Hartford Courant

US Census takers can finally start in Hartford

With virus rates down, canvassing will begin the week of July 20

- By Mark Pazniokas CT Mirror

Connecticu­t’s falling COVID-19 infection rates will allow the U.S. Census to get an early start on door-to-door canvassing in Hartford, the city with the worst self-response rate in the state, officials said at a recent news conference.

Census takers wearing personal protective equipment will begin canvassing the week of July 20 in Hartford, East Hartford and West Hartford, more than two weeks earlier than the rest of the state, said Eva Bunnell, a regional census official.

“It’s a little bit like COVID testing,” Gov. Ned Lamont said of the census. “You have to go to where people are. You’ve got to convince them why it’s important.”

Connecticu­t’s statewide selfrespon­se rate of 65.5% is the best in the Northeast, but three cities were at less than 50% as of Friday: Hartford, 43.3%; Bridgeport, 47.9%; New Haven, 49.2%. The national self-response rate is 62%.

The outbreak of COVID in the U.S. roughly coincided with the start of the Census, complicati­ng the decennial effort to count everyone in America and produce counts used to adjust legislativ­e districts and apportion federal aid.

Connecticu­t was one of the hardest-hit states by the pandemic, but it now has one of the lowest infection rates and fewer than 100 patients hospitaliz­ed with the disease. On Friday, 78 of the 12,594 new tests were positive — less than 1% of the total. The state reported no additional COVID-related deaths and a net decrease of 13 new hospitaliz­ations.

“Even in the midst of a global pandemic, it remains imperative that the state of Connecticu­t has a full, complete and accurate count of its residents and citizens so that over the next 10 years we are ensuring ourselves our fair share of the billions and billions of dollars of federal resources that come into our state,” said Jay Williams, president of The Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.

The foundation is one of four that successful­ly lobbied the state last fall to spend $500,000 on census outreach. With the state funds and charitable match, the available resources for outreach in the hard-to-count tracts will be at least $1.4 million.

On March 12, the Census began taking self-responses on the internet, by phone and by mail. That effort, originally scheduled to end July 31, will continue until Oct. 31.

Census and state officials announced the coming start of canvassing at a press conference in Hartford to publicize a day of action in concert with major employers. At 10 a.m. Friday, employees were given 10 minutes to complete the census on company time.

“We will be doing this for state government as well,” said Lt. Gov. Susan Bysiewicz, who has been coordinati­ng the state’s work with the Census.

But the hard-to-count census tracts are those with high rates of unemployme­nt, frequent turn

over of rental housing and inconsiste­nt access to the internet. In Hartford, the self-completion rate on the web so far was just 27%.

Hard-to-count census tracts are defined as those where fewer than 74% of mailed surveys were completed and returned in 2010. Of the 831 census tracts in Connecticu­t, 218 fell short of the 74% mark.

Thirty-six of Hartford’s 40 census tracts are considered hard to count.

The lowest, tract 5035, had a completion rate 10 years ago of 41.1%, the worst in Connecticu­t.

Ninety percent of the 563 households in tract 5035 in Hartford are rentals.

Thirty percent have no reliable internet access, the average for the city.

Nearly half the residents have incomes below the poverty level. Twenty-seven percent are foreign born.

Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www.ctmirror.org).

 ?? JONATHAN WEISS/DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? The Census Bureau will plan a “final push” outreach effort this month to reach out to communitie­s that haven’t responded to the census.
JONATHAN WEISS/DREAMSTIME/TNS The Census Bureau will plan a “final push” outreach effort this month to reach out to communitie­s that haven’t responded to the census.

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