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Virus, other problems threaten to throw off homeless census

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LAS VEGAS — The swanky, billion-dollar casinos of Las Vegas are bedecked with shining towers, neon signs and eyepopping extravagan­ce. But directly beneath the glitter, hundreds of homeless people live out of sight, in the dark, in a network of stormwater tunnels running below the city.

When census takers tried in September to count the nation’s homeless for the 2020 census, safety concerns prevented them from venturing into the Las Vegas tunnels.

The tunnels offer just one example of the difficulty in counting the portion of the homeless population that does not stay in shelters. A half dozen census takers around the U.S. told The Associated Press that they experience­d problems that could cause the homeless to be undercount­ed — a situation that may cost some communitie­s political representa­tion and federal money.

America DePasquale, who lived in the tunnels from May 2018 until she moved into a detox facility last month, said she never saw census takers visit the area underneath the Las Vegas Strip.

DePasquale said she does not blame census takers for not attempting to enter the tunnels, but she said it might have helped if they had tried to go with community advocates who make frequent visits below.

“It takes somebody of a certain strength to go down there just regularly, “she said. ”But I also find it kind of appalling that they wouldn’t go deeper and at least even try.“

The count of the unsheltere­d homeless was originally scheduled for last spring, but the Census Bureau delayed it until late September because of concerns about the coronaviru­s. The bureau identified 33,000 homeless camps for census takers to visit.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office warned earlier this month that the delay in the homeless count could affect the quality of the census data given the economic downturn caused by the pandemic. People who may have answered the census questionna­ire last spring but later became homeless may not be recorded as homeless and may be living in a different place, the watchdog agency said in a report.

“Because people who experience homelessne­ss are more likely than people who are housed to be members of minority groups, especially African Americans and Native Americans, the undercount contribute­s, modestly, to the serious undercount of minorities and poor people,“said Beth Shinn, a professor at Vanderbilt University who researches homelessne­ss.

In San Francisco, a census taker said supervisor­s were confused about what to do and where to go. In Oklahoma City, many census takers did only a headcount without interviewi­ng homeless people, so they missed gathering demographi­c informatio­n.

A census taker in Bakersfiel­d, California, said a list of homeless sites they were given was outdated, and they were not allowed to interview people who appeared to be homeless if their locations were not on the list.

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