Los Angeles Times

Virus throws curve at census

Pandemic makes California’s count more crucial — and more challengin­g.

- By Sarah Parvini Staff writer Sarah D. Wire contribute­d to this report.

Taking a head count of the entire U.S. population was already going to be hard. The coronaviru­s will make it much harder.

Across California, grassroots groups looking to ramp up census participat­ion among historical­ly hard-to-count communitie­s have hit a snag: how to reach people at a time when many are self-quarantini­ng to stem the spread of the pandemic.

Canvassers had hoped to use the weeks leading up to census day, April 1, to reach communitie­s that are at the greatest risk of an undercount by knocking on doors. They were betting that a face-to-face connection would help to ensure California­ns would fill out the decennial survey.

But with social distancing, those conversati­ons will have to happen via text messages and phone calls, or on social media.

“With increased restrictio­ns on group gatherings, we’re seeing we may not even be able to convene folks onsite to do collective phone banking,” said Kevin Cosney, senior organizing manager at California Calls, a coalition of community groups. “We were supposed to launch our outreach efforts last weekend. Now we won’t be able to until at least April.”

California Calls aims to provide workers with the resources needed to do their phone banking remotely, he said.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Census Bureau announced it would temporaril­y suspend all field operations for the 2020 census for two weeks, until April 1, to help slow the virus.

Steven Dillingham, the bureau’s director, said the office is making the change “to help protect the health and safety of the American public, Census Bureau employees, and everyone going through the hiring process for temporary census taker positions.”

Even before the outbreak, officials said that Los Angeles County would be the nation’s hardest to tally because of its high concentrat­ions of renters and homeless people, as well as immigrant communitie­s that may not participat­e because of language barriers or because they fear reprisal from the federal government.

States draw on census data to form school district boundaries, and many of the services that people rely on in California — such as nutrition programs and housing assistance — are tied to funds calculated using the census. Statewide, 72% of the population belongs to one or another historical­ly undercount­ed group.

Cosney worries that organizati­ons such as his could lose out on connecting with people who aren’t registered to vote, whose phone numbers they wouldn’t have, or ethnic communitie­s that would respond well to a conversati­on with a “trusted messenger.”

The point of outreach on the streets, he added, was to tell people the various ways they could ensure they were counted, whether through online participat­ion, calling in their responses or going to an assistance center.

Their focus now is not only on participat­ion rates, but also on pivoting their messaging to underscore the importance of vulnerable population­s, such as California’s tens of thousands of homeless people, being counted.

“It’s hard to do social distancing if you don’t have a home,” Cosney said. “And one way to ensure affordable housing is by completing the census. It’s hard to stay healthy if we don’t have adequate healthcare services. Certainly, the census is a way to ensure that.”

William Frey, a demographe­r and senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n, said hard-to-count groups are “the exact communitie­s that may require face-to-face interactio­n.”

A widespread illness such as the coronaviru­s, he added, is the “kind of situation where people need to be able to rely on the government to have good informatio­n on where people who are vulnerable live.”

“This is one of the reasons we take the census,” he said. “It’s the basis for these government and private sector programs that help vulnerable population­s in a time like this.”

Both the census bureau and the state have encouraged people to complete the survey online or by phone. More than 11 million people already have responded to the 2020 census, according to the Census Bureau.

In an email, a spokespers­on for the bureau noted the importance of self-responding online to avoid the in-person nonrespons­e follow-up by a census taker.

“We are working with our partners in local, county and state government­s to make sure people are informed that their census invitation will be at their homes by March 20th and that it is imperative, given the current health emergency, that people follow suit by filling out their survey,” the spokespers­on said.

The closure or quarantini­ng of many homeless shelters, nursing homes and colleges because of the virus is also forcing the bureau to change the way it counts some of the most-difficultt­o-reach population­s. The move might mean that the count could take longer.

The original plan was to have census workers interview each person staying at an emergency or transition­al shelter, or eating at a soup kitchen or mobile food vans between March 30 and April 1.

Rather than starting March 30, the bureau will delay its mobile outreach, which is often set up at grocery stores, churches or festivals in areas with low response rates. The bureau has also decided to push the start of census takers’ doorknocki­ng in college towns to April 23. As the bureau makes those changes, groups are also looking at how best to tailor their online messaging.

“Some partners have started to use online contests to boost social media outreach,” said June Lim, demographi­c research project director at Asian Americans Advancing Justice.

One of AAAJ’s community partners in the Fresno area has encouraged its young, college-age residents to create bilingual YouTube videos related to the census in various Southeast Asian languages and in English, Lim said. A Pacific Islander group, she added, is encouragin­g people to post videos or photos of themselves with a completed form with the hashtag #mystoryhas­beenwritte­n.

“Before, the messaging was about safety related to confidenti­ality,” Lim said. “Now, I think it’s not just going to be that, but also safety in terms of you can do it without leaving your home, without compromisi­ng your health or the health of others.”

Arturo Vargas, chief executive of NALEO Educationa­l Fund, said that the organizati­on’s public outreach has also shifted to social media. Their messaging, he said, is encouragin­g people to self-respond because it is a “great way to avoid someone coming and knocking on your door.” They are also noting that census data are critical to planning and the allocation of resources during a crisis.

“I would imagine government­s are looking at data updated by the Census Bureau to make plans for providing supplies and enough food and other items for their population­s,” he said. “Under the current situation, the elderly population is vulnerable. Under census data, you have informatio­n on age groups.”

NALEO is reminding people that they can call in their response to the census as well, he said.

“Anybody who is marginaliz­ed in society in any way,” he said, “by poverty, by language, by housing situation — I think this [virus] exponentia­lly complicate­s ability to count those population­s.”

 ?? Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune ?? WITH LARGE gatherings now being discourage­d, the census may undercount the Latinos and immigrants who receive help with the survey in public spaces.
Howard Lipin San Diego Union-Tribune WITH LARGE gatherings now being discourage­d, the census may undercount the Latinos and immigrants who receive help with the survey in public spaces.

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