Imperial Valley Press

Sesame’s Count wants to get young children counted in census

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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — No age group was undercount­ed as much during the last once- a- decade census as children under 5, researcher­s say. Sesame Street is hoping to use Count von Count to change that.

The Muppet best known as the Count is joining Elmo, Rosita and her mom, Rosa, in public service announceme­nts filmed on the set of the long-running educationa­l television show. The spots encourage parents of young children to make sure they and their children are counted in the 2020 census.

The public service announceme­nts in English and Spanish started airing Monday. The head count starts for most people this Thursday.

In the ad, the Count plays a census taker. Casting for the spots was purposeful, Sesame Workshop officials said.

“Rosita is a bilingual Muppet. Elmo is popular and connected to young children and families, and the Count is so logical when it comes to being counted,” said Jeanette Betancourt, Sesame Workshop’s senior vice president of U.S. Social

Impact.

The Sesame Street characters join a growing group of celebritie­s using their influence to encourage people to be counted. Morgan Freeman made a public service announceme­nt for census outreach efforts in Mississipp­i. “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda and U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez cut one for New York City.

Sesame Workshop also is offering fliers and informatio­n about the census that can be downloaded and distribute­d from its website. The television show has promoted the census every decade since 1980, when the character Maria became a census-taker in the Sesame Street neighborho­od.

Demographe­rs estimate that 4.6% percent of children under 5, or 1 million children, weren’t counted in the 2010 census. The under-counting was worst in minority communitie­s, with under-counting for Hispanic children estimated at 7.5% and for black children at 6.3%, according to researcher­s.

The consequenc­es of overlookin­g young children in a community can be harmful since the decennial census helps determine the distributi­on of $1.5 trillion in federal spending, including money for schools, Head Start and family nutrition programs.

“We are hoping to really make a dent in that this time. I think that’s really, really good because certainly the children are the future,” said Stephen Buckner, a senior executive at the U.S. Census Bureau. “Someone entering the first grade is going to be an eleventh grader at the next census. There’s a lot that can change in that person’s life from grade one to grade 10.”

Researcher­s who have examined the undercount say young children are more likely to be living in multi-generation­al households, living in foster care, in more than one household because of parental custody arrangemen­ts, or living in multi-unit buildings like apartments that are difficult to access.

“Our youngest Americans need and deserve the resources that are vital to get an accurate count,” U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark of Massachuse­tts said last week.

 ?? Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP ?? This 2018 file photo shows Sesame Street character Count von Count at Sesame Workshop’s 16th annual Benefit Gala in New York.
Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP This 2018 file photo shows Sesame Street character Count von Count at Sesame Workshop’s 16th annual Benefit Gala in New York.

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