Census Bureau: Illinois may have been undercounted in 2020 census
Send a link to a friend
[May 20, 2022] By
PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Census Bureau released
new survey data Thursday suggesting the population of Illinois may have
been undercounted by nearly 2 percent in the 2020 headcount.
That was one of the findings of the Census Bureau’s Post-Enumeration
Survey, or PES, something the bureau does after each decennial census to
assess the quality of the census data. The results do not change the
official population numbers of any state, nor do they affect
congressional reapportionment, but they do help guide the bureau in its
planning for the next decennial census.
“The release of these PES estimates assists us in understanding how well
we did this decade, state by state, in our efforts to count everyone
living in the United States,” Census Bureau Director Robert L. Santos
said in a news release. “Transparency is a critical aspect of scientific
integrity. That is why we are releasing these results to the public.”
According to the survey, Illinois, with a 1.97 percent undercount, was
among six states with “statistically significant” undercounts. There
were eight states with statistically significant overcounts, while 36
states had neither an undercount nor overcount.
The other states with undercounts were all located in the South:
Arkansas at 5.04 percent; Florida at 3.48 percent; Mississippi at 4.11
percent; Tennessee at 4.78 percent; and Texas at 1.92 percent.
States with population overcounts included Delaware at 5.45 percent;
Hawaii at 6.79 percent; Massachusetts at 2.24 percent; Minnesota at 3.84
percent; New York at 3.44 percent; Ohio at 1.49 percent; Rhode Island at
5.05 percent; and Utah at 2.59 percent.
There was no statistically significant undercount or overcount for 36
states, Washington, D.C., or the nation as a whole.
In Illinois, the official 2020 census showed the state’s population as
12,812,508. That was a decline of 18,124, or 0.1 percent, from the 2010
census. As a result of the state’s population loss, combined with large
gains in some other states, Illinois lost one of its congressional
seats, leaving the state with only 17 U.S. House seats.
However, if Illinois really was undercounted by 1.97 percent, as the
survey suggests, that would have meant that the population actually grew
by more than 257,000, putting it at just over 13 million.
The population loss that Illinois did see was smaller than many people
had predicted. During the 10 years leading up to the census, annual
population estimates released by the Census Bureau were showing the
population could drop by as much as 1.23 percent – 10 times more than it
actually did.
[to top of second column]
|
New survey data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows
Illinois was among six states that were undercounted in the 2020
census. (Credit: U.S. Census Bureau)
In response to those concerns, Gov. JB Pritzker signed an executive
order in 2019 committing $29 million to census outreach projects to
encourage and help people to fill out their census forms.
Thursday afternoon, Pritzker released a statement hailing the survey
results as good news, but also expressing frustration that the state’s
growth was not reflected in the official census.
“While it is disappointing that these numbers were not reflected in the
initial count, I have already spoken to members of our congressional
delegation and will work tirelessly to ensure Illinois receives its fair
share of federal funding,” he said. “I look forward to celebrating this
development with all Illinoisans, including those who routinely badmouth
our state.”
During a media briefing on Wednesday ahead of the survey release, Census
Bureau officials emphasized that no census is ever perfect, and no
survey is perfect either.
They also noted that the quality of the 2020 census was affected by
unique factors that included the pandemic and wildfires in the West that
damaged air quality and made it difficult for census workers to go
door-to-door to gather data from those who had not filled out their
census forms.
But even in normal years, they said, reporting errors occur. While
people who fill out the census forms are supposed to report the names
and ages of people living in the household on April 1 of the census
year, overcounts can occur when they include a person who dies before
that date or a child born shortly after that date. Undercounts occur
when people do not report everyone in the household or fail to fill out
the census form at all.
The survey data released Thursday did not identify the causes of
undercounts or overcounts within any particular state, nor did it
identify the cities, counties or regions within a state where the count
may have been inaccurate.
On a national level, however, officials said undercounts generally occur
within the Black population, Hispanic or Latino population, American
Indian and Alaska Native populations living on reservations and the
demographic group that reported being of “some other race.”
Overcounts, they said, tend to occur in the white, non-Hispanic
population and the Asian population.
They also noted that the 2020 census undercounted children, especially
young children ages 0-4.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |