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Voto Latino also screened the first episode of a serial drama starring Dawson and Wilmer Valderrama, who plays a character who resists the census because he wants to stay off the U.S. government's radar and (spoiler alert) is eventually revealed to be in the country illegally. Organizers said the drama and smart phone campaigns ways to get through to an ethnic group that has been hard for census officials to reach because of indifference, language barriers and
-- for some -- deportation fears. "It is critically important, very simple and completely confidential to participate in the United States Census," said MALDEF president Thomas A. Saenz said. "Unfortunately, too many in our community are not aware of those three important messages: importance, simplicity and confidentiality." Harry Pachon, a public policy professor at the University of Southern California's Tomas Rivera Policy Institute, agreed that the extra efforts were needed to get through to the members of a community that is suspicious of the census and largely unaware of its relevance. He said using the community's abundance of wired youth was an especially canny strategy to drive up participation. "Young people are sort of an intermediary between the all-English world and the all-Spanish world, so it makes a lot of sense to use the young people as transmitters of information," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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