Dayton Daily News

Goal for 2020 count near, but crucial areas lagging

- By Michael Macagnone

— The Census Bureau has reached the cusp of its goal for the nation to respond to the 2020 count, but with rates still lagging in minority neighborho­ods, advocates and members of Congress worry that people in diverse communitie­s will get missed amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More than 59% of the nation’s households have responded so far to the census online, by mail or by phone, according to the agency. That’s within 1% of the Census Bureau’s final goal for self-response. But the same pandemic that gave the agency extra time to let people respond on their own also has disrupted many Census Bureau plans to reach ethnic minorities, immigrants and other “hard-to-count” population­s.

“They’re falling short in outreach to Latino and immigrant communitie­s,” said Arturo Vargas, who heads the NALEO Educationa­l Fund, an advocacy organizati­on.

An undercount of these population­s could lead these communitie­s to miss out on political representa­tion and $1.5 trillion in federal funds tied to the decennial count.

“The only tool we have at our disposal right now is advertisin­g and especially paid advertisin­g nationwide. We just don’t have the resources to do that on our own,” Vargas said.

In the largely African American Bronx neighborho­od of Wakefield, N.Y., the response rate ranges between 30 and 40%. The majority Hispanic Miami Beach has a response rate of 36%.

Rates dive deeper in rural areas with large minority population­s. The majority

Hispanic Presidio County in southwest Texas has a 6% response rate. On the Navajo Nation reservatio­n, less than 1% of the households have responded to the census. That rate may end up higher since the Census Bureau recently restarted delivering paper questionna­ires to rural areas around the country with little internet access.

The Census Bureau also will soon restart operations in Puerto Rico, which has an 8% response rate, with staff dropping off questionna­ires at many households.

Census officials initially planned on spending $500 million as part of an advertisin­g campaign highlighti­ng the importance of filling out the census. They worked on outreach nationwide with hundreds of thousands of local partners such as community groups, libraries and nonprofit groups to counter a decades-long trend of undercount­ing minority communitie­s, immigrants, young children and rural Americans.

After the self-response phase, the Census Bureau plans to send out 500,000 or more door-knockers to count the rest of the country. Experts, however, say that process will be less accurate, with a greater risk of missing people.

The agency also said it plans to continue outreach through the fall, and plans on in-person counting efforts in the field later this summer. But Vargas, other advocates and members of Congress fear the agency hasn’t done enough to bounce back from the disruption the pandemic caused to its original timeline.

Last Wednesday, the leaders of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus, Congressio­nal Black Caucus and Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American

Caucus wrote the Census Bureau asking about in-person briefings, more outreach, and support for additional languages in the agency’s plans. They noted longstandi­ng concerns that their constituen­ts would be undercount­ed in the census, just like in previous counts.

“The pandemic has since then added unpreceden­ted barriers to the enumeratio­n of all Americans and early analysis of the response rates of the 2020 Census show that these barriers are disproport­ionately impacting communitie­s of color and immigrant communitie­s,” they said.

The caucus leaders, as well as House Oversight and Government Reform Chairwoman Rep. Carolyn B. Maloney, D-N.Y., have asked for regular updates as a condition of granting the Census a requested deadline extension.

The latest coronaviru­s relief bill passed Friday by the House would include $400 million in additional appropriat­ions for the Census to deal with the impacts of the pandemic. The bill also would require the agency to provide monthly operationa­l updates and give the agency the 120-day deadline extension to finish the count and deliver new apportionm­ent numbers to Congress.

Representa­tives from the Census Bureau and its advertisin­g agency, VMLY&R, did not respond to repeated requests for comment about this story.

Vargas’ organizati­on, along with more than 100 others, urged congressio­nal leaders in a letter last week to have the Census Bureau do more to reach hard-to-count communitie­s amid the pandemic. They noted past counts have missed millions, including minorities and immigrants.

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