Chicago Sun-Times

Report warns 1 million kids likely to go uncounted in 2020 Census

- BY MAUDLYNE IHEJIRIKA, STAFF REPORTER mihejirika@suntimes.com | @maudlynei

More than 1 million of the nation’s most vulnerable children — including 150,000 under the age of 5 in Illinois — are at risk of being undercount­ed in the 2020 Census, according to a national report released this week.

The Annie E. Casey Foundation’s 2018 KIDS COUNT Data Book, an annual study of child well-being, warned of dire consequenc­es to states in federal funding for critical programs, unless efforts are stepped up to count the youth — who are among about 4.5 million young children living in neighborho­ods at risk of undercount­ing.

“Much of our efforts to improve the lives of Illinois children could be undermined,” said Tasha Green Cruzat, president of Voices for Illinois Children, which urged the Illinois Legislatur­e, Cook County Board and City Council to fully fund outreach efforts.

In Illinois alone, over $5 billion a year in federal funding for programs like Medicaid, SNAP, CHIP and foster/child care is based on census data.

“If we don’t count children, we render their needs invisible and their futures uncertain,” said Casey Foundation president and CEO Patrick McCarthy, noting some 300 federal programs targeting family stability and opportunit­y use census data to allocate more than $800 billion annually.

Results of undercount­ing could reverberat­e for decades. In education, it would mean overcrowde­d classrooms and eliminated Head Start programs; in health care, uninsured children and understaff­ed hospital emergency rooms.

The problems posed by the “hard-tocount” census tracts compound others such as the new online census form and proposed questions about citizenshi­p, said the foundation, which called for greater state and local census outreach and efforts to mitigate confidenti­ality concerns.

Annually measuring four barometers of child well-being — economic, education, health, and family and community — the report ranked Illinois No. 22 overall; New Hampshire, No. 1.

Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, Minnesota and Iowa rounded out the top five; while Alaska, Nevada, Mississipp­i, Louisiana and New Mexico — at No. 50 — were the bottom five. Mississipp­i’s No. 48 ranking was its highest in over 25 years.

The report continues to find troubling disparitie­s among children from minority, lowincome and immigrant families.

It found Illinois ranked high in providing children access to health insurance and made gains over last year in key areas related to health and education. However, it found too many Illinois children still living in families struggling with economic security statewide.

The state ranked 24th in health, 13th in education and 27th in both economic and family and community well-being.

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