U.S. Decennial Census 1900 (N/A)[8] 1910-1930[9] 1930-1950[10] 1980-2000[11] 2010[12]
Sectors
Barrios (which are, in contemporary times, roughly comparable to
minor civil divisions)[13] in turn are further subdivided into smaller local populated place areas/units called sectores (sectors in English). The types of sectores may vary, from normally sector to urbanización to reparto to barriada to residencial, among others.[14][15][16]
Carretera 162, Carretera 718, Comunidad Monte Verde, Comunidad Yura, Hacienda Camila, Parcelas Nuevas, Parcelas Viejas, Sector Bejuco, Sector Cuchilla, Sector Cuesta Blanca, Sector La Playita, Sector La Torre, Sector Los Cardín, Sector Palomas, Sector Pasto, Urbanización Las Delicias, Urbanización Paseo de Algarrobo, Urbanización Paseo de la Reina, and Villas de Algarrobo.
Special communities
Since 2001 when law 1-2001 was passed,[18] measures have been taken to identify and address the high levels of poverty and the lack of resources and opportunities affecting specific communities in Puerto Rico. Initially there were 686 places that made the list.[19] By 2008, there were 742 places on the list of Comunidades especiales de Puerto Rico. The places on the list are barrios, communities, sectors, or neighborhoods and in 2004 several areas of Pasto barrio had made the list including: Parcelas Nuevas in Pasto, and Parcelas Viejas in Pasto.[19] In 2017, Jesus Velez Vargas, the director of the Special Communities of Puerto Rico program stated that the program was evolving with more ways to help the residents of these so-called
marginal communities.[20][21]
^Rivera Quintero, Marcia (2014), El vuelo de la esperanza: Proyecto de las Comunidades Especiales Puerto Rico, 1997-2004 (first ed.), San Juan, Puerto Rico Fundación Sila M. Calderón,
ISBN978-0-9820806-1-0
^"Leyes del 2001". Lex Juris Puerto Rico (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 June 2020.
^"PRECINTO ELECTORAL AIBONITO 069"(PDF). Comisión Estatal de Elecciones (in Spanish). PR Government. 21 September 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
^"Leyes del 2001". Lex Juris Puerto Rico (in Spanish). Retrieved 24 June 2019.