consistently show higher digital exclusion.
- Suburban/urban counties (Collin, Dallas, Denton) show significantly better connectivity.
- The chart updates when a year or county filter is applied.
C. Trend Line — Regional Progress (2016–2023)
The trend line shows a steep decline in households lacking internet from 2016 to 2023, indicating improvements in infrastructure, affordability programs, and digital participation efforts.
Trend Values:
- 2016: 521.1
- 2017: 462.2
- 2018: 390.8
- 2019: 329.1
- 2020: 284.7
- 2021: 245.9
- 2023: 211.1
Interpretation:
- The region achieved a ~60% reduction over seven years.
- The steepest improvements occurred from 2016–2019, likely due to broadband expansion and rural infrastructure grants.
- COVID-19 (2020–2021) accelerated home internet adoption due to remote work and online schooling.
- Decline continues into 2023, signaling ongoing progress.
3. Demographic & Socioeconomic Interpretation
A. Urban vs Rural Digital Divide
- Rural counties (Eastland, Comanche, Hamilton, Jack) lack internet at much higher rates due to:
- Limited broadband infrastructure
- Lower population density (discourages provider investment)
- Higher poverty levels
- Fewer public Wi-Fi centers
- Lower digital literacy
- Urban counties (Dallas, Tarrant, Collin, Denton) benefit from:
- Strong fiber and cable networks
- Affordable internet programs
- Public & institutional access points
This divide explains the stark differences in the map and bar chart.
B. Income, Education, & Technology Access
Internet access correlates strongly with:
- Household income
- Education level
- Employment opportunities
- Housing stability
Counties with higher income and educational attainment—Collin, Rockwall, Denton—show the lowest rates of digital exclusion.
C. Workforce & Economic Impacts
Households lacking internet face challenges in:
- Job applications
- Remote work
- Online education
- Accessing telemedicine
- Participating in e-commerce or digital services
This makes rural counties more vulnerable to economic stagnation and limits upward mobility.
4. Key Takeaways & Summary
Internet access has dramatically improved from 2016–2023, declining from 521.1 to 211.1 households.
Large geographic disparities persist, with some rural counties facing 2–4× higher rates of digital exclusion.
Urban/suburban counties show near-complete digital coverage, reflecting investment, affordability, and socioeconomic advantages.
Map serves as an intuitive county-level filter, enabling deep exploration of each county’s digital access over time.
The dashboard supports policy-making around:
- Broadband grants
- Digital literacy programs
- Rural connectivity initiatives
- Fairly distributed access planning