Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. receives input on racial categories

- MIKE SCHNEIDER

The idea of revising categories for ethnic and racial identities, both in the census and in gathering demographi­c informatio­n between head counts, has fueled editorials and think-tank essays as well as thousands of written comments by individual­s in what is almost a Rorschach test for how Americans identify themselves. The White House’s Office of Management and Budget is set to decide on new classifica­tions next year and is hosting three virtual town halls on the subject this week.

Some conservati­ves question the process itself, saying the overarchin­g premise that Americans need more ethnic categories will only accelerate Balkanizat­ion.

“By creating and deepening sub-national identities, the government further contribute­s to the decline of one national American identity,” wrote Mike Gonzalez, a senior fellow at The Heritage Foundation, in his personal comment posted on the OMB webpage seeking public input.

That view contrasts sharply with those who say previous categories have overlooked nuances.

“This is certainly a singular moment and opportunit­y to greatly improve and enhance the accuracy and completene­ss of the data,” Mario Beovides, director of policy and legislativ­e affairs for the National Associatio­n of Latino Elected Officials Educationa­l Fund, said during a recent forum.

The proposed changes would create a new category for people of Middle Eastern and North African descent, also known by the acronym MENA, who are now classified as white but say they have been routinely undercount­ed.

The process also would combine the race and ethnic origin questions into a single query, because some advocates say the current method of asking about race and separately about ethnic origin often confuses Hispanic respondent­s. With the revisions, the government would try to get more detailed answers on race and ethnicity by asking about country of origin.

Another proposal recommends striking from federal government forms the words “Negro” and “Far East,” now widely regarded as pejorative. The terms “majority” and “minority” would also be dropped because some officials say they fail to reflect the nation’s complex racial and ethnic diversity.

Several Black Americans, like Nyheim Way, whose ancestors were enslaved, said in public comments to the OMB that they would like to be identified in a category such as American Freedmen, Foundation­al Black Americans or American Descendant­s of Slavery to distinguis­h themselves from Black immigrants, or even white individual­s born in Africa, as well as reflecting their ancestors’ history in the U.S.

Way, who is president of United Sons & Daughters of Freedmen, which describes itself as dedicated to restoring the broken promises from Reconstruc­tion, also recommende­d substituti­ng the word “population group” for “race.”

Conflating “African American” with “Black” has “blurred what it means to be an African American in this country,” Way, who works for a pharmaceut­ical company in Athens, Georgia, said in a telephone interview.

Byron Haskins, a retired government worker from Lansing, Mich., who describes himself as African American, suggested eliminatin­g race categories like “white” and “Black” since they perpetuate “deeply rooted unjust socio-political constructs.”

Instead, he said people should be able to self-identify as they wish. When his sociologis­t daughter points out the difficulty of aggregatin­g such data into something useful to address inequaliti­es in housing or voting, or tailoring health or education programs to the needs of communitie­s, he tells her, “Go crazy at it. That’s what you’re being paid for.”

“You need to search for the truth and not just stay with the old categories because someone decided, ‘That is what we decided,’” Haskins said.

Shalini Parekh is asking the government to distinguis­h South Asians from East Asians.

“When these groups are assessed together, one loses a lot of important granularit­y that can help differenti­ate issues that are specific to one group and not another,” Parekh said.

The MENA community appears to be having a related problem, based on several comments to OMB. Without its own category, the group’s political power is diluted. People could benefit from cohesive representa­tion, especially if identities were taken into account in drawing political districts, advocates said.

It comes down to something even more personal for Houda Meroueh, who described herself to the Biden administra­tion as a 73-yearold Arab American woman.

“When I go to the doctor’s office I do not feel they have the informatio­n necessary to understand my medical history or my culture,” she said. “For all these reasons I want to be counted as who I am. Not as white.”

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