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Cincinnati Recycling Data

Using Spark to query a large dataset of recycling cart tip data from the Cincinnati Open Data Portal.

This was a class project for "Big Data: High-Performance Computing."

Overview

The goal of this project was to select a large dataset and use it to develop and answer a set of questions. I wrote the query scripts using Scala and ran them against the data set using Spark. I accessed Spark using Apache Zeppelin, a component of the Hortonworks Sandbox running on an Amazon Elastic Computing (EC2) instance.

Data Sources

The primary dataset I used was “Recycle Carts Collection ‘Tip’ Data” available from the City of Cincinnati Open Data Portal. This dataset tracks the number of times every recycling cart in the city is picked up by a recycling truck, based on an RFID tag identifier attached to each cart.

The full recycling dataset contains over 5.8 million rows of records. To help develop my Scala query scripts, I first wrote a short Java program to randomly sample a subset of data. A copy of one such sample is included in the project repository.

For Question 4, I also collected data from the US Census Bureau. The data I used came from detailed tables of the 2018 American Community Survey 5-year estimates. The table numbers and titles were:

  • B15003 - EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT FOR THE POPULATION 25 YEARS AND OVER
  • B19001 - HOUSEHOLD INCOME IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS (IN 2018 INFLATION-ADJUSTED DOLLARS)
  • B17021 - POVERTY STATUS OF INDIVIDUALS IN THE PAST 12 MONTHS BY LIVING ARRANGEMENT

I downloaded data at the census block group level to match the block groups in each of the Cincinnati Statistical Neighborhood Approximations (SNAs) as shown in the maps available from the Cincinnati Department of City Planning. The names of the SNAs coincide with the values of the “NEIGHBORHOOD” column in the recyling data. The repository includes a copy of a csv file listing the census tracts (CT column) and Block Groups (BG column) in each SNA; I used this file to join the two data sets.

Research Questions and Results

What follows is a list of the questions I wrote, including the query results and reasoning behind each question. I've included copies of the query scripts as text files in the project repository.

Questions 1 & 2 examine the rate of participation in the Cincinnati recycling program, first by neighborhood (Question 1) and then by city block (Question 2). According to the data set description, “the Cartlift field indicates how many time (sic) the recycling cart was ‘tipped’ in a given month.” I chose to define recycling program “participants” as an address with at least one cart tip recorded in a month. Dividing the number of participating addresses by the total number of addresses in the neighborhood or city block produced monthly participation rates. This does not account for rates of participation within a single address, such as multi-unit buildings or single-unit buildings associated with multiple bin RFID numbers.

Which neighborhoods have average monthly recycling program participation rates in the bottom 10 percent of all neighborhoods? Consider residential addresses only.

Results:

Neighborhood Average Monthly Recycling
Program Participation Rate
ENGLISH WOODS 0.05657894736842104
WINTON HILLS 0.0835981531258129
VILLAGES AT ROLL HILL 0.15105042016806725
SOUTH FAIRMOUNT 0.18403062580694163
MILLVALE 0.1872814270402695

Motivation:

The neighborhoods with the lowest average monthly participation rates might benefit from targeted outreach designed to increase program participation. Though this question is limited in scope, the full set of results including all neighborhoods also gives an overview of how participation rates vary throughout the city.

What are the top 10 city blocks measured by average monthly recycling program participation rates? For the purposes of this question, a city block is defined as addresses on the same street having numbers within the same “hundreds” place, i.e., 301, 359, 378, would be in one block, 4502, 4523, 4567, would be in a different block. Consider residential addresses only and exclude any block with fewer than 10 addresses.

Results:

Block (Number of Addresses) Average Monthly Recycling
Program Participation Rate
Rank
700 WAKEFIELD DR (15) 0.9749999999999999 1
800 WAKEFIELD DR (17) 0.9647058823529411 2
100 LAFAYETTE CIR (24) 0.9541666666666668 3
1200 DEAN CT (13) 0.9365384615384615 4
6200 ROBISON RD (25) 0.9360000000000005 5
1200 CLIFF LAINE DR (12) 0.9354166666666666 6
1400 OAK KNOLL DR (16) 0.934375 7
6300 KINCAID RD (13) 0.9211538461538462 8
2100 BUDWOOD CT (12) 0.9166666666666666 9
6300 PARKMAN PL (12) 0.9125 10

Motivation:

As in question 1, the results included here are filtered from a larger result set which might have other uses. For example, instead of comparing participation rates of blocks city-wide, they could be compared to other blocks on the same street or in the same neighborhood. This information could be used in a positive way to encourage neighbors to determine which block can achieve the highest average monthly participation rate, leveraging civic pride to increase overall participation in the recycling program.

List recycling truck routes with a monthly average of cart tips greater than one standard deviation above the monthly average of cart tips calculated for all routes. Include residential and commercial addresses. Exclude routes labelled “UP” (which appear to be low-volume, supplemental routes).

Results:

Monthly average cart tips, calculated for all routes: 580.0044

Standard deviation of individual route monthly average cart tips: 314.3280659183882

Route Name Average Monthly Cart Tips
TUE-U2-GOLD 1197.4000
WED-U8-GREEN 1098.6000
WED-U3-GREEN 1086.9250
TUE-U8-GOLD 1018.3000
WED-U2-GREEN 986.6750
MON-U2-GREEN 985.6250
THU-U8-GOLD 949.2000
TUE-U12-GOLD 896.9750

Motivation:

The results of this question should identify recycling truck routes with the heaviest pick-up volume, which could be useful in further analysis of route efficiency, the expected need for supplemental routes, and the possibility of route splitting. This depends on the extent to which the number of cart tips corresponds to the volume of materials. For example, the carts in the data set vary in capacity and it is likely the volume of material within each cart varies from week to week. However, it seems reasonable to assume that the two measurements are somewhat correlated and tip counts could be used as rough proxy measure of pick-up volume.

At the neighborhood level, determine whether there is evidence of a relationship between participation in the recycling program and each of the demographic characteristics of educational attainment, household annual income, and incidence of poverty. Consider residential addresses only.

Results:

Variable Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient
Education: up to high school -0.6639075002188944
Education: up to bachelor’s degree 0.5429677590764169
Education: above bachelor’s degree 0.6432057991540835
Income: below $25,000 -0.7693372574989855
Income: between $25,000 and $39,000 0.12409668632848933
Income: between $40,000 and $75,000 0.41172711015737484
Income: above $75,000 0.6696463186102165
Poverty: below poverty level -0.7591604703412604
Poverty: at or above poverty level 0.7591604703412602

Motivation:

This question measured the linear correlation between the neighborhood average monthly recycling program participation rates calculated in question 1 and neighborhood-level demographic data from the US Census Bureau. The Census data required some additional processing before correlation could be calculated: first, the categories in both the educational attainment and household income topics were condensed; then, along with the poverty topic, the data were converted to percentages of individuals/households in each category.

The results show a strong negative correlation between recycling participation rates and: 1) the percentage of individuals 25 or older in a neighborhood who have completed a high school education or less; 2) the percentage of individuals in a neighborhood earning less than $25,000 annually; and 3) the percentage of households in a neighborhood earning income below the poverty level. Similarly, there is some evidence of positive correlation between recycling participation rates and: 1) the percentage of individuals 25 or older in a neighborhood who have completed a master’s degree or higher; 2) the percentage of individuals in a neighborhood earning more than $75,000 annually; and 3) the percentage of households in a neighborhood earning income above the poverty level.

Educational attainment, household income, and poverty status are related to one another (directly in the case of income and poverty status), so these variables alone would not produce a useful regression model to predict neighborhood recycling participation rates. However, the correlations seen in the results underscore the potential challenge of promoting participation in the recycling program: residents in neighborhoods with low participation rates likely have more immediate financial and social problems to address.