{ "currentVersion": 10.61, "serviceDescription": "This layer represents the ratio of the summer peak to the winter off peak (Q3 to Q1) employment for each of the counties shown in Figure 4 of the report, \u2018New Perspectives on the Ocean Economy of the Mid-Atlantic States,\u2019 prepared for MARCO by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey (webpage link here).\n
<\/br>\nThis figure uses the \u201cLeisure & Hospitality\u201d sector rather than the ENOW ocean economy data to measure quarterly levels of employment, which are not available in the ENOW data. The ratios shown in the layer are used to adjust the ENOW tourism and recreation data. Cape May County, New Jersey, stands out as having the largest difference between summer and winter employment; the ratio is 3.73 to 1. Other shoreline counties along the Atlantic in New Jersey, Delaware, and Virginia have ratios showing summer employment between 45% and 120% higher than winter. On the other hand there is little summer peak in Kent County, Maryland and middle Chesapeake counties in both Maryland and Virginia. \n
<\/br>\nNOTE: The ratios for Richmond and Surry counties in Virginia were calculated with a separate formula than the other Mid-Atlantic counties due to a difference in available data. As a result, no data is shown upon clicking the two counties on the MARCO Portal's map layer. Rather, these are represented in the map layer as \u20180\u2019 (for these null values).", "mapName": "Layers", "description": "", "copyrightText": "Prepared for MARCO by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey", "supportsDynamicLayers": true, "layers": [ { "id": 0, "name": "MARCO_Counties_SummerWinterRatio", "parentLayerId": -1, "defaultVisibility": true, "subLayerIds": null, "minScale": 0, "maxScale": 0 } ], "tables": [], "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102100, "latestWkid": 3857 }, "singleFusedMapCache": false, "initialExtent": { "xmin": -8754014.170989271, "ymin": 4670978.306223999, "xmax": -7749715.995448175, "ymax": 5122533.027468548, "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102100, "latestWkid": 3857 } }, "fullExtent": { "xmin": -8602127.0827, "ymin": 4376611.082800001, "xmax": -7998997.2393, "ymax": 5066534.262699999, "spatialReference": { "wkid": 102100, "latestWkid": 3857 } }, "minScale": 0, "maxScale": 0, "units": "esriMeters", "supportedImageFormatTypes": "PNG32,PNG24,PNG,JPG,DIB,TIFF,EMF,PS,PDF,GIF,SVG,SVGZ,BMP", "documentInfo": { "Title": "Ratio of Summer Peak to Off Peak Leisure & Hospitality Sector Employment", "Author": "Prepared for MARCO by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey", "Comments": "This layer represents the ratio of the summer peak to the winter off peak (Q3 to Q1) employment for each of the counties shown in Figure 4 of the report, \u2018New Perspectives on the Ocean Economy of the Mid-Atlantic States,\u2019 prepared for MARCO by the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey (webpage link here).\n
<\/br>\nThis figure uses the \u201cLeisure & Hospitality\u201d sector rather than the ENOW ocean economy data to measure quarterly levels of employment, which are not available in the ENOW data. The ratios shown in the layer are used to adjust the ENOW tourism and recreation data. Cape May County, New Jersey, stands out as having the largest difference between summer and winter employment; the ratio is 3.73 to 1. Other shoreline counties along the Atlantic in New Jersey, Delaware, and Virginia have ratios showing summer employment between 45% and 120% higher than winter. On the other hand there is little summer peak in Kent County, Maryland and middle Chesapeake counties in both Maryland and Virginia. \n
<\/br>\nNOTE: The ratios for Richmond and Surry counties in Virginia were calculated with a separate formula than the other Mid-Atlantic counties due to a difference in available data. As a result, no data is shown upon clicking the two counties on the MARCO Portal's map layer. Rather, these are represented in the map layer as \u20180\u2019 (for these null values).\n\n\nThis figure uses the \u201cLeisure & Hospitality\u201d sector rather than the ENOW ocean economy data to measure quarterly levels of employment, which are not available in the ENOW data. The ratios shown in the layer are used to adjust the ENOW tourism and recreation data. Cape May County, New Jersey, stands out as having the largest difference between summer and winter employment; the ratio is 3.73 to 1. Other shoreline counties along the Atlantic in New Jersey, Delaware, and Virginia have ratios showing summer employment between 45% and 120% higher than winter. On the other hand there is little summer peak in Kent County, Maryland and middle Chesapeake counties in both Maryland and Virginia.\n", "Subject": "This layer represents the ratio of the summer peak to the winter off peak (Q3 to Q1) employment for each of the counties shown.", "Category": "", "AntialiasingMode": "None", "TextAntialiasingMode": "Force", "Keywords": "employment,coastal" }, "capabilities": "Map,Query,Data", "supportedQueryFormats": "JSON, AMF, geoJSON", "exportTilesAllowed": false, "supportsDatumTransformation": true, "maxRecordCount": 1000, "maxImageHeight": 4096, "maxImageWidth": 4096, "supportedExtensions": "" }