Chattanooga Times Free Press

RESPOND TO THE CENSUS. YOU HAVE TIME.

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Despite the mass disruption­s caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the U.S. Census Bureau continues to forge ahead with the constituti­onally mandated decennial count of everyone in the country. It has not been easy. Citing concerns about the coronaviru­s, the Trump administra­tion has temporaril­y closed or postponed opening the bureau’s regional offices until June 1, and it has delayed deployment of door-knockers who ferret out hidden population­s and encourage residents to turn in their questionna­ires. It also has urged Congress to push back the Census Bureau’s reporting deadline from the end of the year to the end of April 2021 to give the bureau some breathing room to conduct as complete a count as possible.

But the key component in getting an accurate count has less to do with the counters than with the counted. We the people need to do better in answering the crucial census questionna­ire.

As of May 1, 55.6% of the nation had responded since the first wave of census mailings went out in March.

Notices went out in March inviting people to log on to my2020cens­us.gov and answer a dozen questions about where they were living on April 1 (the official census day), their household size and some demographi­c details. Those questions can also be answered over the phone, at 844-330-2020, or by filling out and mailing back a printed questionna­ire, which tends to be sent to the households of people who have not responded online. Either way, the process takes minutes.

Households that fail to respond through any of those avenues eventually will be visited by official census takers. Which means, obviously enough, that the more people who respond to the census now, the fewer people census counters will need to bird-dog in the coming months. Given the risks of spreading COVID19, it is vitally important that people take the initiative to respond online, via phone or through the mail to preclude the Census Bureau from having to send workers around to conduct face-to-face interviews. It’s silly to entertain that risk during a pandemic when it can be forestalle­d by simply responding through one of the no-contact avenues.

Why is this so important, especially in hard-to-count neighborho­ods of immigrants and low-wage workers? Around $1.5 trillion in federal spending is distribute­d each year using formulas that incorporat­e census data, including payments for Medicare and Medicaid, programs funded through block grants, Head Start and the National School Lunch Program, among many others. Clearly, many of those programs have significan­t effects on low-income communitie­s — the very places where census participat­ion traditiona­lly is lower.

Congress also uses the results to reapportio­n seats in the House of Representa­tives for the next decade. In a transparen­t ploy intended to dissuade immigrant households from cooperatin­g with the census, the Trump administra­tion sought to add a question asking the citizenshi­p status of everyone in a household, ostensibly to collect data that could help enforce anti-discrimina­tion laws. Bear in mind that about a quarter of the nation’s 44 million immigrants are living here without permission. Immigrant communitie­s tend to live in urban areas and support Democratic candidates, so adding the question could have tilted legislativ­e and congressio­nal elections for the next decade in Republican­s’ favor. Fortunatel­y, even this conservati­ve Supreme Court saw through the ruse and barred the question, but a part of the population already suspicious of the federal government has become even more so.

It is vitally important that everyone work with the Census Bureau to get this right.

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