The social, health, educational and economic well-being of Austinites will be revealed May 20 in a new report that is expected to shed light on some of the city's biggest trends. A private coalition of nonprofit organizations called Community Advancement Network, also known as CAN, compiled data to learn more about the existing social climate in Austin. This is the sixth year the group has compiled its CAN Dashboard report. CAN's mission is to measure if the community is safe, just and engaged. This year's CAN Dashboard report gauges 17 indicators, such as crime, voting trends, income, food security, the increasing burden of housing costs, health, homelessness, obesity, air quality, high school graduation rates, college success rates and unemployment rates. According to the CAN Dashboard, African Americans in Travis County are 3.4 times more likely to be booked into jail than whites and 2.2 times more likely than Hispanics. While African Americans represent 8 percent of the total county population, they account for about 21 percent of overall jail bookings, according to the report. "This indicator gets to the heart of what CAN is about—equity and opportunity," said Erica Saenz, chair of the CAN Board of Directors, in a statement. "There is something each of us can do to promote equity. Whether we are in law enforcement, education, social services or business, we all have a part to play." Since 2009 Travis County's annual overall crime rate has reduced by 1 percent, which meets a CAN target. Travis County also has the lowest violent crime rate among the six largest urban counties in Texas, according to the report. Community engagement, on the other hand, is up, with data showing a 250-percent increase since May 2012 in the voter turnout during the recent Austin elections for mayor and City Council election. However, the amount of voters for gubernational races remained virtually unchanged from 2010 to 2014, according to the report.