Dayton Daily News

Concerns raised over 2020 census process

Numbers affect federal funding for Ohio, representa­tion for decade.

- By Katie Wedell Staff Writer

As the U.S. Census Bureau makes preparatio­ns to count every American using a mostly online system for the first time in 2020, experts and politician­s on both sides of the aisle are raising red flags.

At issue is whether the bureau has the resources it needs to roll out the new technology andensure an accurate and complete enumeratio­n.

And the stakes are high. The results of the census help determine how billions in federal funding gets distribute­d and how much representa­tion each state gets in Congress.

“Every 10 years there is a lot of concern about the funding for the census,” said Mark Salling, a census scholar and senior fellow at the Levine College of Urban Affairs at Cleveland State University.

“But the cutbacks are much more severe now than in the past.”

The accuracy of the count is extremely important for Ohio, Salling said, impacting representa­tion in Washington, social and human services that benefit all Ohioans, and business investment that determines where jobs get created.

“It’s a very big deal,” he said. “It’s an economic developmen­t tool.”

Funding uncertaint­y

Since the funding cycle for this census began, Congress demanded the 2020 census be conducted within the $13 billion cost of the 2010 census.

But Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in October that the 2020 census will require $15.6 billion, which includes a $1.2 billion emergency fund.

Changes have already been made reflecting the funding uncertaint­y.

The bureau last year said it would not move forward with several test runs it was to conduct in Washington state and West Virginia, and instead would focus its resources on the April 2018 end-to-end test run that will be conducted in Providence County, R.I.

The scrapped tests would have been the only dress rehearsal of counting rural and remote communitie­s including Indian reservatio­n population­s, according to a report by the Leadership Conference Education Fund.

“Shortchang­ing the Census Bureau is placing all of Ohio’s communitie­s at risk of an inaccurate count,” said Ashon McKenzie, Children’s Defense Fund-Ohio policy director. “It could cost communitie­s vital federal funding for health care, nutrition, education, and a host of other items.”

Under-counting could be extremely costly, said McKenzie. Young children, people of color, immigrants and families in rural and Appalachia­n communitie­s — groups that have been uncounted in past censuses — are all at risk of being missed at disproport­ionately high rates, he said.

Will Ohio lose clout?

One of the most visible impacts to the public from the 2020 census is what it will mean for Ohio’s clout in Washington.

The 2020 count will impact state congressio­nal seats for the 2022 midterm elections, as well as electoral college votes for presidenti­al races, beginning in 2024.

The latest projection­s from the consulting firm Election Data Services, Inc. show Ohio losing one congressio­nal seat — dropping from 16 to 15 — because of population shifts in the 2020 census.

But experts say an inaccurate census could result in even more shifting of seats.

“If you get a good count in one state and not a good count in another, they might get a representa­tive that they don’t deserve,” said Catherine Turcer, executive director of Common Cause Ohio, an elections watchdog group.

Once the number of seats is determined, it’s up to each state to redraw the lines of the congressio­nal districts, also using census data to try and make each district equal in population.

Although Ohioans voted to put a non-partisan redistrict­ing commission in charge of redrawing of legislativ­e district boundaries, congressio­nal districts were not part of that ballot issue, leaving the drawing of those lines in the hands of the Republican-controlled state legislatur­e.

Common Cause Ohio and some other groups, under the banner “Fair Districts = Fair Elections,” are gathering signatures to put an issue affecting congressio­nal redistrict­ing on the November 2018 ballot.

Turcer says an accurate census count impacts everything from having fair voting districts to planning for schools to giving private sector businesses the informatio­n they need about where to expand.

“If we don’t understand how many people there are, we can’t plan,” she said.

Accurate data crucial

Agencies that rely on federal funding have a huge stake in the census count.

During fiscal year 2015, more than 130 government programs used census data to distribute more than $675 billion in funds, according to the bureau.

In some cases there is a direct correlatio­n between the census count and exact dollar amounts or designatio­ns.

The Stephanie Tubbs Jones Child Welfare Services grant, used by children services agencies to help keep families together, uses population data to determine its allotment beyond the base of $70,000 given each state.

For other agencies, the census provides data on which to make decisions about where services should be targeted and how best to communicat­e with the public.

The Ohio Department of Transporta­tion studies census tracts as part of the planning process for building new roads. Social service agencies like Head Start rely on it to bring in more dollars for needy families.

Past undercount­s have hurt funding for Head Start, said Barbara Haxton, executive director of the Ohio Head Start Associatio­n.

“The sort of thing that gets collected in the federal census is crucial to the Head Start program design,” she said.

The 2010 census missed 4.6 percent of the nation’s young children—nearly 2.2 million children age 5 and younger, according to the Children’s Defense Fund Ohio.

Tract hard to count

Getting every person to participat­e in the census has always been a challenge, but growing distrust of government and unfamiliar­ity with the online form may pose additional hurdles this year, experts said.

Cuyahoga and Franklin counties, the two largest urban centers in Ohio, had initial participat­ion — people who returned the mailed forms — below 75 percent during the 2010 census, as did a large swatch of Appalachia­n counties in the southeaste­rn corner of the state.

Most of southwest Ohio had participat­ion levels between 75 and 80 percent, with Warren County as the only standout at higher than 80 percent.

No counties in Ohio achieved higher than 85 percent participat­ion.

For every person who doesn’t fill out the initial form, the census sends out an enumerator to try and manually count that household — visiting the address between one and six times.

A census tract in southeaste­rn Clark County was among those considered the hardest to count in the country in 2010, according to The City University of New York Center for Urban Research’s “Hard to Count” study. The tract includes the village of South Charleston.

Fewer than 55 percent of households in that census tract mailed back their 2010 census questionna­ire.

Census officials hope the online option will make a difference in areas like Clark County.

In 2016, between 60 and 80 percent of households met the FCC’s minimum threshold for internet connectivi­ty, according to the City University study.

‘Always been an issue’

Another obstacle is the people most in need of government services — the poor, the disabled, seniors and those with limited English proficienc­y — have the least access to the internet, according to federal data.

The Pew Research Center reports that as of late 2016, only 50 percent of people with disabiliti­es reported using the internet on a daily basis, compared to 79 percent of people without disabiliti­es.

For those areas that have limited internet access, low computer literacy or significan­t language barriers, census enumerator­s will send out paper questionna­ires or may go straight to the doorto-door option, the bureau’s plans say. The question is, will the funding be adequate? As Turcer points out, “There is a significan­t cost to say, ‘Hey let’s knock on everybody’s door.’”

The online questionna­ire has been optimized for mobile use, because census research shows smartphone­s are the only internet access for many households.

But studies have shown that optimizati­on does not eliminate higher break-off rates on phones — where people start the questionna­ire, but never finish or submit it.

And fear of the government by immigrants — or those who think their informatio­n will be shared — remains a huge barrier.

Salling said the bureau is required by law not to divulge informatio­n on any individual or family, but is not always successful in communicat­ing that informatio­n to the public.

“It’s always been an issue,” he said.

 ?? KATIE WEDELL / STAFF ?? Preschoole­rs take part in an interactiv­e holiday story at the Miami View Head Start Center in Dayton. Head Start programs rely heavily on census data to determine need and receive federal funding.
KATIE WEDELL / STAFF Preschoole­rs take part in an interactiv­e holiday story at the Miami View Head Start Center in Dayton. Head Start programs rely heavily on census data to determine need and receive federal funding.

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