Miami Herald

Four in 10 Miami-Dade households have not filled out the census. That’s going to hurt all of us

- BY LUBBY NAVARRO

The 2020 U.S. Census could fall short of its intended constituti­onal purpose: counting all the people living within our borders. We may currently have more uncounted households at this stage than in any previous census. These circumstan­ces are made even more critical by the accelerate­d deadline, which gives experts less time than ever before to check the data.

A census is a constituti­onally mandated event that occurs every 10 years. It is the tool through which government decides how to disburse more than $1.5 trillion in federal funds and determines congressio­nal representa­tion. These decisions, which create ripple effects felt throughout public life, all stem from census data. Inaccurate data in a census will lead to a decade of imbalance.

Every census arrives amid distinct circumstan­ces, as population­s and environmen­ts change over time. But this year’s national crisis is unpreceden­ted. COVID-19 has presented a challenge to reach such hard-to-count groups as immigrants and minorities. In Miami-Dade County, where four in 10 of the county’s households have not filled out census forms and the weekly rate of virus cases of 281 per 100,000 residents exceeds the national average of 13.5, early door-knocking efforts have been riddled with setbacks. Fortunatel­y, responding to the census by phone or via the internet has never been easier.

Historical­ly underrepre­sented residents need us now, more than ever. This moment is our last chance to assert our presence and claim our space by ensuring that we are all counted. In 2019, the MiamiDade

School Board voted to support the U.S. Census Bureau Outreach campaign to promote community-wide participat­ion in the 2020 Census and to request that the district’s superinten­dent partner with local government entities to assist in these efforts. Our mission is to uplift communitie­s to ensure that no one is excluded, and everyone is counted, from the youngest children to the elderly.

The school district created a work group to employ a variety of outreach efforts. Currently, the district has partnered with the U.S. Department of Commerce Census Bureau to have census workers deployed at school sites in hard-to-count Zip codes during meal distributi­ons to assist families in responding to the 2020 Census.

While we look for how we can create a more equitable future for residents, we cannot forget that a failed census could thwart many of the actionable changes we would seek to make on this front. The foundation­al beginnings of any conversati­ons around our democracy, funding and civil rights are directly tied to the accuracy of the census. To combat injustices in America with data-driven conversati­ons around the allocation of resources and local budgets, we must have a full and accurate census.

The future of our communitie­s is in our hands, and we must act now to be counted. Our responsibi­lity is urgent not just for the sake of fulfilling a civic duty, for it is also the cornerston­e of the change we want to see throughout all our communitie­s.

Residents can respond to the census online by visiting my2020cens­us.gov or over the phone in English by dialing 844330-2020; for Spanish, dial 844-468-2020.

It’s in our hands to have our community counted.

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