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"This is going to be a big enough deal where states will have to make some decisions," said Kimball Brace, president of Election Data Services, a Virginia-based firm that crunches political numbers. "We may see an impact ultimately where one political party decides to go one way and draws districts accordingly, the other party goes another way, and we end up with a court case to sort it out." The population count, held every 10 years, is used to apportion U.S. House and state legislative and county seats as well as distribute more than $400 billion in federal aid. New Yorker Chevelle Johnson, 44, who said he was formerly incarcerated, returned to his community of Bedford-Stuyvesant, in Brooklyn, upon being released from prison in 2007. "A lot of us come home and we can't even vote," he said. "We need political power in our communities so that when we do come home, we come home to something ... to things that will help us not get reincarcerated." While the 2010 data will not include hometown information, advocacy groups say they are continuing their push for prisoners to be counted as residents of the communities they came from for the next decennial census in 2020. ___ On the Net: Census Bureau: http://www.census.gov/ Prison Policy Initiative: http://www.prisonpolicy.org/
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