Worried about undercount, states and
cities spend to promote 2020 census
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[October 01, 2018]
By Nick Brown
NEW YORK(Reuters) - By law, the United
States government is responsible for conducting a census every 10 years
to count all of the country's residents. But in the lead-up to the 2020
census, state and local leaders have made it clear they will not rely on
the federal government to ensure an accurate count.
State governments, foundations and local governments are committing
hundreds of millions of dollars to convince people to fill out their
census forms, in what is likely to be the most expensive grassroots
census campaign ever.
The stakes are high: Population data collected in the census not only
serves to allocate congressional seats; it also determines how the
federal government divides an estimated $800 billion each year for such
things as public housing, highway construction, Head Start, Medicaid and
Medicare. An undercount could cost states billions of dollars in federal
revenue.
Some of the groups most likely to receive federal aid are also among
those most often missed by the census. The Census Bureau's own analysis
found that it undercounted young children by 4.6 percent in the 2010
census and missed 1.1 percent of renters (a category sometimes used as a
proxy for low-income residents). Homeowners were over-enumerated by more
than half-a-percent.
States with large immigrant populations are particularly worried for
2020. They say they have seen widespread distrust of government among
immigrants because of heightened immigration enforcement. And for the
first time in 70 years, the Census Bureau intends to ask all people
whether they are U.S. citizens, a question many worry will further
suppress immigrant participation. More than two dozen states and cities
are suing to get the question removed.
California has said it will spend $100 million on outreach, dwarfing the
$2 million it spent on the 2010 census, when the state had a severe
budget crisis, and the $25 million it spent in 2000. Salt Lake City has
budgeted $80,000 to hire its first-ever census director. New York City
has allocated $4.3 million, the first time it has formally budgeted for
census outreach.
In addition to state and local governments, some 74 grant-makers
nationwide have committed $30 million to census efforts.
Even so, government and nonprofit leaders across the country expressed
doubt in interviews that money alone will be enough to coax wary
populations to raise their hands.
“Certain communities,” said New York City Deputy Mayor J. Phillip
Thompson, “may just be too frightened to participate.”
'IT'S A TRICK'
The National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials has
been running focus groups to identify effective ways of maximizing
census participation. The group's chief executive, Arturo Vargas, said
the citizenship question raised alarm bells in focus groups conducted
with immigrants, and that participants said they had little confidence
their data would be kept private.
They also worried about completing census forms online, another
innovation of this year's census. “My mom is 61 years old and she’s not
going to go on the computer,” said one focus group respondent. “She’ll
think it’s a trick.”
NALEO’s research found that immigrants responded positively to messaging
that cited their legal obligation to complete the census. Younger Latino
men responded well to ads portraying the census as a way to defend their
communities.
Traditional messaging emphasizing civic responsibility “ain’t gonna
work,” said Allan Oliver, of the Santa Fe, N.M.-based Thornburg
Foundation.
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U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke arrives at the presentation of
the 2010 Census U.S. population at the National Press Club in
Washington December 21, 2010. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
Many state and local officials expressed concern that the
citizenship question in particular would depress participation.
“Citizenship might be relevant to the federal government, but for
those of us who run local governments, we have to treat the sewage,”
said Westchester County Executive George Latimer, whose county has
appointed an advisory board to help boost participation. “I don’t
know if it’s generated by a citizen or not.”
Los Angeles Census Director Maria de la Luz Garcia said the city's
efforts have focused on practical concerns, including planning for
computers at local libraries to perform double duty as kiosks for
filling out census forms and preparing to include census reminders
in city utility bills.
The bureau has said it can conduct the 2020 census more cheaply
because, with online responses, it will be able to hire fewer
enumerators than in 2010 and open fewer field offices.
But some local government officials say their constituents will need
human contact and encouragement in this census more than ever.
Every person not counted will ultimately cost his or her state
$19,500 over the next decade, a study by George Washington
University’s Andrew Reamer estimated. California, for example, lost
out on at least $1.5 billion of aid due to uncounted residents after
the 2000 census, a PricewaterhouseCoopers study found.
FUNDERS CIRCLE
Philanthropic groups in 21 states so far have formed state-level
census outreach efforts, in many cases for the first time.
In rural New Mexico, where getting an accurate count has always been
difficult, a group led by the Thornburg Foundation and the
Albuquerque Community Foundation are aiming to raise $600,000. In
Minnesota, which has the nation's largest Somali population,
foundations have designed a $4.8 million campaign, asking
Minnesota’s government to chip in $1.25 million.
The foundation-led New York Counts 2020 coalition plans to raise $3
million, and is urging the state's government to pony up much more,
citing California's example.
Ditas Katague, who oversees census outreach for California, said
that even with the state's $100 million campaign, the task is
difficult.
“We’re way ahead of where we were in 2000 and 2010,” Katague said.
“But the feeling is that we’re behind.”
(Editing by Damon Darlin and Sue Horton)
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